Market Capitalization: Large / Small
Underweight Small cap stocks appear to have hit resistance, following the flight to safety (or at least shedding international risk exposure) that has seen them outperforming this year. Recent news that an offer from the Treasury Department to recommence trade talks has been warmly received by the Chinese Commerce Ministry underscores the early stages of a wind down in the escalating trade conflict; further relief will be a boon to large cap stocks, at the expense of their small cap peers. While easing trade tensions are a welcome reprieve to the elevated risk premiums borne by the internationally-geared S&P 500, our core thesis is unaffected. Namely, we believe the binging on debt by small caps, both in absolute and relative terms, should usher in a period of underperformance. In the second panel, we show the ratio of debt to profits; it is worth noting that profits (the denominator) are at record levels and the small cap ratio still is at a decade-high. The implication is that small caps are far less prepared for a profit shock and the divergence noted in the bottom panel will normalize via a decline in small cap relative performance. Bottom Line: We reiterate our large cap preference over small caps.
Trade Relief Should Spur A Small Cap Rollover
Trade Relief Should Spur A Small Cap Rollover
Underweight We moved to a large over small cap preference last month, based on the exploding balance sheets of small cap equities. Our thesis was that the rapid increase in leverage would find its way into higher risk premia for small cap equities, necessitating a valuation derating. Small caps have since been outperforming owing to their inherent trade war insulation (top panel), implying the opposite has happened and risk premia have, in fact, decreased. The middle panel of the chart shows the cyclically adjusted relative price to earnings (CAPE) ratio. While on a forward earnings basis, small caps are trading at an elevated (but still within the realm of normal) 13% premium to large caps, on a cyclically adjusted basis, the premium has exploded near all-time highs, approaching 50%, well above the historical mean. This lofty relative CAPE multiple leaves small caps increasingly vulnerable to profit and debt related shocks and we reiterate our large cap bias.
Small Cap Valuations Are Anything But Small
Small Cap Valuations Are Anything But Small
Underweight This week's NFIB small business survey was a record-setter on a number of fronts; the small business optimism index is at its second highest level in the survey's 45 year history with a net 34% of respondents saying that now is a good time to expand, the highest level ever (top and second panel). However, the news is not all positive for small business owners; an all-time record 35% of firms reported higher worker compensation while only 15% reported higher sales, implying margins are tightening. We downgraded small caps last month, moving to a large cap preference, based on the diverging (and unsustainable) debt levels of small caps vs. their large cap peers (third and bottom panels). The strength of this NFIB survey actually reinforces our negative thesis. Small businesses are as likely as they ever have been to expand their businesses and their balance sheets at the same time. Meanwhile, quality of labor problems, now the single largest issue facing small businesses according to the NFIB, and the resulting compensation increases present significant headwinds to EBITDA growth. Bottom Line: We reiterate our large cap preference over small caps.
Is This Peak Optimism
Is This Peak Optimism
Underweight In line with our renewed focus on balance sheets as a measure of risk in our portfolio positioning (please see this week's Special Report for more details), we have applied the same rigor to our size bias. With elevated debt levels waving a red flag, today we are acting on our downgrade alert and recommend a large over small cap bias. Over the past decade, the Goldman Sachs weak/strong equity baskets share price ratio has moved in tandem with the small/large share price ratio (SLR, top panel). However, a large and exploitable gap has opened recently that will likely narrow via a convergence lower in the SLR. Respective net debt-to-EBITDA ratios corroborate this downbeat relative indebtedness backdrop, which have seen small caps binging on debt (middle panel); a resulting widening relative equity risk premium should precipitate a decline in small caps relative to their large cap peers. When the net debt-to-EBITDA ratio is expressed as a year-over-year change, it is an excellent leading indicator of relative share price momentum (bottom panel); currently, the signal is crystal clear: over-levered small caps appear destined to underperform better capitalized large cap stocks. Bottom line: We are executing our downgrade alert and moving to a large over small cap preference.
Small Caps Have A Big Balance Sheet Problem
Small Caps Have A Big Balance Sheet Problem
Highlights Key Portfolio Highlights Our portfolio positioning remains firmly behind cyclicals over defensives, driven principally by our key 2018 investment themes: synchronized global capex growth (Chart 1A) and higher interest rates on the back of a pickup in inflation (Chart 1B). The positioning has been lifted by synchronized global growth and a soft U.S. dollar (Chart 1C), while the key risk to our portfolio of a hard landing in China looks to be mitigated (Chart 1D). A return of volatility, spurred on by Fed tightening (Chart 1E), caused an SPX pullback in February, and while the market pushed through that rough patch, it has since been replaced with fears of a trade war, exacerbated by musical chairs in the Trump administration (Chart 1F). Our buy-the-dip strategy remains appropriate on a cyclical time horizon (Chart 1G), given a dearth of evidence of a recession in the next year. SPX forward EPS estimates still show near-20% increases this calendar year (corroborated by our EPS growth model, Chart 1H) which should underpin outsized equity returns in the absence of a major valuation rerating. Still, the return of volatility warrants a review of our macro, valuation and technical indicators. The best combination in our review is S&P financials (Overweight) with an elevated and accelerating cyclical macro indicator (CMI), fed by both of our key capex growth and rising interest rate themes, combined with a modest undervaluation. The worst combination is S&P telecom services (Underweight, high-conviction), whose CMI recently touched a 30-year low as sector deflation hit acute levels. Valuations make the sector look cheap, but every indication is that telecoms are a value trap. Chart 1AGlobal Trade Is Rising...
Global Trade Is Rising...
Global Trade Is Rising...
Chart 1B...But So Too Is Inflation
...But So Too Is Inflation
...But So Too Is Inflation
Chart 1CA Weaker Dollar Is A Boon To Growth
A Weaker Dollar Is A Boon To Growth
A Weaker Dollar Is A Boon To Growth
Chart 1DSoft Landing In China Seems Likely
Soft Landing In China Seems Likely
Soft Landing In China Seems Likely
Chart 1EThe Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party...
The Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party...
The Return Of Vol May Spoil The Party...
Chart 1F...And Policy Uncertainty Doesnt Help
...And Policy Uncertainty Doesnt Help
...And Policy Uncertainty Doesnt Help
Chart 1GBuy The Dip Has Worked Out Nicely
Buy The Dip Has Worked Out Nicely
Buy The Dip Has Worked Out Nicely
Chart 1HHeed The Message From A Booming EPS Model
Heed The Message From A Booming EPS Model
Heed The Message From A Booming EPS Model
Feature S&P Financials (Overweight) Our financials cyclical macro indicator (CMI, Chart 2) has climbed to new cyclical highs with significant upward momentum, driven by broad improvement in virtually all of its underlying components. More than any other variable, rising yields and the accompanying higher price of credit are a boon to financials. Higher interest rates is one of BCA's key themes for 2018 and an ongoing selloff in the bond market bodes well for profits in the heavyweight banks sub-index and should deliver the next up leg in bank stocks performance (top panel, Chart 3). Another of BCA's key themes for 2018 is a global capex upcycle; higher demand for capital goods should drive outsized capital formation in the year to come. Our U.S. commercial banks loans and leases model echoes this positive outlook, pointing to the best loan growth of the past 30 years (middle panel, Chart 3). Lastly, a low unemployment rate drives both expanding consumer credit and much better credit quality. At present, the unemployment rate is testing all-time lows, sending an unambiguously positive message for financials profitability (bottom panel, Chart 3). Despite the much-improved cyclical outlook and a revival of overall animal spirits, our valuation indicator (VI) suggests that financials are modestly undervalued. At this point in the cycle, we would expect a modest overvaluation; the implication is that financials should be a core portfolio overweight. Our technical indicator (TI) has approached overbought levels several times over the course of this bull market, though history suggests it can stay at elevated levels for a considerable time. Chart 2S&P Financials (Overweight)
S&P Financials (Overweight)
S&P Financials (Overweight)
Chart 3RS1 Rising Yields Are A Boon To Financials Earnings
RS1 Rising Yields Are A Boon To Financials Earnings
RS1 Rising Yields Are A Boon To Financials Earnings
S&P Industrials (Overweight) Our industrials CMI (Chart 4) has gone vertical and is very near its all-time high. A combination of a supportive currency, a recovery in commodity prices and synchronized global growth are responsible for the rise. A falling U.S. dollar and capital goods producers' top line growth acceleration have historically moved hand-in-hand as this group is one of the most international of the S&P 500. The trade-weighted U.S. dollar has fallen by more than 10% from its most recent peak at the end of 2016 which suggests U.S. industrials should have a leg up in sales for the year to come (top panel, Chart 5). The slide in the U.S. dollar is coming at an opportune time; global growth is remarkably synchronized (and remains a key BCA theme for 2018) and has proven an excellent harbinger of industrials margins (bottom panel, Chart 5). Overall, an expanding top line and widening margins imply solid relative EPS gains. Our valuation gauge is near the neutral zone, where it has been for much of the past 3 years as the market has failed to capture the sector's outlook strength. Our TI echoes the neutral message, having unwound a significant overbought position at the beginning of last year. Chart 4S&P Industrials (Overweight)
S&P Industrials (Overweight)
S&P Industrials (Overweight)
Chart 5Global Euphoria Should Lift Industrials
Global Euphoria Should Lift Industrials
Global Euphoria Should Lift Industrials
S&P Energy (Overweight) Our energy CMI (Chart 6) has maintained its upward trajectory after bouncing off all-time lows last year. Importantly, the relative share performance does not yet reflect the drastically improved cyclical conditions, underpinning our overweight recommendation. Falling oil inventories and rising prices (top and second panel, Chart 7) combined with solid gains in domestic production underlie the CMI recovery. Our key themes for 2018 of a global capex expansion and synchronized global growth should be the most important drivers for energy stocks this year. With respect to the former, the capex intentions from the Dallas Fed survey hit their highest level in a decade, which usually presages domestic oil patch expansion and energy stock outperformance (third panel, Chart 7) With respect to global growth, emerging markets/Chinese demand is the swing determinant of overall oil demand, and non-OECD demand has been moving higher for most of the past year (bottom panel, Chart 7). Our VI has retreated far into undervalued territory, a result of the aforementioned failure of stocks to react to the enticing macro outlook. The TI too is in deeply oversold levels, suggesting that an oversold bounce could soon occur at a time when valuations are so appealing. Chart 6S&P Energy (Overweight)
S&P Energy (Overweight)
S&P Energy (Overweight)
Chart 7Energy Share Prices Have Trailed Oils Recovery
Energy Share Prices Have Trailed Oil's Recovery Energy Share Prices Have Trailed Oils Recovery
Energy Share Prices Have Trailed Oil's Recovery Energy Share Prices Have Trailed Oils Recovery
S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight) Our consumer staples CMI (Chart 8) has turned up recently, following a two year decline. Strong employment gains and positive retail sales are the key pillars underlying the modest recovery. The euphoric consumer continues to push our consumer staples EPS model higher, now pointing to the best earnings growth of the past 5 years (middle panel, Chart 9). Overall industry exports are expanding at a healthy clip as a consequence of a softening U.S. dollar and robust European and rebounding emerging markets demand. Deflating raw food commodity prices are offsetting rising energy and labor input costs, heralding a sideways move to margins. Sell side analysts are also currently penciling in a lateral profit margin move (bottom panel, Chart 9). Investors have been vehemently avoiding staples stocks during the board market's uninterrupted run up, and have put our positioning offside. However, in the context of our cyclical over defensive portfolio bent we refrain from putting all our eggs in one basket, and prefer to keep consumer staples as our sole defensive sector overweight. Further, our VI is waving a green flag as consumer staples are now nearly two standard deviations below their 30-year mean valuation. Technical conditions too are completely washed out, signaling widespread bearishness, which is positive from a contrary perspective. Chart 8S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight)
S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight)
S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight)
Chart 9Robust Consumer Confidence Bodes Well
Robust Consumer Confidence Bodes Well
Robust Consumer Confidence Bodes Well
S&P Utilities (Neutral) Our utilities CMI (Chart 10) has spent the last decade in a long-term downtrend, albeit one with periodic countertrend moves. The key underlying factors are natural gas prices and relative spending on utilities, both of which have been retreating since 2008 (middle panel, Chart 11). Encouragingly, the sector's wage bill has slowed from punitively high levels, though pricing power has followed it down, implying muted margin changes (bottom panel, Chart 11). Like other defensive sectors, utilities have underperformed cyclical sectors in the last year; utilities equities trade as fixed income proxies, and a rising interest rate environment is punitive. As a result of the underperformance and relatively constant earnings, valuations have collapsed to the neutral zone. We reacted by booking solid gains and upgrading to a benchmark allocation earlier this year; synchronized global growth and higher interest rates are headwinds for this niche defensive sector and prevent us from lifting positions further. Our TI has fallen steeply over the past year and is now closing in on two standard deviations below the 30-year average. Chart 10S&P Utilities (Neutral)
S&P Utilities (Neutral)
S&P Utilities (Neutral)
Chart 11Pricing Is Falling But Margins Look Neutral
Pricing Is Falling But Margins Look Neutral
Pricing Is Falling But Margins Look Neutral
S&P Real Estate (Neutral) Our real estate CMI (Chart 12) has been in decline since its most recent peak at the end of 2016. This is confirmed by a darkened outlook for REITs; rents have crested while the vacancy rate found its nadir in 2016, suggesting further rent weakness on the horizon (top panel, Chart 13). Further, bankers appear less willing to extend commercial real estate credit, despite recent stability in underlying prices; declines in credit availability will directly impact REIT valuations (bottom panel, Chart 13). Our VI is consistent with BCA's Treasury bond indicator (not shown), indicating that both are at fair value. Our TI is starting to firm from extremely oversold levels, a positive indication for both 12- and 24-month relative performance. Chart 12S&P Real Estate (Neutral)
S&P Real Estate (Neutral)
S&P Real Estate (Neutral)
Chart 13Peaking Rents and Tight Credit Are Headwinds
Peaking Rents and Tight Credit Are Headwinds
Peaking Rents and Tight Credit Are Headwinds
S&P Materials (Neutral) Our materials CMI (Chart 14) has maintained its downward trajectory, largely due to the ongoing Fed tightening cycle. The heavyweight chemicals component of the materials index typically sees earnings (and hence stock prices) underperform as rates are moving higher (top panel, Chart 15). BCA's view remains that a sizable selloff in the bond markets is the most likely scenario in 2018, representing a substantial headwind to sector performance. Still, the news is not all negative. Exceptionally strong global demand growth has revitalized chemicals prices (bottom panel, Chart 15). Combined with the industry's relatively newfound restraint, capacity has not overextended and the resulting productivity gains bode well for earnings growth. Despite the improving outlook, valuations have been retreating for much of the past year and our VI has fallen back to the neutral zone. Our TI has been hovering near the neutral line for the past year, though a recent hook downward indicates a loss of momentum and downside relative performance risks. Chart 14S&P Materials (Neutral)
S&P Materials (Neutral)
S&P Materials (Neutral)
Chart 15Rising Rates Are Offset By Improving Demand
Rising Rates Are Offset By Improving Demand
Rising Rates Are Offset By Improving Demand
S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight) Our consumer discretionary CMI (Chart 16) has fallen back after reaching highs earlier in 2017, though remains elevated relative to the long term trend. Rising interest rates (top panel, Chart 17) are more than offsetting higher home prices and real wage growth, both have which have recently stalled. This rising short-term interest rate backdrop is not conducive to owning the extremely interest rate-sensitive equities that fall into the S&P consumer discretionary index. Both the household financial obligation ratio and household debt service payments have bottomed and are actually increasing. A higher interest rate backdrop will sustain the upward pressure on both and likely weigh on consumer discretionary relative share prices (third and bottom panels, Chart 17). This underpins our recent downgrade to a below benchmark allocation. Elevated valuations support our negative thesis as our valuation indicator has been rising recently out of the neutral zone. Our TI has fully recovered from oversold levels, and is now well into overbought territory, though historically this indicator has been excessively volatile. Chart 16S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight)
S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight)
S&P Consumer Discretionary (Underweight)
Chart 17Higher Borrowing Costs Bode Ill For Consumer Discretionary
Higher Borrowing Costs Bode Ill For Consumer Discretionary
Higher Borrowing Costs Bode Ill For Consumer Discretionary
S&P Health Care (Underweight) Our health care CMI (Chart 18) rolled over last year and has been treading water at these lower levels, driven by weak fundamentals in the key pharmaceuticals sector. Poor pricing power, a soft spending backdrop and a depreciating U.S. dollar have been pressuring the sector and keeping a tight lid on the CMI (top and second panels, Chart 19). Other non-pharma indicators are mixed as lower healthcare consumer spending is offset by a tick up in overall pricing power. Relative valuations have fallen deep into undervalued territory and are approaching one standard deviation below the 25 year average. Our TI too has reversed course and is well into oversold territory. However, the message from our health care earnings model is that sector earnings will continue to decelerate; this environment in not conducive for a sector re-rating (bottom panel, Chart 19). Chart 18S&P Health Care (Underweight)
S&P Health Care (Underweight)
S&P Health Care (Underweight)
Chart 19Pharma Pricing Power Continues To Collapse
Pharma Pricing Power Continues To Collapse
Pharma Pricing Power Continues To Collapse
S&P Telecommunication Services (Underweight) Our telecom services CMI (Chart 20), after moving sideways for much of the past decade, has recently fallen to a new 30-year low. Extreme deflation continues to reign in the beleaguered sector as relative consumer outlays on telecom services have nosedived (top panel, Chart 21) which is broadly matched by melting selling prices (middle panel, Chart 21) as demand contracts. This is reflected in our S&P telecom services revenue growth model, which remains deep in contractionary territory (bottom panel, Chart 21). The sector remains chronically cheap, exacerbated by the recent sell-off, and is currently as cheap as it has ever been. Still, given the brutal operating environment, we think such valuations have created a value trap. Our Technical Indicator has sunk but, like the VI, cycles deep in the sell zone have not proven reliable indicators that a relative bounce is in the offing. We recently downgraded the sector to underweight and added it to our high-conviction underweight list based on the factors noted above.1 Chart 20S&P Telecommunication Services (Underweight)
S&P Telecommunication Services (Underweight)
S&P Telecommunication Services (Underweight)
Chart 21Telecom Services Remain A Value Trap
Telecom Services Remain A Value Trap
Telecom Services Remain A Value Trap
S&P Technology (Underweight, Upgrade Alert) The technology CMI (Chart 22) has been falling for the past three years, driven by ongoing relative pricing power declines and new order weakness. However, the sector has proven resilient, at least until recently, as a handful of stocks (the FANGs, excluding the consumer discretionary components) and the red-hot semiconductor group have provided support. Still, market euphoria aside, tech stocks thrive in a disinflationary/deflationary environment and suffer during inflationary periods; inflation is gradually rising after a prolonged disinflationary period (bottom panel, Chart 23). Valuations, while still in the neutral zone, have reached their highest level in a decade. This may prove risky should inflation mount faster than expected; a de-rating phase in technology would likely follow. Our TI is extremely overbought, though it has been at this high level for several years. Chart 22S&P Technology (Underweight, Upgrade ALert)
S&P Technology (Underweight, Upgrade ALert)
S&P Technology (Underweight, Upgrade ALert)
Chart 23Inflation Is No Friend To Tech
Inflation Is No Friend To Tech
Inflation Is No Friend To Tech
Size Indicator (Neutral Small Vs. Large Caps) Our size CMI (Chart 24) has fallen back to the boom/bust line. Keep in mind that this CMI is not designed as a directional trend predictor, but rather as a buy/sell oscillator; the current message is neutral. Small company business optimism is near modern highs, as pricing and consumption vigor push domestic revenues higher (top panel, Chart 25). A smaller government footprint, i.e. fewer regulatory hurdles, and tax relief will disproportionately benefit SMEs. Earlier this year, we downgraded our recommendation on small caps vs. large caps to a neutral allocation, based on a deterioration in small cap margins and too-high leverage.2 Recent NFIB surveys would suggest this move was prescient; firms reporting planned labor compensation increases have steadied near a two decade high, while price increases are trailing far behind (middle panel, Chart 25). With "quality of labor" having overtaken "taxes" as the single most important problem facing businesses, labor compensation growth seems likely to continue moving up at an elevated pace and small cap margins should likely continue to trail large cap peers (bottom panel, Chart 25). Valuations have improved and small caps are relatively undervalued, though our TI echoes a neutral message. Chart 24Size Indicator (Neutral Small Vs. Large Caps)
Size Indicator (Neutral Small Vs. Large Caps)
Size Indicator (Neutral Small Vs. Large Caps)
Chart 25Small Businesses Remain Exceptionally Confident
Small Businesses Remain Exceptionally Confident
Small Businesses Remain Exceptionally Confident
Chris Bowes, Associate Editor chrisb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Manic-Depressive?" dated February 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True?" dated January 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
This week's NFIB small business survey was remarkable; small business optimism is at its second highest level in the survey's 45 year history with an all-time record high 32% of respondents saying that now is a good time to expand (top and second panel). Such a positive reading underscores one of BCA's key themes for 2018 of a capex revival underpinning a virtuous cycle of positive earnings growth. It also adds some wind to the sails of the small cap index, which has been solidly resilient. Earlier this year, we downgraded our recommendation on small caps vs. large caps to a neutral allocation, based on a deterioration in small cap margins and too-high leverage.1 Drilling down into this NFIB survey would suggest this move was prescient; firms reporting planned labor compensation increases have steadied near a two decade high while price increases are trailing far behind (third panel). With "quality of labor" having overtaken "taxes" as the single most important problem facing businesses, labor compensation growth seems likely to continue moving up at an elevated pace and small cap margins should likely continue to trail large cap peers (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We reiterate our neutral capitalization bias with a downgrade alert. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True?" dated January 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Labor Costs Should Contain Small Cap Exuberance
Labor Costs Should Contain Small Cap Exuberance
As noted in the previous Insight, relative margin declines for small caps seem more likely than gains. Meanwhile, small cap balance sheets have never been less prepared for such a downturn than they are right now. The relative net debt-to-EBITDA ratio has gone parabolic and is making all-time highs (middle panel). Rising small cap indebtedness, at a time when cash flow growth is anemic, suggests that the S&P 600 is increasingly vulnerable. Not only are interest payments eating into income, but also refinancing risk is a threat in an era of rising interest rates. The recently passed tax reform legislation caps interest expense tax deductibility at 30% of EBITDA this year. Nearly 30% of Russell 2000 constituents had an interest expense greater than 30% of EBITDA, compared with 3% of the S&P 500. The upshot is that stretched small cap balance sheets are delivering an additional P&L headwind that large cap peers don't face. Bottom Line: Factors are starting to line up for small cap underperformance in 2018. We are adding a downgrade alert to small caps vs. large caps. Please see Monday's Weekly Report for more details.
Part 2 And Balance Sheets Are Not Ready For Them
Part 2 And Balance Sheets Are Not Ready For Them
Small businesses have been in an ebullient mood since the Trump administration took power as key concerns, including reducing regulation and lowering corporate taxes have been aggressively addressed. However, recent readings from the Atlanta wage growth tracker and a survey of small business planned wage increases have suddenly diverged (second panel). The implication seems to be that small businesses are struggling to retain talent to a degree the greater economy is not experiencing. This looks to be borne out by the relative operating margins of the S&P 500 and 600 where the former is nearing cyclical highs and the latter remains distantly below the levels of only 5 years ago (third panel). At the same time, small caps continue to trade at a premium valuation to their large cap peers (bottom panel). We think this understates the true valuation gap as nearly 15% of S&P 600 component firms have negative or no forward EPS estimates. Bottom Line: Small caps seem overvalued relative to large cap earnings growth potential. Please see the next Insight for more details.
Part 1 Dark Clouds Forming For Small Caps
Part 1 Dark Clouds Forming For Small Caps
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Relative sector index composition, the macro backdrop, relative operating metrics along with compelling valuations and washed out technicals suggest that a value over growth style bias is warranted. Rising interest rates and a flattening yield curve, coupled with increasing relative indebtedness and lack of relative profit growth signal that the time is right to shift the capitalization bias to a neutral setting. Recent Changes Shift the style bias and favor value over growth today. Book profits in the small over large cap size bias of 2% since the mid-August 2016 inception. Table 1
Too Good To Be True?
Too Good To Be True?
Feature Equities catapulted to new all-time highs last week as earnings season got underway. Upbeat bank reports set the tone, and SPX profits are slated to register a 12% growth rate for both Q4/2017 and calendar 2017. Current year EPS estimates have been aggressively ratcheted higher, on the back of the tax bill passage, rising from 12% to 16% in a mere three weeks, according to Thomson Reuters/IBES. Our SPX EPS growth model agrees that, cyclically, profits will continue to drift higher and a low-to-mid double-digit growth rate is likely for 2018, as we posited last week.1 While the synchronized and disinflationary global growth narrative continues to dominate, we are a bit uneasy. The eerie calm overtaking the markets, and headlines like this recent one from Bloomberg "The Stock Market Never Goes Down" give us cause for concern. As a reminder, the SPX is up 1000 points since the 1800 level registered in early-2016. Put differently, the SPX has been rising by roughly 25% per annum for the past two years. Such a breakneck pace is unsustainable. Our sense is that from a tactical perspective, equities are currently extremely stretched and warrant some caution. Therefore, this week we identify five key signposts we are closely monitoring that are sending clear warning signals (for a more comprehensive list please see the tactical section of our August 7th White Paper).2 First, our reflation gauge (RG) has taken a turn for the worse (Chart 1). At the margin, higher oil prices and interest rates may begin to bite. Historically, our RG has been an excellent leading indicator of both sentiment that has vaulted to multi-decade highs and CITI's economic surprise index. Our global reflation gauge emits a similar signal (not shown). Mean reversion is looming. Second, speculation runs rampant. Our Equity Speculation Index (ESI) is close to two standard deviations above the historical mean. Since the early-1960s, the ESI has only been higher during the dotcom bubble (Chart 2). While the ESI can rise further, it is at least waving a yellow flag. Investor sentiment has also gone parabolic with the bull/bear ratio reaching a level last seen right before the 1987 crash (third panel, Chart 2). Chart 1Yellow Flag
Yellow Flag
Yellow Flag
Chart 2Extended
Extended
Extended
Third, financial conditions are as good as they get. The St. Louis Fed Financial Stress Index recently hit an all-time low level. Similarly, Goldman Sachs' and the Chicago Fed's National Financial Conditions indexes are also near uncharted territory. This should be cause for some trepidation (Chart 3). Fourth, extended EPS breadth, all time highs in net earnings revisions, stretched median valuations and overbought technical conditions are near levels that have marked previous temporary broad market pullbacks (Chart 4). Finally, gold is behaving strangely. While the U.S. dollar's selloff explains part of the recent jump in the shiny metal, we think bullion may be sniffing out some trouble as it remains a true safe haven asset. Either real rates have to come down or gold has to reverse course; such a steep divergence is unsustainable (gold shown inverted, top panel, Chart 5). Chart 3As Good As It Gets
As Good As It Gets
As Good As It Gets
Chart 4Peak Euphoria?
Peak Euphoria?
Peak Euphoria?
Chart 5What's Gold Sniffing Out?
What's Gold Sniffing Out?
What's Gold Sniffing Out?
Since December 18th our strategy has been to book gains in tactical trades and to refrain from altering our cyclical over defensive portfolio positioning bent,3 as we do not foresee a recession in the coming 9-12 months.4 We continue to pursue this strategy and were a 5-10% selloff to materialize, we would "buy the dip". In addition, this week we introduce/apply a risk management measure to our recently revealed high-conviction 2018 calls.5 Almost all of our calls are in the black outperforming the broad market on average by 640bps (Chart 6). While we are not compelled to change our views just yet, our confidence is not as high as two months ago, especially in the two calls that are registering double-digit relative returns. Thus, we suggest that clients institute a tight stop in these trades (please see the "Stop" column in the "Top High-Conviction Calls For 2018" table on page 15). Going forward, we will introduce such risk management trailing stops once a call clears the 10% relative return mark. This week we shift both our style and size biases. Chart 6Time To Set Stops
Too Good To Be True?
Too Good To Be True?
Buy Value At The Expense Of Growth There is a once in a decade opportunity to prefer value over growth (V/G) stocks, and we recommend shifting our style bias in favor of value stocks. Typically, the V/G ratio moves in multi-year up and down cycles, and at the current juncture it is a screaming buy, if history at least rhymes. Chart 7 shows that relative share prices are not only near previous troughs, but also 1.5 standard deviations below the six-decade time trend. Chart 7Compelling Entry Point
Compelling Entry Point
Compelling Entry Point
In fact we already have a flavor of this style preference in one of our market-neutral pair trades, long financials / short tech (for additional details on this trade please refer to our "Disentangling Pricing Power" early-summer report). Table 2 depicts why this is so: financials stocks dominate value indexes, while IT comprises 40% of growth indexes. Sector composition also suggests that a long energy / short health care trade would mimic this V/G preference, as energy stocks offer a lot of value, whereas health care stocks sit prominently in growth indexes (Table 2 & Chart 8). While we do not have this pair trade on per se, as a reminder we are overweight the energy sector and underweight health care stocks; we are also overweight financials and underweight tech (please see page 14 for a complete picture of our current sector recommendations). Table 2Sector Composition
Too Good To Be True?
Too Good To Be True?
With regard to macro variables, these sector preferences would equate to a positive interest rate and oil price correlation. Indeed, the 10-year Treasury yield moves in lockstep with the V/G ratio and similarly oil prices are joined at the hip with relative performance (Chart 9). Chart 8Value/Growth Replicas
Value/Growth Replicas
Value/Growth Replicas
Chart 9Rising Oil And Rates = Buy Value / Sell Growth
Rising Oil And Rates = Buy Value / Sell Growth
Rising Oil And Rates = Buy Value / Sell Growth
One of BCA's themes for 2018 is higher interest rates, with our bond strategists still expecting an inflation-driven rise in the 10-year Treasury yield near 3%. Similarly, BCA' commodity strategists remain constructive on oil prices. Taken together, these BCA views warrant a value over growth preference. Importantly, since the depths of the GFC, value has underwhelmed growth by a wide margin. Likely, this growth over value preference reflected central bank interest rate suppression, which boosted the multiple investors were willing to pay for perceived growth at a time when growth was scarce. Now that the Fed has lifted rates five times since December 2015 and is on track to do so three more times this year, value should take the reins (Chart 10). Moreover, the Fed is unwinding its balance sheet and that tightening in monetary conditions, at the margin, favors value over growth (Chart 11). Chart 10Avoid Growth Stocks During Fed Tightening Cycles...
Avoid Growth Stocks During Fed Tightening Cycles...
Avoid Growth Stocks During Fed Tightening Cycles...
Chart 11...And During Quantitative Tightening
...And During Quantitative Tightening
...And During Quantitative Tightening
On the currency front, the V/G ratio has had a tight positive correlation with the EUR/USD foreign exchange rate (Chart 12). Once again sector composition has been underpinning this relationship. However, sector composition is constantly shifting. Currently, a larger percentage of growth stocks have international sales (especially tech) compared with more domestically-oriented value stocks. Thus, the depreciating U.S. dollar is a risk to our value over growth preference On the operating metric front, value stocks have the upper hand versus their growth siblings. Our relative composite pricing power gauge has swung by eight percentage points from trough-to-peak and heralds a deflation exit for relative top line growth (middle panel, Chart 13). Chart 12Depreciating U.S. Dollar Is ##br##Typically A Boon To The V/G Ratio
Depreciating U.S. Dollar Is A Boon To The V/G Ratio
Depreciating U.S. Dollar Is A Boon To The V/G Ratio
Chart 13Relative Pricing Power ##br##Favors Value Over Growth
Relative Pricing Power Favors Value Over Growth
Relative Pricing Power Favors Value Over Growth
Sell-side analysts have taken notice and have been aggressively bumping their net earnings revisions in favor of value versus growth indexes. As mentioned earlier, rising oil price inflation and better credit pricing power are a boon to V/G profit prospects (bottom panel, Chart 13). Valuations and technicals also suggest that investors should overweight value at the expense of growth. Our relative Valuation Indicator (VI) has recently sunk to a level last hit in the early-2000s, approaching one standard deviation below the historical mean. Similarly, the V/G ratio is oversold and our relative Technical Indicator (TI) has fallen to a level that has marked previous bull market phases (Chart 14). Finally, over the past thirty years V/G price moves have been a mirror image of both junk bond yields and vol. In other words, a value over growth preference has been synonymous with a "risk on" backdrop (junk yield and the VIX shown inverted, Chart 15). However, these close correlations appear to have broken down since the Great Recession as the Fed's unconventional monetary policies functioned well in keeping a lid on vol and suppressing bond yields across the fixed income spectrum. Chart 14Value Vs Growth Stocks Are Cheap And Oversold
Value Vs Growth Stocks Are Cheap And Oversold
Value Vs Growth Stocks Are Cheap And Oversold
Chart 15Bet On Convergence
Bet On Convergence
Bet On Convergence
As the Fed winds down its balance sheet there are good odds that volatility will make a comeback and interest rates will also shoot higher. The upshot is that these inverse correlations get reestablished in the coming quarters via a rise in the V/G ratio, an increase in vol and a selloff in the junk corporate bond market (Chart 15). Adding it up, relative sector composition, the macro backdrop, relative operating metrics along with a compelling VI reading and our washed out TI suggest that a value over growth style bias is warranted. Bottom Line: Boost value stock exposure at the expense of growth equities. The V/G ratio offers an excellent entry point with limited downside risk. Book Profits In Small Caps Vs. Large Caps And Move To The Sidelines In August 2016, we recommended a small over large cap (S/L) bias, predating the Trump election victory, on the back of five key drivers: non-inflationary growth would persist allowing central banks to stay incredibly accommodative, emerging market tail risks had eased taming equity market vol, small/large sector composition differentials, relative EPS fundamentals and restored relative valuations. Given that most of these factors have moved in favor of small versus large caps and some are starting to shift against the S/L ratio, does it still pay to have a small cap size bias? The short answer is no, and we now recommend investors book profits and move to the sidelines. While the euphoric tailwind surrounding the new administration and its promise to slash red tape and taxes tripped us up and we failed to monetize 10%+ gains, better late than never. First, from a big picture perspective, the near two decade S/L outperformance phase is running on fumes and it has likely put in a secular top in late-2016 (Chart 16). Similar to the style bias, this ratio also tends to move in long cycles. We are clearly in extended territory hovering at one standard deviation above the historical time trend. Chart 16Major Top?
Major Top?
Major Top?
Second, interest rates bear close attention. Rising interest rates on the back of an inflationary impulse is BCA's view for the coming year and, coupled with the yield curve narrowing, are a harbinger of small cap trouble. Chart 17 shows the tight positive correlation between the S/L ratio and the yield curve, and the current message is to avoid small caps. Small caps are mostly domestically exposed and are ultra-sensitive to interest rate moves as small and medium businesses rely more heavily on their bankers for credit, rather than debt markets. When the yield curve flattens late in the cycle it is typically because the Fed is aggressively tightening monetary policy. While such a monetary backdrop is neither conducive to small nor to large firms, small caps suffer more, at the margin. Third, we are perplexed by the lack of profit growth in the small cap complex. It has now been over a year since Trump came into power and small cap EPS underperformance has been extremely prominent (top panel, Chart 18). The 12-month forward profit growth delta has also widened considerably over the past year to the detriment of small caps (middle panel, Chart 18). While the U.S. dollar's sizable depreciation explains part of the profit divergence, i.e. as the currency falls foreign sales exposed large caps enjoy a significant translation gain, relative indebtedness is also likely playing a key role. The bottom panel of Chart 19 shows the net debt-to-EBITDA ratio for the small cap and large cap indexes. The relative ratio has gone parabolic and is making all-time highs. Rising small cap indebtedness, at a time when cash flow growth is anemic, suggests that the S&P 600 is increasingly vulnerable. Not only are interest payments eating into income, but also refinancing risk is a threat in an era of rising interest rates. Under such a backdrop, small cap stocks should not trade at a valuation premium (bottom panel, Chart 18). Chart 17Yield Curve Blues
Yield Curve Blues
Yield Curve Blues
Chart 18Small Cap Profit Trouble
Small Cap Profit Trouble
Small Cap Profit Trouble
Chart 19Mind The Small Cap Indebtedness
Mind The Small Cap Indebtedness
Mind The Small Cap Indebtedness
Bottom Line: The time is ripe to take profits of 2% and move to the sidelines in the capitalization bias. Were our indicators to further deteriorate, we would not hesitate to fully reverse course and prefer large to small caps. Stay tuned. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "White Paper: Introducing Our U.S. Equity Sector Earnings Models," dated January 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "White Paper: U.S. Equity Market Indicators (Part I)," dated August 7, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Top 5 Reasons To Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives," dated October 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "EPS And 'Nothing Else Matters'," dated December 18, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "High-Conviction Calls," dated November 27, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth and stay neutral small over large caps.
Highlights BCA expects the 2/10 curve to steepen in 1H in 2018, then flatten in 2H. U.S. equities, the stock-to-bond ratio and oil thrive when the curve is flat. Small caps struggle. Record household net worth matters more for household saving than for consumption. Feature Wrangling over the GOP's tax plan and the Federal Open Market Committee's final meeting of 2017 provided the backdrop for financial markets last week. The dollar was the big loser, as investors doubted the ability of the Republican leadership in Congress to find the votes needed to pass the bill. BCA's view remains that Congress will pass a tax cut package by the end of Q1 2018. Even though inflation missed the Fed's forecast in 2017 (Chart 1), the FOMC left its inflation and interest projections unchanged for the next two years given its outlook for stronger growth and lower unemployment. Inflation will reach the 2% target by the end of 2019. As a consequence, the Fed expects to lift interest rates three more times in 2018 and another two times in 2019 (Chart 2). Chart 1Persistent Inflation Shortfall
Persistent Inflation Shortfall
Persistent Inflation Shortfall
Chart 2The FOMC's Latest Forecasts
The FOMC's Latest Forecasts
The FOMC's Latest Forecasts
The economy is now expected to grow 2.5% in 2018, up from the Fed's previous forecast of 2.1%. Growth is seen remaining above the 1.8% trend rate for three years. The Fed nudged its forecasts for the unemployment rate down by 0.2% for the next three years, based on the higher growth projections. The jobless rate is now expected to dip to 3.9% in 2018 and 2019, before ticking up to 4.0% in 2020. If anything, these forecasts look too conservative. Importantly, the Fed left its estimate for long-run unemployment unchanged at 4.6%. Therefore, the labor market is expected to tighten further beyond full employment. Consequently, wage gains should accelerate and allow inflation to return to the Fed's 2% target in 2019. We don't have any major disagreements with the Fed's interest rate forecasts for 2018, but inflation must turn higher. The Fed has raised rates five times over the last two years, but CPI inflation has made no progress toward the 2% objective. However, the New York Fed's Underlying Inflation Gauge continues to move steadily higher (Chart 1, panel 1). Nevertheless, the real Fed funds moved closer to its neutral level and the yield curve has continued to flatten (panel 3). Bottom Line: BCA expects the yield curve to steepen in the first half of 2018, driven either by rising inflation or a more dovish Fed. However, a flat curve is not the death knoll for risk assets. The yield curve will not invert until inflation has recovered to the Fed's target. This means that a period of modest curve steepening is likely, driven either by rising inflation or a more dovish Fed. Powell Versus The Market BCA's view is that the current paths of inflation and the yield curve are unsustainable. If the Fed continues to hike rates, but inflation fails to rise, then the yield curve will invert in the coming months. The inversion would signal that bond investors anticipate a recession and the Fed has not achieved its inflation target. Such an obvious policy error will not be permitted to occur, which leaves three possible outcomes for Fed policy and the Treasury curve during the next six months.1 1) The Fed Is Right In this scenario, inflation would rebound in the coming months, pushing up the compensation for inflation protection embedded in long-dated bond yields. This would cause an increase in long-maturity nominal yields and probably impart a steepening bias to the yield curve, depending on how quickly the Fed lifts rates. BCA's Outlook for 2018 makes a case why inflation will likely bottom in the coming months. Therefore, we view the "Fed is Right" scenario as the most probable outcome.2 2) The Fed Is Proactive In another scenario, the Fed recognizes there is a risk of tightening the yield curve into inversion - and the economy into recession - if inflation stays low. Therefore, the Fed may proactively adopt a more dovish policy stance to prevent the yield curve from inverting. The yield curve would also steepen, but this time it would be a bull-steepener where short-maturity yields fall more than long-maturity yields. This outcome would be the least likely of our three scenarios. The Fed will cling to its forecast that inflation will climb, given that economic growth is accelerating. If inflation fails to respond, then risky assets will eventually sell-off. 3) The Fed Is Reactive The Fed has a strong track record of reacting to tighter financial conditions and risk-off periods in equities and credit markets. If the yield curve continues to flatten, then we will soon see credit spreads widen and equities sell-off. At that stage, the Fed would almost certainly respond by signaling a slower pace of rate hikes. This would steepen the curve and ease pressures on risky assets. We view this development as more likely than the one where the Fed is proactive. Trouble With The Curve BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy team expects that the 2/10 yield curve will languish between 0 and 50 bps in 2018. The curve will steepen from 53 bps in mid-December 2017 through mid-year 2018, and then flatten into year-end. Which asset classes would benefit if BCA's curve call is accurate? Charts 3 through 7 show how several key financial markets have performed in previous yield curve environments. Chart 3A shows that the S&P 500 performs best when the curve is flat (between 0 and 50 bps), with average annualized returns of 22% and median annualized returns of 21%. Moreover, S&P 500 returns are negative less than 5% of the time when the curve is flat, but are negative 25% of the time when the curve is very steep (+100 to +150 bps) (Chart 3B). In general, Chart 3A demonstrates that returns diminish as the curve climbs. Chart 3AS&P 500 Total Return & Yield Curve##BR##(1988- Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Chart 3BPercent Of Months With Negative##BR##S&P 500 Returns (1988- Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
A flat slope of the 2/10 curve is also the sweet spot for the stock-to-bond ratio (Chart 4A). Treasuries outperform stocks only in 5% of months when the 2/10 Treasury curve is flat (Chart 4B). As with stocks, the performance of the stock-to-bond ratio deteriorates as the curve steepens. The stock-to-bond ratio declines more than a third of the time when the curve is very steep. A 2/10 slope of +100 to +150 bps is the worst backdrop for the stock-to-bond ratio. Stocks underperform bonds 40% of the time in this situation. Chart 4AStock-To-Bond Total Return & Yield Curve##BR##(1988 - Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Chart 4BPercent Of Months With Negative##BR##Stock-To-Bond Total Return (1988 - Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
However, a flat curve is a poor setting for small-cap excess performance (Chart 5A). Small caps underperform large caps nearly 80% of the time when the curve is flat (Chart 5B). The average underperformance is 600 bps. Moreover, a flat curve is the most unhealthy climate for small-cap excess returns, even poorer than when the curve inverts. A precipitous curve is the best environment for small caps, with small caps outperforming large by 400 bps on average. Small caps beat large caps 60% of the time when the curve is between 100 and 150 bps. Chart 5AS&P Small/Large TOTAL Return & Yield Curve##BR##(1988- Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Chart 5BPercent Of Months With Negative##BR##S&P Small/Large Total Return (1988- Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Our U.S. Bond Strategy colleagues note that the flatter the curve, the higher the risk of a sell-off in high-yields relative to Treasuries.3 Junk bonds underperform Treasuries 48% of the time when the curve is flat, which we expect in 2018 (not shown). The implication for investors is that the first half of 2018 will be the best period for junk bond returns. Investment-grade corporates have a similar return profile relative to the curve. Oil performs best when the 2/10 curve is inverted (Chart 6A). However, WTI oil returns an annualized 10-15% when the curve is between 0 and 100 bps. Plus, oil is higher 75% of the time when the curve is between 50 and 100 bps, which is the environment we expect in the first half of next year (Chart 6B). Chart 6AWTI Crude Oil Price Return & Yield Curve##BR##(1988- Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Chart 6BPercent Of Months With Negative##BR##WTI Crude Oil Price Return (1988- Present)
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Forward earnings per share perform well with a flat curve, but earnings growth is optimal when the curve is inverted. The steeper the curve, the bigger the headwind for EPS. Since 1988, earnings growth has been positive when the curve inverts and is positive 95% of the time when the curve is flat. Chart 7 provides the historical context for a flat yield curve (0 to 50 bps) in terms of the performance of stocks, Treasury bonds, the stock-to-bond ratio, small caps and oil. The Appendix (see page 13) also includes three other charts that provide a perspective on asset class performance when the curve is moderately steep (50 to 100 bps), steep (100 to 150bps) and above 150 bps. Chart 7Stocks, Treasuries, Small Caps And Oil When The Curve Is Flat
Stocks, Treasuries, Small Caps And Oil When The Curve Is Flat
Stocks, Treasuries, Small Caps And Oil When The Curve Is Flat
Bottom Line: BCA expects that the yield curve will first steepen in 2018, then become flatter, ultimately spending most of the year between 0 and 50 bps. A flat curve is the ideal environment for the S&P 500 and the stock-to-bond ratio. However, small cap stocks struggle when the curve is flat; BCA's view is that small caps will outperform large caps in 2018. A flat yield curve raises the risk of a sell-off in high yield, but provides a favorable grounding for oil, which is in line with BCA's fundamental view. BCA expects EPS growth will be positive next year; earnings growth is higher 75% of the time when the curve is flat. Household Net Worth Loses Influence Chart 8The Consumer Is In Good Shape
The Consumer Is In Good Shape
The Consumer Is In Good Shape
U.S. consumer health has improved markedly since early this year, driving BCA's Consumer Health Indicator into positive territory (Chart 8). These elevated readings should bolster household consumption well into 2018. The improvement supports BCA's view of a stronger U.S. economy alongside a global synchronized recovery, at least over the next 12 months. Real consumer spending is underpinned by advances in real disposable income stemming from increasingly healthy labor market. Moreover, household net worth has continued to soar to an all-time high in 2017Q3 as equity markets remain frothy and house prices stable. However, net worth's direct influence on overall household consumption is not as significant as before the Great Recession. During the housing bubble in the early 2000s, U.S. households leveraged their spending through extensive mortgage refinancing and mortgage equity withdrawal. Real estate was the principal holding on most households' balance sheets. However, as the Great Recession unfolded, household net worth suffered with a collapse in both house prices and equity markets. By 2009, U.S. households were tapped out and grossly over-indebted. Deleveraging is now over, U.S. households have re-fortified their balance sheets and consumer spending is back in line with income growth. In the long term, inflation-adjusted disposable income is more highly correlated with inflation-adjusted consumer spending growth than real household net worth (Chart 9). Positive momentum should continue to support further real consumer spending over the next few quarters, given that unemployment is at a 17-year low and consumer confidence is at a 17-year high, and also given elevated consumers' expectations of real income gains over the next year or two. Chart 9Consumer Spending More Correlated With Income Than Net Worth
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Household net worth matters more for household saving than for consumption. Chart 10 shows the inverse relationship between net worth and the saving rate. Empirical research has demonstrated the risk that the structural decline (since the mid-1990s) in personal savings has on consumer spending and the overall economy. An often cited conclusion drawn by the investment community is that a lower savings rate raises the risk of consumer retrenchment.4 Chart 10Low Savings Rate, Record High Household Net Worth And Rising Income Expectations
Low Savings Rate, Record High Household Net Worth And Rising Income Expectations
Low Savings Rate, Record High Household Net Worth And Rising Income Expectations
Even though the personal savings rate can be considered a contrarian measure for consumer spending, like many measures from the BEA national accounts (NIPA), it is subject to regular revisions. Over the long-term, according to the BEA, the level of the savings rate is often revised upwards but the trend over the last 45 years remains unchanged. There was a downtrend path to revisions in the mid-2000s housing bubble, but there has been a subtle uptrend since 2008 (Chart 11). Even so, in the long run, BCA views the low personal savings rate as a potential headwind for consumer spending as it cannot sustainably remain at its recovery low of 3.2%. However, rising income expectations and a sturdy labor market are offsets to depressed savings and will ensure that the economic expansion remains sustainable and, therefore, less vulnerable to volatile saving patterns. Does record high net worth alter the risks to the FOMC's goals of price stability and sustainable economic growth? In a recent research paper, the Federal Reserve of St-Louis looked at the most exuberant peaks in the ratio of household net worth to income in 1999 and 2006, which occurred before collapses in asset prices and recessions. Although caution is prescribed as household net worth keeps making new highs, the report noted that the composition of households' balance sheet is less alarming today than prior peaks, as equities and real estate relative to household income or total assets are more reasonable. Debt levels are also much more tame today than in 2006. With more immune balance sheets, households may be less vulnerable to unexpected shocks in the future (Chart 12).5 BCA's view is that financial vulnerabilities from the household sector are well contained. Outside of subprime auto loans, household borrowing is increasing modestly at an annual pace of 3.6%, in stark contrast with a 12.9% rate in the early-to-mid 2000s. Broad measures of household solvency, such as the household debt-to-income ratio, is within the range of the past few years and back to pre-recession levels. Furthermore, liquidity buffers (liquid assets to liabilities) are almost as high as the levels that preceded the equity market boom/bust in 1999-2000 (Chart 13). Chart 11Savings Rate Level Often Revised Upwards
Savings Rate Level Often Revised Upwards
Savings Rate Level Often Revised Upwards
Chart 12Household Sector Balance Sheet Composition
Household Sector Balance Sheet Composition
Household Sector Balance Sheet Composition
Chart 13Household Sector Buffers Are Solid
Household Sector Buffers Are Solid
Household Sector Buffers Are Solid
BCA expects the Fed to remain vigilant about financial stability.6 Policymakers will take comfort that household liquidity and solvency ratios have improved dramatically in the past nine years, aided by the cumulative gains in housing and financial assets. Bottom Line: The outlook for the U.S. consumer is bright as incomes continue to improve amid tight labor market conditions. However, record household net worth is more relevant today for savings than for consumption. The Fed should remain committed to gradual rate hikes, but the central bank's quandary will be to determine the optimal pace to foster maximum employment and price stability. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com Jizel Georges, Senior Analyst jizelg@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Proactive, Reactive Or Right?," published on December 12, 2017. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's "2018 Outlook Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course ," published December 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report "Proactive, Reactive Or Right?," published on December 12, 2017. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 4 "Should The Decline In The Personal Savings Rate Be A Cause For Concern?", Alan C. Garner, The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, 2006Q2; and "The Decline in the U.S. Personal Savings Rate: Is It Real and Is It A Puzzle?", Massimo Guidolin and Elizabeth A. La Jeunesse, The Federal Reserve Bank of St-Louis, November/December 2007. 5 "Household Wealth Is At A Post-WW II High: Should We Celebrate or Worry?", William R. Emmons and Lowell R. Ricketts, Federal Reserve Bank of St-Louis, In the Balance, Perspectives on Household Balance Sheets, May 2017. 6 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Powell's In Power," published on November 6, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. Appendix Chart 14U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Between 50 And 100 Bps
U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Between 50 And 100 Bps
U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Between 50 And 100 Bps
Chart 15U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Between 100 And 150 Bps
U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Between 100 And 150 Bps
U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Between 100 And 150 Bps
Chart 16U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Steeper Than 150 Bps
U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Steeper Than 150 Bps
U.S. Financial Markets When The 2/10 Curve Is Steeper Than 150 Bps