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Market Capitalization: Large / Small

Foreword Today we are publishing a charts-only report focused on the S&P 500, Cyclicals/Defensives, Growth/Value, and Small/Large. Many of the charts are self-explanatory; to some we have added a short commentary. The charts cover macro, valuations, fundamentals, technicals, and the uses of cash. Our goal is to equip you with all the data you need to make investment decisions along these style dimensions. We also include performance, valuations, and earnings growth expectations tables for all styles, sectors, industry groups, and industries (GICS 1, 2 and 3). We hope you will find this publication useful. We alternate between Style and Sector chart packs updates on a bi-monthly basis. Overarching Investment Themes Macro Is bad news good news again? Investors are caught in crosscurrents of worries and deteriorating economic data. The Citigroup Economic Surprise index is in  negative territory (Chart 1) – yet the US equity market defies gravity. The bad news is good news again, as it gives the Fed cover to keep a loose monetary policy for longer. Tapering: The Fed has broadcast its plans for tapering well in advance, and Fed Chair Jay Powell’s Jackson Hole speech, with its many caveats and uncertain timetable, produced a muted reaction from financial markets. However, investors exhaled with relief, when Powell explicitly separated the decision to taper from the timing of the first rate hike, conditioned on full employment, which is “a long way off”. Covid-19 Delta variant has caught investors off guard: "What does not kill us, mutates and tries again”. While a new wave of infections has dented consumer activity, there are early signs that it is cresting (Chart 2). Delta scare was a key reason for the underperformance of consumer services and cyclical stocks over the summer. Once fears of Delta subside, these groups will bounce back. Chart 1US Economic Data Disappoints US Economic Data Disappoints US Economic Data Disappoints Chart 2Delta Infections Are Cresting Delta Infections Are Cresting Delta Infections Are Cresting Supply chain disruptions are still rampant: Shipping costs have soared again in recent months: After falling below 10 this summer, the number of anchored containers ships waiting to offload in the West Coast ports has spiked again to 40, a level last seen in January 2021. Container freight costs have increased nearly five-fold from pre-pandemic levels (Chart 3). There are also significant backlogs of goods (Chart 4), and inventories have been drawn down to all-time low. It will take time for supply chains to normalize, with most industry participants expecting the situation to improve only in 2022. Chart 3Transportation Costs Have Surged Transportation Costs Have Surged Transportation Costs Have Surged Chart 4Supply Chain Bottlenecks Are Not Abating Supply Chain Bottlenecks Are Not Abating Supply Chain Bottlenecks Are Not Abating Labor shortages: : Companies are still struggling to fill job openings: There are 10 million job openings to slightly over eight million job seekers (Chart 5). That puts upward pressure on wages and increases companies’ costs. Disappointing jobs report: It is confounding, given strong demand for workers, that August payroll grew only by 235,000 jobs. While this low number may have resulted from the Delta hit to service industries, jobs data is volatile, and revisions are common. Next month's report will be a decisive data point for the Fed’s tapering timing decision. Chart 5Plenty Of Job Openings To Fill Plenty of Job Openings To Fill Plenty of Job Openings To Fill Chart 6Inflation Is Broadening Inflation Is Broadening Inflation Is Broadening Companies continue rising prices: Good news for corporate America is that its pricing power remains high, with 45% of companies planning on passing surging labor and supply costs on to consumers. This leads to a broadening of inflation across categories, with even trimmed means significantly overshooting 2% (Chart 6). While pricing power protects against significant margin compression, former peak margins are elusive. Consumer mood has soured: Consumers are well-aware of rising prices and expect inflation to exceed 6.5% within 12 months - high inflation is becoming embedded into consumer behavior and may become a self-fulfilling prophecy. The consumer confidence reading has slumped to a six-month low of 114 from 125 a month earlier. Many consumers have also postponed durable goods and house purchases discouraged by soaring prices and low inventories (Chart 7). Quality balance sheets outperformed: The wall of worries has resulted in strong balance sheet equities outperforming weak ones. This is also consistent with the classical performance of assets during the slowdown stage of the business cycle (Chart 8). Chart 7Consumer Are Discouraged By Prices And Shortages Of Inventory Consumer Are Discouraged By Prices And Shortages Of Inventory Consumer Are Discouraged By Prices And Shortages Of Inventory Chart 8Strong Balance Sheet Companies Outperformed During The Slowdown Strong Balance Sheet Companies Outperformed During The Slowdown Strong Balance Sheet Companies Outperformed During The Slowdown Valuations and Profitability Q2-2021 earnings season was remarkable both in terms of growth delivered (96% yoy%), and earnings surprise (88%). Earnings have grown at a 14% compound rate since 2019: Chart 9Earnings Growth Is Returning To Trend US Equity Chart Pack US Equity Chart Pack Now earnings have returned to trend, and we expect normalization of growth. Analysts expect flat QoQ growth for the next three quarters. These are timid expectations; barring a black swan event, earnings growth is likely to surprise on the upside (Chart 9). Earnings growth will provide the necessary impetus for the US equity markets to move higher, with the driver of returns shifting from multiple expansion to earnings growth and cash disbursements to shareholders. Valuations remain elevated with the S&P 500 trading at 21x forward earnings. However, this level of valuations is more of a speed limit for future gains as opposed to a harbinger of a bear market. Sentiment Buy the dip investor mentality prevails. The S&P 500 has not had a 10% correction for nearly a year. This can be explained by FOMO (fear of missing out), and $2 trillion in excess savings in the US: cash that many retail investors aim to park in US equities. Retail flows into domestic equities have been exceptionally strong (Chart 10). Uses of Cash Share buybacks and other shareholder-friendly activities are on the rise again and are expected to gain steam this year and next. S&P 500 buybacks have increased from $120B reported two months ago to nearly $180B – impressive. This is another driver of returns in addition to earnings growth (Chart 11). Chart 10Retail Investors Buy On Dips Retail Investors Buy On Dips Retail Investors Buy On Dips Chart 11Buybacks Are A Driver Of Returns Buybacks Are A Driver Of Returns Buybacks Are A Driver Of Returns Investment Implications Low for longer: Fed’s dovish stance, Delta scare, and deteriorating economic growth data suggest that rates are likely to remain “low for longer”, and tapering may be postponed till January 2022. S&P 500: We expect US equities to perform well into the balance of the year on the back of an easy fiscal and monetary policy and steady earnings growth. Growth vs Value: Economic growth continues to slow, the Delta variant is still at the forefront of investor worries, and the Fed is dovish: Interest-rate sensitive stocks, such as Growth and Technology sector will continue outperforming. Cyclicals vs Defensives: We expect consumer cyclicals to start performing again once the onset of Delta dissipates, and more people are willing to travel and eat out. We believe that this is imminent and we are watching Delta stats closely. We also believe that parts of the Industrial sector most exposed to restocking of inventories, infrastructure, and construction will perform strongly. Small vs Large: Small is an “out of the gate” asset class, which tends to surge at the first whiff of recovery. Recently, Small started outperforming on the news that the number of new Delta cases is rolling over. Small is cheap relative to Large, and most of the earnings downgrades are already in the price. We are getting more constructive on this asset class.   Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com S&P 500 Chart 12Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 13Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 14Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Chart 15Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Cyclicals Vs Defensives Chart 16Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 17Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 18Valuation And Technicals Valuation And Technicals Valuation And Technicals Chart 19Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Growth Vs Value Chart 20Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 21Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 22Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals   Small Vs Large Chart 23Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 24Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 25Valuations And Technicals Valuations and Technicals Valuations and Technicals Chart 26Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Recommended Allocation . Footnotes  
Highlights Earnings season was impressive, with 87% of companies beating analyst earnings expectations. Analysts’ targets were too low because a whopping 38% of companies provided negative forward guidance for the Q2-2021 results. The markets expect 12-17% earnings growth over the next 12 months. Growth is past its peak and is returning to trend. Earnings growth will pick up the baton from multiple expansion and will propel US equity markets further. Yet, returns will be lower than in the past due to high valuation “speed limit.” US equity market is expensive, and earnings growth with a 10% handle will not deliver a significant re-rating, while growth rates above 20% are unlikely. We still like the consumer theme: Earnings results were strong, and more growth is expected ahead, especially in the consumer services space. Overweight Health Care: Pent up demand for elective procedures will propel earnings growth higher. Overweight Industrials to benefit from the US manufacturing Renaissance long term, and from a rebound in earnings growth in response to the inventory restocking cycle and infrastructure spending short term. Stay underweight Materials: China slowing will take a toll on the earnings growth of industrial metals miners and on the Materials sector as a whole. Overweight Growth vs Value for now. Watch for a persistent rise in rates and steeping of the yield curve – once that happens, rotate into Value and Small Caps, which thrive in such a macroeconomic environment. Feature The Q2-2021 earnings season is coming to an end, and it is time to take stock of the companies’ results and validate our equity views on styles, sectors, and investment themes into the balance of the year. Review Of The Q2-2021 Earnings Season The S&P 500 Key Earnings Results Stats S&P 500 quarterly earnings grew 93% YoY, and sales increased by 23.5% YoY compared to the same quarter a year ago (Table 1). Q2-2021 earnings stand 29% above the Q2-2019 level, which translates into 14% annualized growth. CAGR for sales for the same period is 4.6%. 87% of the companies have beaten both sales and earnings expectations. Earnings surprise is 16%, while sales surprise is 4.6%. As our colleagues from US Investment Strategy (USIS) have observed, beats are unprecedented: Their magnitude is more than two standard deviations above the historical average (Chart 1). Table 1S&P 500 Q2-2021 Earnings And Sales Results Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Chart 1Earnings Surprises Are Unprecedented Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Decoding The S&P 500 Earnings Season Results While we are impressed with the earnings results delivered by the US companies, our reaction to these superb growth numbers and beats is tepid, like the market’s reaction. The average reaction to an EPS beat this earnings season was about 0.9%. Misses were penalized harshly with stocks falling 1.1%. S&P 500 is up only 2% since the beginning of the reporting season. There are a few reasons for this lukewarm reception: Analyst targets were too low: Ubiquitous beats of earnings and sales expectations indicate that the analyst targets were too low despite upgrades throughout the earnings season (downgrades are more typical). The bar was set too low because a whopping 38% of the companies provided negative forward guidance for the Q2-2021 results. Growth was lumpy: Much of the robust growth can be explained by what we can call two sides of the same coin, one being a low base for the comparisons – after all, in the summer of 2020, the economy was close to a standstill – and the other is a pent-up demand for goods and services. In other words, all the growth postponed in 2020 was delivered at once over this past couple of quarters. With that, a 14% annualized growth rate for the S&P 500 earnings since 2019, which smooths results over time, is strong but not exceptional. Corporate guidance was cautious: Many companies have warned investors that their high growth rates are unsustainable (31% of companies guided lower for Q3-2021). Since the markets are forward-looking, reported earnings growth is seen in the rearview mirror and is priced in, and it is future growth that matters. Earnings growth has returned to trend: Earnings have fully recovered from the pandemic dip. The street bottom-up EPS growth projections (according to Refinitiv) for the rest of 2021, 2022, and 2023 are based on that assumption (Chart 2). The corollary to the point above is that earnings growth has peaked (Chart 3, RHS): Earnings will grow forward along the trend line at about 6-8% annually, which is the historical average. Chart 2Earnings Growth Is Returning To Trend Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings What To Expect Over The Next Four Quarters? According to the data compiled by Refinitiv, analysts expect Q3-2021 earnings to be 5% (QoQ) below their Q2-2021 level, staying flat for the next couple of quarters and exceeding the current level only in Q2-2022 (Chart 3, LHS). Aggregating quarterly growth rates into next 12 months growth rate, analysts expect 12.6% YoY growth over the next 12 months. Chart 3Growth Has Peaked And Quarterly Earnings Are Expected To Be Almost Flat Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings We believe that these growth expectations are too low, as they are based on the expectation that over the next four quarters EPS will stay practically flat. Therefore, most of the 12.6% YoY growth can be attributed to a base effect. It is likely that YoY growth will be higher: Some sector earnings are still at a pre-pandemic level, while others should grow simply because the economy is expanding. IBES expects EPS NTM to grow at 17% over the next 12 months, which is slightly more realistic in our opinion (Chart 4). The difference with Refinitiv is in the calculation methodology. Our working assumption is that next year’s growth will be within the 12-17% YoY range. From Multiple Expansion To Earnings Growth! Return decomposition demonstrates that in 2020, the S&P 500 return was 26%, with 43% contributed by the multiple expansion, and 19% detracted by the earnings contraction: Over the past year, returns have been borrowed from the future, but this year is payback time. The source of the equity returns is shifting from multiple expansion to earnings growth. This means that 12%-17% expected EPS growth (and possibly more if we get a positive earnings surprise) in the upcoming four quarters will propel the markets higher (Chart 5). Chart 4IBES Expect Next 12 Months Growth To Be 17% IBES Expect Next 12 Months Growth To Be 17% IBES Expect Next 12 Months Growth To Be 17% Chart 5Earnings Growth Replaces Multiple Expansion As A Driver Of Returns Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Will the S&P 500 Grow Into Its Big Valuations Shoes? Not So Fast At present, the S&P 500 is trading at 21.3x forward earnings (PE NTM), which is steep compared to a historical average of 18x. PE NTM multiples will compress if earnings growth exceeds index price appreciation. While we do expect multiple expansion to pass the baton to earnings growth over the next 12 months, we are curious to know by how much earnings would have to grow for PE to come down to 18x. To get an answer, we created a scenario analysis matrix, varying price and earnings growth simultaneously. The most likely scenario is for the earnings to grow at 3-5% each quarter over the next 12 months (13-16% annualized) and, assuming that the S&P 500 price does not move, it will trade at 20.5-21x forward earnings multiples. For PE to come down to 18x, earnings would have to grow by more than 10% every quarter, or 30% over the next 12 months, which is way above the growth rates expected by the market. Therefore, we are unlikely to see significant multiple compression without a market correction (Table 2). US equities are expensive, no excuses. Table 2Earnings Have To Grow in Double-Digits For PE NTM To Come Down To 18x Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Zooming In On The US Equity Market Segments Table 3Style Indices Q2-21 Sales And Earnings Growth Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Value Outgrew Growth: Earnings of Value grew 31% faster than earnings of Growth (Table 3). However, looking under the hood, annualized EPS growth of Growth was 16% p.a. since 2019, while EPS of Value contracted by 2% p.a. This means that for many Value companies, the earnings surge is a function of the base effect; earnings have not yet reached their pre-pandemic levels (Chart 6) and have room to run further. Chart 6Small Delivered Spectacular 2019-2021 Growth Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Small Crushes Earnings: Small Caps' quarterly results have been nothing short of astonishing: EPS in Q2-21 is 10 times higher than during the same quarter a year ago. This growth surge can’t be attributed just to the base effect, as earnings are double what they were two years ago. The S&P 600 has an annualized earnings growth rate over the past two years of 42%, and sales growth of 6.2%. Sectors Sector results are characterized by a powerful rebound of the cyclical sectors: Industrials, Consumer Discretionary, Energy, Materials, and Financials have delivered triple-digit earnings growth, and double-digit sales growth (Table 4). Table 4S&P 500 Sectors' Q2-21 Sales And Earnings Growth Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings However, looking at 2019-2021 CAGR, we observe that the Industrials sector earnings are still 10% below the 2019 level, and the Consumer Discretionary sector has only grown 2% annualized, much slower than the market. The case is the same for Energy. Financials and Materials growth was very strong: The former benefited from the M&A and IPO boom, while the latter has grown thanks to stimulative Chinese policy, which has been tightened lately (Chart 7). Chart 7Cyclical Sectors Did Not Grow Much Since 2019 Despite Recent Profit Rebound Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Profitability Is Unlikely to Return To A Previous Peak Many companies have tightened their belts during the pandemic to preserve capital in the face of uncertainty. Margins have compressed, but less than expected in such a dire situation. Currently, the majority of sectors has margins close to their historical averages (Chart 8). While most sectors, with exception of Financials and Technology, are below peak margins, it is unlikely that they will be able to return to their former highs. Sales will soar thanks to stimulative fiscal and monetary policies, strong demand by consumers, and inflation. Yet the bottom line may be impeded by the increases in labor and input costs and tighter fiscal policy, which have not yet been priced in by the market. Market Expectations For The Next 12 Months According to IBES, earnings growth will be propelled by the cyclicals, such as Industrials, Consumer Discretionary and Energy (though less so as it is a small sector). These expectations are well aligned with our investment thesis (Chart 9). Chart 8Most Sectors' Margins Are Back To Normal, But Peak Margins Are Elusive Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Chart 9Cyclical Sectors Are Expected To Grow The Most Over The Next 12 Months Decoding Earnings Decoding Earnings Investment Themes Consumers Are Flush With Cash One of our key investment themes is that the US consumer still has plenty of money to spend: Excess savings in the US currently stand at $2.5 trillion, and disposable incomes have been padded by the pandemic helicopter cash drops. While spending on goods had exceeded its historical trend and has recently turned, spending on services is still below pre-pandemic levels (Chart 10). During Q2-2021, Consumer Services earnings grew by 154%, exceeding analyst targets by 27%, though the level of earnings is only 5% above the Q2-2019 level (Chart 11). This suggests that the theme has worked, but also that it has the potential to run further only if not derailed by the fear of COVID-19 variants. However, the approach to investing in this sector needs to be granular, with overweights allocated to service industries such as hotels, restaurants, and leisure (S&P leisure products, S&P hotels, S&P restaurants). Chart 10Real Spending On Services Is At Pre-Pandemic Levels: Room For Further Rebound Real Spending On Services Is At Pre-Pandemic Levels: Room For Further Rebound Real Spending On Services Is At Pre-Pandemic Levels: Room For Further Rebound Chart 11The Consumer Discretionary Sector Growth Will Stay Robust The Consumer Discretionary Sector Growth Will Stay Robust The Consumer Discretionary Sector Growth Will Stay Robust We recommend staying away from Internet Retail (downgrade is pending) and the other sectors that have outsized exposure to consumer goods. Amazon earnings were a case in point: The company disappointed analysts with weaker revenue growth as well as provided a more cautious outlook as it finds it difficult to surpass its stellar pandemic numbers. Brick and mortar retail is likely to fare better, as going out to shop now falls into the “experiences” basket. China Slowdown: Underweight The Materials Sector Chinese growth is slowing, which has an adverse effect on demand for industrial metals (Chart 12). As a result, we have underweighted the Materials sector, along with the Metals and Mining industry. This call was on the money: While Materials more than doubled earnings over the past year, its earnings surprise at 6.40% is the smallest of all the sectors. The Materials sector has underperformed S&P 500 by 8% since the beginning of June. Chart 12Materials Sector Earnings Growth Is Slowing Materials Sector Earnings Growth Is Slowing Materials Sector Earnings Growth Is Slowing Post-COVID-19 Normalization: Overweight The Health Care Sector We upgraded this sector to an overweight three weeks ago. We intended to add a defensive sector in our portfolio to make it more robust in the face of an imminent market pullback, likely volatility on the back of elevated valuations and the upcoming debt ceiling kerfuffle. This quarter, Health Care posted mixed results despite being among the key beneficiaries of the pandemic. There are several factors at play. One is that some US vaccine manufacturers pledged to produce vaccines at no profit (J&J). Another reason is that the pandemic forced hospitals to halt their non-emergency operations that serve as an important end-demand market for the S&P Health Care sector. Weak Q2-2021 earnings suggest untapped demand for medical services and elective procedures. Just now, hospitals started reopening, and we expect a spike in the number of hospital visits, with positive spillover effects for medical equipment manufacturers and pharmaceutical companies. We are sticking to our overweight unless Delta and Lambda take over the hospital beds. US Manufacturing Renaissance The Industrials delivered triple-digit growth, but the sector’s earnings are still below pre-pandemic levels. There was an earnings growth dichotomy at play. Manufacturing companies that derive a high percentage of earnings from abroad have been affected by a slowdown of Chinese demand and by inflationary pressures. CAT’s recent 20% drawdown in relative terms encapsulates these headwinds. Domestic and services-oriented stocks like railroads reported exceptionally strong demand. Looking ahead, we are constructive on the sector. There is still significant pent-up demand for industrial goods and services, inventories are historically low (Chart 13) and need to be replenished, Federal infrastructure spending is a near certainty, and onshoring of US manufacturing is a new structural theme. Analysts concur: Expected EPS growth for the sector over the next 12 months is 46%. Chart 13Inventories Are At All Time Low Inventories Are At All Time Low Inventories Are At All Time Low Chart 14Value-Growth Earnings Growth Differential Is Closing Value-Growth Earnings Growth Differential Is Closing Value-Growth Earnings Growth Differential Is Closing Rate Stabilization: Overweight Technology and Growth vs Value Technology is one of our core overweights in the portfolio and the sector fared well last quarter. One of the drivers behind the strong quarter is an accelerating shift to remote work as companies re-evaluate the need for offices, especially given the possibility of new virus variants. A similar upbeat message came from the semiconductor industry: A shortage of chips that touches all corners of manufacturing from cars to computers, translates into strong earnings growth, which is likely to continue far into the future. As our BCA colleague, Arthur Budaghyan observed, semiconductor chip manufacturing is becoming a strategic asset, especially in a standoff between China and the US, and the country that controls the production of semis controls the production of most tech goods. We have been overweight Growth vs Value in our portfolios since the beginning of June. Since then, Growth has outperformed Value by about 6%. While Value was growing faster than Growth in Q2-21, the earnings growth expectation between Growth and Value is closing. After a strong run, Growth is expensive again, trading at 28x forward earnings compared to 16x for Value. We expect the yield curve to steepen and yields to rise this fall once workers return to work and the unemployment rate falls further. In other words, we are edging closer to downgrading Growth to neutral; we are just waiting to get more visibility on the Delta variant scare. Upgrade Small vs Large When Rates Rise Again Back in June, we wrote a deep-dive report on Small / Large cap allocation and concluded that an equal-weighted allocation was warranted. This call has not worked so far as Small has underperformed Large by about 5%. Our reasons for not overweighting Small vs Large were manifold: Slowing growth, flattening yield curve, mean reversion of high-yield spreads and, most importantly, a significant downgrade of earnings expectations (Chart 15). Chart 15Small Cap Downgrades Likely Ran Their Course Small Cap Downgrades Likely Ran Their Course Small Cap Downgrades Likely Ran Their Course However, we are warming up to Small: Reported earnings and sales growth was impressive. Furthermore, we expect the yield curve to steepen (helping banks in the S&P 600) as people go back to work in September, and rates to go up to as high as 1.8% by the end of the year. When the timing is right, we will swap overweight in the Growth stocks to an overweight in Small. Investment Implications The earnings season was impressive, but growth is returning to trend and is past its peak. The markets expect 12-17% earnings growth over the next 12 months. Earnings growth will pick up the baton from multiple expansion and will propel US equity markets further. Yet returns will be lower than in the past due to a high valuation “speed limit.” The US equity market is expensive, and earnings growth with a 10% handle will not deliver a significant re-rating, while growth rates above 20% are unlikely. We still like the consumer theme: Earnings results were strong, and more growth is expected ahead, especially in the consumer services space. Overweight Health Care: Pent-up demand for elective procedures will propel earnings growth higher. Overweight Industrials which will benefit from the US manufacturing Renaissance over the long term, and from a rebound in earnings growth in response to the inventory restocking cycle and infrastructure spending over the short term. Stay underweight Materials: China slowing will take a toll on the earnings growth of industrial metals miners and on the Materials sector as a whole. Overweight Growth vs Value for now. Watch for a persistent rise in rates and steeping of the yield curve – once that happens, rotate into Value and Small Caps, which thrive in such a macroeconomic environment. Bottom Line The earnings season produced peak growth, and the next phase of the cycle is earnings growth returning to trend. This normalization will be a tailwind for the equity markets and will replace multiple expansion as a driver of equity returns. We are sticking to our overweights in Industrials, Health Care and Consumer Discretionary, and our underweight in Materials. We are reconsidering our overweight in Growth and neutral positioning in Small Caps. Once rates turn up decisively, a rotation into Small and Value is warranted.   Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com   Recommended Allocation
Highlights Recent progress on the path to a post-pandemic state and the return to pre-COVID economic conditions has been mixed. The share of vaccinated individuals continues to rise globally, and the number of confirmed UK cases has recently peaked. However, vaccine penetration remains comparatively low in the US, and there has been no meaningful change in the pace of vaccination. Given the emergence of the delta variant as well as vaccine hesitancy in some countries, policymakers currently face a trilemma that is conceptually similar to the Mundell-Fleming Impossible Trinity. The pandemic version of the Impossible Trinity suggests that policymakers cannot simultaneously prevent the reintroduction of pandemic control measures while maintaining a functioning medical system and the complete freedom of individuals to choose whether or not to be vaccinated. Were they to occur, the imposition of renewed pandemic control measures or a dangerous rise in hospitalizations this fall would likely weigh on earnings expectations, at a time when income support for households negatively impacted by the pandemic will be withdrawn. The delta variant of COVID-19 is not vaccine-resistant, meaning that a delta-driven surge in hospitalizations this fall could delay – but not prevent – eventual asset purchase tapering and rate hikes from the Fed. 10-year Treasury yields are well below the fair value implied by a mid-2023 rate hike scenario, underscoring that the recent decline in long-maturity yields is overdone. The recent (slight) tick higher in China’s credit impulse is perhaps a sign that the worst of the credit slowdown has already occurred, but we do not expect a rising trend without a genuine shift toward a looser monetary policy stance. As such, a normalization in services spending in advanced economies remains the likely impulse for global growth over the coming year, at least over the coming 3-6 months. On a 12-month time horizon, we would recommend that investors position for the underperformance of financial assets that are negatively correlated with long-maturity government bond yields. However, for investors more focused on the near term, we would note the potential for further underperformance of cyclical sectors, value stocks, international equities, and most global ex-US currencies versus the US dollar – depending heavily on the evolution of the medical situation in the US and the subsequent response from policymakers. Feature Since we published our last report, progress made on the path to a post-pandemic state and the return to pre-COVID economic conditions have been mixed. Encouragingly, Chart I-1 highlights that the share of people who have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine continues to rise outside of Africa, which continues to be impacted by India’s ban on vaccine exports. By the end of September, at least a quarter of the world’s population will have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, and many more will have received at least one dose. Pfizer’s plan to request emergency authorization for its vaccine for children aged 5-11 by October also stands to raise total vaccination rates in advanced economies even further by the end of the year. In addition, Chart I-2 presents further evidence that the relationship between new cases of COVID-19 and hospitalization has truly been altered. The chart shows that the number of patients in UK hospitals is much lower than what would be implied by the number of new cases, which itself now appears to have peaked at a lower level than that of January. Given that the strain on the medical system is the dominant constraint facing policymakers, a modest rise in hospitalizations implies a durable end to pandemic restrictions and a return to economic normality. Chart I-1Global Vaccination Progress Continues Global Vaccination Progress Continues Global Vaccination Progress Continues Chart I-2Vaccines Have Truly Altered The Relationship Between Cases And Hospitalizations Vaccines Have Truly Altered The Relationship Between Cases And Hospitalizations Vaccines Have Truly Altered The Relationship Between Cases And Hospitalizations   However, the risk from the delta variant appears to be higher in the US than in the UK, due to a lower level of vaccine penetration. Only 56% of the US population has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, compared with 67% in Israel, 69% in the UK, and 71% in Canada. And thus far, there has been no meaningful change in the pace of vaccination in the US in response to the threat from the delta variant, despite recent exhortations from politicians and media personalities from both sides of the political spectrum. The Impossible Trinity: Pandemic Edition Last year, most investors would have said that the existence of a safe and effective vaccine would likely be enough to durably end the pandemic. But given the development of more dangerous variants of the disease, and the existence of vaccine hesitancy in many countries, policymakers now face a trilemma that is conceptually similar to the concept of the “Impossible Trinity” as described by Mundell and Fleming. The upper portion of Chart I-3 illustrates the standard view of the Impossible Trinity, which posits that policymakers must choose one side of the triangle, while foregoing the opposite economic attribute. For example, most modern economies have chosen “B,” gaining the free flow of capital and independent monetary policy by giving up a fixed exchange rate regime (and allowing currency volatility). By contrast, Hong Kong has chosen side “A,” meaning that its monetary policy is driven by the Federal Reserve in exchange for a pegged currency and an open capital account. The lower portion of Chart I-3 presents the pandemic version of the trilemma, which sees policymakers having to choose two of these three outcomes: No economically-damaging pandemic control restrictions placed on society A functioning medical system The complete freedom of individuals to choose whether or not to be vaccinated Chart I-3Variants And Vaccine Hesitancy Have Created A Difficult Choice For Policymakers August 2021 August 2021 In reality, the pandemic version of the Impossible Trinity is likely to be resolved in a fashion similar to how China views the original trilemma,1 which is to distribute a 200% “adoption rate” among the three competing choices. In essence, this means that policymakers will likely partially adopt all three measures with a degree of intensity that will change over time in response to the prevailing circumstances. Chart I-4No Sign Yet Of A Pickup In US Vaccination Rates No Sign Yet Of A Pickup In US Vaccination Rates No Sign Yet Of A Pickup In US Vaccination Rates But Chart I-4 is a clear example of the differences in approach adopted by the US in response to vaccine hesitancy compared to other. So far, attempts to convince vaccine-hesitant Americans to get their shot have relied mostly on “carrot” approaches in an attempt to preserve individual freedom of choice, i.e. side “B” in Chart I-3. As noted above, these measures, so far, have failed, as there has been no noticeable uptick in the pace of vaccine doses administered in the US over the past month. By contrast, France, like several other countries, has begun to use “stick” approaches that push it more toward side “A” of the trilemma. In mid-July, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that French citizens who want to visit cafes, bars or shopping centers must show proof of vaccination or a negative test result. The policy also mandated that French health care and nursing home workers must be vaccinated. The result was a sharp, and thus far sustained, uptick in the pace of doses administered. For equity investors, the risk is that the politically contentious nature of vaccine mandates in the US will cause policymakers to acquiesce to renewed pandemic control measures this fall if the delta variant continues to spread widely over the coming few months (as seems likely). Alternatively, policymakers may allow a dangerous increase in hospitalizations, but this would merely postpone the imposition of control measures – and they would be more severe once reintroduced. Thus, there is a legitimate risk that the spread of the delta variant in the US does weigh on earnings expectations, especially for consumer-oriented services companies, at a time when income support for households negatively impacted by the pandemic will be withdrawn. Bond Yields, Delta, And Slowing Growth Momentum Chart I-5Growth Momentum Has Slowed... Growth Momentum Has Slowed... Growth Momentum Has Slowed... Of course, many investors would point to the significant decline in US 10-year bond yields since mid-March as having already acted in response to waning growth momentum. For example, the peak in US bond yields coincided with the March peak in the ISM manufacturing PMI, as well as a meaningful shift lower in the US economic surprise index (Chart I-5). Without a soaring inflation surprise index, the overall economic surprise index for the US would likely already be negative. The takeaway for some investors has been that a decline in yields has been normal given that the economy has passed its point of maximum strength. But there are two aspects of this narrative that do not accord with the data. First, Chart I-6 highlights that growth is peaking from an extremely strong pace, making it difficult to justify the magnitude of the decline in long-term yields over the past few months. And second, Chart I-7 highlights that the decline in the US 10-year yield closely corresponds to delta variant developments in the US. The chart shows that the 10-year yield broke below 1.5% shortly after the effective US COVID-19 reproduction rate (“R0”) began to rise, and the significant decline in yields over the past month began once R0 rose above 1. Chart I-7 does suggest that yields have reacted in response to the growth outlook, but in a different way than the “maximum strength” narrative suggests. Chart I-6…But Growth Itself Remains Quite Strong August 2021 August 2021 Chart I-7The Yield Decline Over The Past Month Seems Related To Delta The Yield Decline Over The Past Month Seems Related To Delta The Yield Decline Over The Past Month Seems Related To Delta Chart I-810-Year Yields Are Too Low, Even If Variants Delay The Fed 10-Year Yields Are Too Low, Even If Variants Delay The Fed 10-Year Yields Are Too Low, Even If Variants Delay The Fed While we can identify the apparent trigger for the decline in bond yields since mid-March, we do not agree that the decline is fundamentally justified. The delta variant of COVID-19 is not vaccine-resistant, meaning that a delta-driven surge in hospitalizations this fall could delay – but not prevent – eventual asset purchase tapering and rate hikes from the Fed. For example, Chart I-8 highlights that the 10-year yield is now 60 basis points below its fair value level in a scenario in which the Fed only begins to raise interest rates in mid-2023, underscoring that the recent decline in yields is overdone. And, although it is also true that market-based measures of inflation compensation have eased from their May highs, we have noted in previous reports that the Fed’s reaction function is almost exclusively driven by progress in the labor market back toward “maximum employment” levels – not inflation. Chart I-9 highlights that US real output per worker has grown at a much faster pace since the onset of the pandemic than what occurred on average over the past four economic recoveries, reflecting the success that US fiscal policy has had in supporting aggregate demand as well as constraints on labor supply in services industries. These factors will wane in intensity over the coming year, suggesting that real output per worker is unlikely to rise meaningfully further over that time horizon. Based on consensus market expectations for growth as well as the Fed’s most recent forecasts, a flat trend in real output per worker over the coming year would imply that the employment gap will be closed by Q2 of next year. This would be consistent with the recent trend in high frequency mobility data, such as US air traveler throughput and public transportation use in New York City (Chart I-10), the epicenter of the negative impact on urban core services employment stemming from the pandemic “work from home” effect. Chart I-9Real Output Per Worker Unlikely To Rise Much Further Over The Coming Year Real Output Per Worker Unlikely To Rise Much Further Over The Coming Year Real Output Per Worker Unlikely To Rise Much Further Over The Coming Year Chart I-10High-Frequency Data Points To A Closed Jobs Gap By Mid-2022 High-Frequency Data Points To A Closed Jobs Gap By Mid-2022 High-Frequency Data Points To A Closed Jobs Gap By Mid-2022   A closed employment gap by the middle of next year would imply that the Fed will begin to raise rates sometime in 2H 2022. Even if this were delayed by several months due to delta, Chart I-8 illustrated that 10-year Treasury yields are still too low. No Help From China If the spread of the delta variant over the coming few months does temporarily weigh on developed market economic activity via renewed pandemic control measures, investors should note that the lack of a countervailing growth impulse from China may act as an aggravating factor. Chart I-11 highlights that China’s PMI remains persistently below its 12-month trend, as it has tended to do following a decline in China’s credit impulse. And while some investors were hoping that the PBOC’s recent cut to the reserve requirement ratio represented a pivot in Chinese monetary policy towards sustained easing, Chart I-12 highlights that the 3-month repo rate remains well off its low from last year – and is only modestly lower than it was on average during most of the 2018/2019 period. Chart I-11China Is Slowing, And Policy Has Not Yet Reversed Course August 2021 August 2021 Chart I-12The Recent RRR Cut Was Not The Start Of A Dovish PBOC Shift The Recent RRR Cut Was Not The Start Of A Dovish PBOC Shift The Recent RRR Cut Was Not The Start Of A Dovish PBOC Shift   The recent (slight) tick higher in China’s credit impulse is perhaps a sign that the worst of the credit slowdown has already occurred, but we do not expect a rising trend without a genuine shift toward a looser monetary policy stance. As such, a normalization in services spending in advanced economies remains the likely impulse for global growth over the coming year, at least over the coming three to six months. Investment Conclusions Chart I-13Assets That Benefit From Lower Yields May Remain Well-Bid In The Near Term Assets That Benefit From Lower Yields May Remain Well-Bid In The Near Term Assets That Benefit From Lower Yields May Remain Well-Bid In The Near Term The unprecedented nature of the pandemic, as well as the unclear impact the delta variant will have given prevailing rates of vaccination in advanced economies, has clouded the near-term economic outlook. It is unlikely that the delta variant of SARS-COV-2 will have a long-lasting impact on economic activity in advanced economies, but it does have the potential to cause the temporary reintroduction of some pandemic restrictions and, thus, modestly delay the transition to a post-pandemic state. While long-term government bond yields are set to rise on a 12-month time horizon, financial assets that are negatively correlated with long-term bond yields could remain well-bid over the next few months. Chart I-13 highlights that cyclical equity sectors have underperformed defensive equity sectors over the past month, and banks have underperformed the overall index. The correlation between long-maturity real Treasury yields and the relative performance of value and growth stocks has also held up, with growth stocks outperforming since the end of March. Global ex-US equities have also underperformed US stocks, and the dollar has modestly risen. On a 12-month time horizon, we would recommend that investors position for a reversal of all these recent moves. However, for investors more focused on the near term, we would note the potential for further underperformance of cyclical sectors, value stocks, international equities, and most global ex-US currencies versus the US dollar – depending heavily on the evolution of the medical situation in the US and the subsequent response from policymakers. This underscores that cyclical investment strategy will be even more data dependent than usual throughout the second half of the calendar year. The pace of nonfarm payrolls growth in the US remains the single most important data release driving US monetary policy, and investors should especially focus on whether jobs growth this fall is consistent with the Fed’s maximum employment objective, as the impact of the delta variant becomes clearer, as constraints to labor supply are removed, and as employees progressively return to work. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst July 29, 2021 Next Report: August 26, 2021 II. The Social Media Magnification Effect: Austerity, Populism, And Slower Growth Investors should view social media as a technological innovation with negative productivity growth. Social media has contributed to policy mistakes – such as fiscal austerity and protectionism – that have acted as shocks to aggregate demand over the past 15 years. The cyclical component of productivity was long lasting in nature during the last economic expansion. Forces that negatively impact economic growth but do not change the factors of production necessarily reduce measured productivity, and repeated policy mistakes strongly contributed to the slow growth profile of the last economic cycle. Political polarization in a rapidly changing world is the root cause of these policy shocks, but social media likely facilitated and magnified them. The risks of additional mistakes from populism remain present, even before considering other risks to society from social media: a reduction in mental health among young social media users, and the role that social media has played in spreading misinformation. A potential revival in protectionist sentiment is a risk to a constructive cyclical view that we will be closely monitoring over the coming 12-24 months. Investors with concentrated positions in social media stocks should be aware of the potential idiosyncratic risks facing these companies from the public’s impression of the impact of social media on society – especially if social media companies come to be widely associated with political gridlock, the polarization of society, and failed economic policies (as already appears to be the case). Investors should view social media as a technological innovation with negative productivity growth. Social media has contributed to policy mistakes – such as fiscal austerity and protectionism – that have acted as shocks to aggregate demand over the past 15 years. Political polarization in a rapidly changing world is the root cause of these policy shocks, but social media likely facilitated and magnified them. While the risk of premature fiscal consolidation appears low today compared to the 2010-14 period, the pandemic and its aftermath could force the Biden administration or Congressional Democrats toward protectionist or otherwise populist actions over the coming year in the lead up to the 2022 mid-term elections. The midterms, for their part, are expected to bring gridlock back into US politics, which could remove fiscal options should the economy backslide. Frequent shocks during the last economic expansion reinforced the narrative of secular stagnation. In the coming years, any additional policy shocks following a return to economic normality will again be seen by both investors and the Fed as strong justification for low interest rates – despite the case for cyclically and structurally higher bond yields. In addition, investors with concentrated positions in social media companies should take seriously the long-term idiosyncratic risks facing these stocks. These risks stem from the public’s impression of the impact of social media on society, particularly if social media comes to be widely associated with political gridlock, the polarization of society, and failed economic policies. A Brief History Of Social Media The earliest social networking websites date back to the late 1990s, but the most influential social media platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter, originated in the mid-2000s. Prior to the advent of modern-day smartphones, user access to platforms such as Facebook and Twitter was limited to the websites of these platforms (desktop access). Following the release of the first iPhone in June 2007, however, mobile social media applications became available, allowing users much more convenient access to these platforms. Charts II-1 and II-2 highlight the impact that smartphones have had on the spread of social media, especially since the release of the iPhone 3G in 2008. In 2006, Facebook had roughly 12 million monthly active users; by 2009, this number had climbed to 360 million, growing to over 600 million the year after. Twitter, by contrast, grew somewhat later, reaching 100 million monthly active users in Q3 2011. Chart II-1Facebook: Monthly Active Users August 2021 August 2021 Chart II-2Twitter: Monthly Active Users Worldwide August 2021 August 2021   Social media usage is more common among those who are younger, but Chart II-3 highlights that usage has risen over time for all age groups. As of Q1 2021, 81% of Americans aged 30-49 reported using at least one social media website, compared to 73% of those aged 50-64 and 45% of those aged 65 and over. Chart II-4 highlights that the usage of Twitter skews in particular toward the young, and that, by contrast, Facebook and YouTube are the social media platforms of choice among older Americans. Chart II-3A Sizeable Majority Of US Adults Regularly Use Social Media A Sizeable Majority Of US Adults Regularly Use Social Media A Sizeable Majority Of US Adults Regularly Use Social Media Chart II-4Older Americans Use Facebook Far More Than Twitter August 2021 August 2021 Chart II-5Social Media Has Changed The Way People Consume News August 2021 August 2021 As a final point documenting the development and significance of social media, Chart II-5 highlights that more Americans now report consuming news often (roughly once per day) from a smartphone, computer, or tablet other than from television. Radio and print have been completely eclipsed as sources of frequent news. The major news publications themselves are often promoted through social media, but the rise of the Internet has weighed heavily on the journalism industry. Social media has, for better and for worse, enabled the rapid proliferation of alternative news, citizen journalism, rumor, conspiracy theories, and foreign disinformation. The Link Between Social Media And Post-GFC Austerity Following the 2008-2009 global financial crisis (GFC), there have been at least five deeply impactful non-monetary shocks to the US and global economies that have contributed to the disconnection between growth and interest rates: A prolonged period of US household deleveraging from 2008-2014 The Euro Area sovereign debt crisis Fiscal austerity in the US, UK, and Euro Area from 2010 – 2012/2014 The US dollar / oil price shock of 2014 The rise of populist economic policies, such as the UK decision to leave the European Union, and the US-initiated trade war of 2018-2019. Among these shocks to growth, social media has had a clear impact on two of them. In the case of austerity in the aftermath of the Great Recession, a sharp rise in fiscal conservatism in 2009 and 2010, emblematized by the rise of the US Tea Party, profoundly affected the 2010 US midterm elections. It is not surprising that there was a fiscally conservative backlash following the crisis: the US budget deficit and debt-to-GDP ratio soared after the economy collapsed and the government enacted fiscal stimulus to bail out the banking system. And midterm elections in the US often lead to significant gains for the opposition party However, Tea Party supporters rapidly took up a new means of communicating to mobilize politically, and there is evidence that this contributed to their electoral success. Chart II-6 illustrates that the number of tweets with the Tea Party hashtag rose significantly in 2010 in the lead-up to the election, which saw the Republican Party take control of the House of Representatives as well as the victory of several Tea Party-endorsed politicians. Table II-1 highlights that Tea Party candidates, who rode the wave of fiscal conservatism, significantly outperformed Democrats and non-Tea Party Republicans in the use of Twitter during the 2010 campaign, underscoring that social media use was a factor aiding outreach to voters. Chart II-6Tea Party Supporters Rapidly Adopted Social Media To Mobilize Politically Tea Party Supporters Rapidly Adopted Social Media To Mobilize Politically Tea Party Supporters Rapidly Adopted Social Media To Mobilize Politically Table II-1Tea Party Candidates Significantly Outperformed In Their Use Of Social Media August 2021 August 2021   And while it is more difficult to analyze the use and impact of Facebook by Tea Party candidates and supporters owing to inherent differences in the structure of the Facebook platform, interviews with core organizers of both the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street movements have noted that activists in these ideologically opposed groups viewed Facebook as the most important social networking service for their political activities.2 Under normal circumstances, we agree that fiscal policy should be symmetric, with reduced fiscal support during economic expansions following fiscal easing during recessions. But in the context of multi-year household deleveraging, the fiscal drag that occurred in following the 2010 midterm elections was clearly a policy mistake. This mistake occurred partially under full Democratic control of government and especially under a gridlocked Congress after 2010. Chart II-7 highlights that the contribution to growth from government spending turned sharpy negative in 2010 and continued to subtract from growth for some time thereafter. In addition, panel of Chart II-7 highlights that the US economic policy uncertainty index rose in 2010 after falling during the first year of the recovery, reaching a new high in 2011 during the Tea Party-inspired debt ceiling crisis. Chart II-7The Fiscal Drag That Followed The 2010 Midterm Elections Was A Clear Policy Mistake The Fiscal Drag That Followed The 2010 Midterm Elections Was A Clear Policy Mistake The Fiscal Drag That Followed The 2010 Midterm Elections Was A Clear Policy Mistake Chart II-8Policy Mistakes Significantly Contributed To Last Cycle's Subpar Growth Profile Policy Mistakes Significantly Contributed To Last Cycle's Subpar Growth Profile Policy Mistakes Significantly Contributed To Last Cycle's Subpar Growth Profile In addition to the negative impact of government spending on economic growth, this extreme uncertainty very likely damaged confidence in the economic recovery, contributing to the subpar pace of growth in the first half of the last economic expansion. Chart II-8 highlights the weak evolution in real per capita GDP from 2009-2019 compared with previous economic cycles, which was caused by a prolonged household balance sheet recovery process that was made worse by policy mistakes. To be sure, the UK and the EU did not have a Tea Party, and yet political elites imposed fiscal austerity. It is also the case that President Obama was the first president to embrace social media as a political and public relations tool. So it cannot be said that either social media or the Republican Party are uniquely to blame for the policy mistakes of that era. But US fiscal policy would have been considerably looser in the 2010s if not for the Tea Party backlash, which was partly enabled by social media. Too tight of fiscal policy in turn fed populism and produced additional policy mistakes down the road. From Fiscal Drag To Populism While social media is clearly not the root cause of the recent rise of populist policies, it has had a hand in bringing them about – in both a direct and indirect manner. The indirect link between social media use and the rise in populist policies has mainly occurred through the highly successful use of social media by international terrorist organizations (chiefly ISIL) and its impact on sentiment toward immigration in several developed market economies. Chart II-9Terrorism And Immigration Likely Contributed To Brexit Terrorism And Immigration Likely Contributed To Brexit Terrorism And Immigration Likely Contributed To Brexit Chart II-9 highlights that public concerns about immigration and race in the UK began to rise sharply in 2012, in lockstep with both the rise in UK immigrants from EU accession countries and a series of events: the Syrian refugee crisis, the establishment and reign of the Islamic State, and three major terrorist attacks in European countries for which ISIL claimed responsibility. Given that the main argument for “Brexit” was for the UK to regain control over its immigration policies, these events almost certainly increased UK public support for withdrawing from the EU. In other words, it is not clear that Brexit would have occurred (at least at that moment in time) without these events given the narrow margin of victory for the “leave” campaign. The absence of social media would not have prevented the rise of ISIL, as that occurred in response to the US’s precipitous withdrawal from Iraq. The inevitable rise of ISIL would still have generated a backlash against immigration. Moreover, fiscal austerity in the UK and EU also fed other grievances that supported the Brexit movement. But social media accelerated and amplified the entire process.  Chart II-10Brexit Weakened UK Economic Performance Prior To The Pandemic Brexit Weakened UK Economic Performance Prior To The Pandemic Brexit Weakened UK Economic Performance Prior To The Pandemic Chart II-10 presents fairly strong evidence that Brexit weakened UK economic performance relative to the Euro Area prior to the pandemic, with the exception of the 2018-2019 period. In this period Euro Area manufacturing underperformed during the Trump administration’s trade war as a result of its comparatively higher exposure to automobile production and its stronger ties to China. Panel 2 highlights that GBP-EUR fell sharply in advance of the referendum, and remains comparatively weak today. Turning to the US, Donald Trump’s election as US President in 2016 was aided by both the direct and indirect effects of social media. In terms of indirect effects, Trump benefited from similar concerns over immigration and terrorism that caused the UK to leave the EU: Chart II-11 highlights that terrorism and foreign policy were second and third on the list of concerns of registered voters in mid-2016, and Chart II-12 highlights that voters regarded Trump as the better candidate to defend the US against future terrorist attacks. Chart II-11Terrorism Ranked Highly As An Issue In The 2016 US Election August 2021 August 2021 Chart II-12Voters Regarded Trump As Better Equipped To Defend Against Terrorism August 2021 August 2021 Trump’s election; and the enactment of populist policies under his administration, were directly aided by Trump’s active use of social media (mainly Twitter) to boost his candidacy. Chart II-13 highlights that there were an average of 15-20 tweets per day from Trump’s Twitter account from 2013-2015, and 80% of those tweets occurred before he announced his candidacy for president in June 2015. This strongly underscores that Trump mainly used Twitter to lay the groundwork for his candidacy as an unconventional political outsider rather than as a campaign tool itself, which distinguishes his use of social media from that of other politicians. In other words, new technology disrupted the “good old boys’ club” of traditional media and elite politics. Some policies of the Trump administration were positive for financial markets, and it is fair to say that Trump fired up animal spirits to some extent: Chart II-14 highlights that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act caused a significant rise in stock market earnings per share. But the Trump tax cuts were a conventional policy pushed mostly by the Congressional leadership of the Republican Party, and they did not meaningfully boost economic growth. Chart II-15 highlights that, while the US ISM manufacturing index rose sharply in the first year of Trump’s administration, an uptrend was already underway prior to the election as a result of a significant improvement in Chinese credit growth and a recovery in oil prices after the devastating collapse that took place in 2014-2015. Chart II-13Trump Used Twitter To Lay The Groundwork For His Candidacy Trump Used Twitter To Lay The Groundwork For His Candidacy Trump Used Twitter To Lay The Groundwork For His Candidacy Chart II-14The Trump Tax Cuts A Huge Rise In Corporate Earnings The Trump Tax Cuts A Huge Rise In Corporate Earnings The Trump Tax Cuts A Huge Rise In Corporate Earnings   Chart II-15But The Tax Cuts Did Not Do Much To Boost Growth But The Tax Cuts Did Not Do Much To Boost Growth But The Tax Cuts Did Not Do Much To Boost Growth Similarly, Chart II-15 highlights that the Trump trade war does not bear the full responsibility of the significant slowdown in growth in 2019, as China’s credit impulse decelerated significantly between the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act and the onset of the trade war because Chinese policymakers turned to address domestic concerns. Chart II-16The Trade War Caused An Explosion In Global Trade Uncertainty The Trade War Caused An Explosion In Global Trade Uncertainty The Trade War Caused An Explosion In Global Trade Uncertainty But Chart II-16 highlights that the aggressive imposition of tariffs, especially between the US and China, caused an explosion in trade uncertainty even when measured on an equally-weighted basis (i.e., when overweighting trade uncertainty, in countries other than the US and China), which undoubtedly weighed on the global economy and contributed to a very significant slowdown in US jobs growth in 2019 (panel 2). Moreover, Chinese policymakers responded to the trade onslaught by deleveraging, which weighed on the global economy; and consolidating their grip on power at home. In essence, Trump was a political outsider who utilized social media to bypass the traditional media and make his case to the American people. Other factors contributed to his surprising victory, not the least of which was the austerity-induced, slow-growth recovery in key swing states. While US policy was already shifting to be more confrontational toward China, the Trump administration was more belligerent in its use of tariffs than previous administrations. The trade war thus qualifies as another policy shock that was facilitated by the existence of social media. Viewing Social Media As A Negative Productivity-Innovation A rise in fiscal conservatism leading to misguided austerity, the UK’s decision to leave the European Union, and the Trump administration’s trade war have represented significant non-monetary shocks to both the US and global economies over the past 12 years. These shocks strongly contributed to the subpar growth profile of the last economic expansion, as demonstrated above. Chart II-17Policy Mistakes, Partially Enabled By Social Media, Reduced Productivity During The Last Expansion Policy Mistakes, Partially Enabled By Social Media, Reduced Productivity During The Last Expansion Policy Mistakes, Partially Enabled By Social Media, Reduced Productivity During The Last Expansion Given the above, it is reasonable for investors to view social media as a technological innovation with negative productivity growth, given that it has facilitated policy mistakes during the last economic expansion. Chart II-17 underscores this point, by highlighting that multi-factor productivity growth has been extremely weak in the post-GFC environment. While productivity is usually driven by supply-side factors over the longer term, it has a cyclical component to it – and in the case of the last economic expansion, the cyclical component was long lasting in nature. Any forces negatively impacting economic growth that do not change the factors of production necessarily reduce measured productivity; it is for this reason that measured productivity declines during recessions; and policy mistakes negatively impact productivity growth. The Risk Of Aggressive Austerity Seems Low Today… Chart II-18State & Local Government Finances Are In Much Better Shape Today State & Local Government Finances Are In Much Better Shape Today State & Local Government Finances Are In Much Better Shape Today Fiscal austerity in the early phase of the last economic cycle was the first social media-linked shock that we identified, but the risk of aggressive austerity appears low today. Much of the fiscal drag that occurred in the aftermath of the global financial crisis happened because of insufficient financial support to state and local governments – and the subsequent refusal by Congress to authorize more aid. But Chart II-18 highlights that state and local government finances have already meaningfully recovered, on the back of bipartisan stimulus in 2020, while the American Rescue Plan provides significant additional funding. While it is true that US fiscal policy is set to detract from growth over the coming 6-12 months, this will merely reflect the unwinding of fiscal aid that had aimed to support household income temporarily lost, as a result of a drastic reduction in services spending. As we noted in last month’s report,3 goods spending will likely slow as fiscal thrust turns to fiscal drag, but services spending will improve meaningfully – aided not just by a post-pandemic normalization in economic activity, but also by the deployment of some of the sizable excess savings that US households have accumulated over the past year. Fiscal drag will also occur outside of the US next year. For example, the IMF is forecasting a two percentage point increase in the Euro Area’s cyclically-adjusted primary budget balance, which would represent the largest annual increase over the past two decades. But here too the reduction in government spending will reflect the end of pandemic-related income support, and is likely to occur alongside a positive private-sector services impulse. During the worst of the Euro Area sovereign debt crisis, the impact of austerity was especially acute because it was persistent, and it occurred while the output gap was still large in several Euro Area economies. Chart II-19 highlights that Euro Area fiscal consolidation from 2010-2013 was negatively correlated with economic activity during that period, and Chart II-20 highlights that, with the potential exception of Spain, this austerity does not appear to have led to subsequently stronger rates of growth. Chart II-19Euro Area Austerity Lowered Growth During The Consolidation Phase… August 2021 August 2021 Chart II-20…And Did Not Seem To Subsequently Raise Growth August 2021 August 2021   This experiment in austerity led the IMF to conclude that fiscal multipliers are indeed large during periods of substantial economic slack, constrained monetary policy, and synchronized fiscal adjustment across numerous economies.4 Similarly, attitudes about austerity have shifted among policymakers globally in the wake of the populist backlash. Given this, despite the significant increase in government debt levels that has occurred as a result of the pandemic, we strongly doubt that advanced economies will attempt to engage in additional austerity prematurely, i.e., before unemployment rates have returned close-to steady-state levels. …But The Risk Of Protectionism And Other Populist Measures Looms Large The role that social media has played at magnifying populist policies should be concerning for investors, especially given that there has been a rising trend towards populism over the past 20 years. In a recent paper, Funke, Schularick, and Trebesch have compiled a cross-country database on populism dating back to 1900, defining populist leaders as those who employ a political strategy focusing on the conflict between “the people” and “the elites.” Chart II-21 highlights that the number of populist governments worldwide has risen significantly since the 1980s and 1990s, and Chart II-22 highlights that the economic performance of countries with populist leaders is clearly negative. Chart II-21Populism Has Been On The Rise For The Past 30 Years August 2021 August 2021 The authors found that countries’ real GDP growth underperformed by approximately one percentage point per year after a populist leader comes to power, relative to both the country’s own long-term growth rate and relative to the prevailing level of global growth. To control for the potential causal link between economic growth and the rise of populist leaders, Chart II-23 highlights the results of a synthetic control method employed by the authors that generates a similar conclusion to the unconditional averages shown in Chart II-22: populist economic policies are significantly negative for real economic growth. Chart II-22Populist Leaders Are Clearly Growth Killers Even After… August 2021 August 2021 Chart II-23… Controlling For The Odds That Weak Growth Leads To Populism August 2021 August 2021 Chart II-24Inequality: The Most Important Structural Cause Of Populism And Polarization Inequality: The Most Important Structural Cause Of Populism And Polarization Inequality: The Most Important Structural Cause Of Populism And Polarization This is especially concerning given that wealth and income inequality, perhaps the single most important structural cause of rising populism and political polarization, is nearly as elevated as it was in the 1920s and 1930s (Chart II-24). This trend, at least in the US, has been exacerbated by a decline in public trust of mainstream media among independents and Republicans that began in the early 2000s and helped to fuel the public’s adoption of alternative news and social media. The decline in trust clearly accelerated as a result of erroneous reporting on what turned out to be nonexistent weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and other controversies of the Bush administration. Chart II-21 showed that the rise in populism has also yet to abate, suggesting that social media has the potential to continue to amplify policy mistakes for the foreseeable future. It is not yet clear what economic mistakes will occur under the Biden administration, but investors should not rule out the possibility of policies that are harmful for growth. The likely passage of a bipartisan infrastructure bill or a partisan reconciliation bill in the second half of this year will most likely be the final word on fiscal policy until at least 2025,5 underscoring that active fiscal austerity is not likely a major risk to investors. Spending levels will probably freeze after 2022: Republicans will not be able to slash spending, and Democrats will not be able to hike spending or taxes, if Republicans win at least one chamber of Congress in the midterms (as is likely). Biden has preserved the most significant of Trump’s protectionist policies by maintaining US import tariffs against China, and the lesson from the Tea Party’s surge following the global financial crisis is that major political shifts, magnified by social media, can manifest themselves as policy with the potential to impact economic activity within a two-year window. Attitudes toward China have shifted negatively around the world because of deindustrialization and now the pandemic.6 White collar workers in DM countries have clearly fared better during lockdowns than those of lower-income households. This has created extremely fertile ground for a revival in populist sentiment, which could force the Biden administration or Congressional Democrats toward protectionist or otherwise populist actions over the coming year, in the lead up to the 2022 mid-term elections. Investment Conclusions In this report, we have documented the historical link between social media, populism, and policy mistakes during the last economic expansion. It is clear that neither social media nor even populism is solely responsible for all mistakes – the UK’s and EU’s ill-judged foray into austerity was driven by elites. Furthermore, we have not addressed in this report the impact of populism on actions of emerging markets, such as China and Russia, whose own behavior has dealt disinflationary blows to the global economy. Nevertheless, populism is a potent force that clearly has the power to harness new technology and deliver shocks to the global economy and financial markets. The risks of additional mistakes from populism are still present, and that is even before considering other risks to society from social media: a reduction in mental health among young social media users, and the role that social media has played in spreading misinformation – contributing to the vaccine hesitancy in some DM countries that we discussed in Section 1 of our report. Two investment conclusions emerge from our analysis. First, we noted in our April report that there is a chance that investor expectations for the natural rate of interest (“R-star”) will rise once the economy normalizes post-pandemic, but that this will likely not occur as long as investors continue to believe in the narrative of secular stagnation. Despite the fact that the past decade’s shocks occurred against the backdrop of persistent household deleveraging (which has ended in the US), these shocks reinforced that narrative, and any additional policy shocks following a return to economic normality will again be seen by both investors and the Fed as strong justification for low interest rates. Thus, while the rapid closure of output gaps in advanced economies over the coming year argues for both cyclically and structurally higher bond yields, a revival in protectionist sentiment is a risk to this view that we will be closely monitoring over the coming 12-24 months. Chart II-25The Underperformance Of Social Media Would Not Excessively Weigh On The Broad Market The Underperformance Of Social Media Would Not Excessively Weigh On The Broad Market The Underperformance Of Social Media Would Not Excessively Weigh On The Broad Market Second, for tech investors, the bipartisan shift in public sentiment to become more critical of social media companies is gradually becoming a real risk, potentially affecting user growth. Based solely on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Snapchat, social media companies do not account for a very significant share of the overall equity market (Chart II-25), suggesting that the impact of a negative shift in sentiment toward social media companies would not be an overly significant event for equity investors in general. Chart II-25 highlights that the share of social media companies as a percent of the broad tech sector rises if Google is included; YouTube accounts for less than 15% of Google’s total advertising revenue, however, suggesting modest additional exposure beyond the solid line in Chart II-25. Still, investors with concentrated positions in social media stocks should be aware of the potential idiosyncratic risks facing social media companies as a result of the public’s impression of the impact of social media on society. If social media companies come to be widely associated with political gridlock, the polarization of society, and failed economic policies (as already appears to be the case), then the fundamental performance of these stocks is likely to be quite poor regardless of whether or not tech companies ultimately enjoy a relatively friendly regulatory environment under the Biden administration. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst III. Indicators And Reference Charts BCA’s equity indicators highlight that the “easy” money from expectations of an eventual end to the pandemic have already been made. Our technical, valuation, and sentiment indicators are very extended, highlighting that investors should expect positive but modest returns from stocks over the coming 6-12 months. Our monetary indicator has aggressively retreated from its high last year, reflecting a meaningful recovery in government bond yields since last August. The indicator still remains above the boom/bust line, however, highlighting that monetary policy remains supportive for risky asset prices. Forward equity earnings are pricing in a substantial further rise in earnings per share, but for now there is no meaningful sign of waning forward earnings momentum. Net revisions remain very strong, and positive earnings surprises have risen to their highest levels on record. Within a global equity portfolio, global ex-US equities have underperformed alongside cyclical sectors, banks, and value stocks more generally. On a 12-month time horizon, we would recommend that investors position for the underperformance of financial assets that are negatively correlated with long-maturity government bond yields. But investors more focused on the near term, we would note the potential for further underperformance of cyclical sectors, value stocks, international equities, and most global ex-US currencies versus the US dollar – depending heavily on the evolution of the medical situation in the US and the subsequent response from policymakers. The US 10-Year Treasury yield has fallen sharply since mid-March. This decline was initially caused by waning growth momentum, but has since morphed into concern about the impact of the delta variant of SARS-COV-2 and the implications for US monetary policy. 10-year Treasury yields are well below the fair value implied by a mid-2023 rate hike scenario, underscoring that the recent decline in long-maturity yields is overdone. The extreme rise in some commodity prices over the past several months has eased. Lumber prices have normalized, whereas industrial metals have moved mostly sideways since late-April and agricultural prices remain 13% below their early-May high. We had previously argued that a breather in commodity prices was likely at some point over the coming several months, and we would expect further declines in some commodity prices as supply chains normalize, labor supply recovers, and Chinese demand for metals slows. US and global LEIs remain very elevated, but are starting to roll over. Our global LEI diffusion index has declined very significantly, but this likely reflects the outsized impact of a few emerging market countries (whose vaccination progress is still lagging). Still-strong leading and coincident indicators underscore that the global demand for goods is robust, and that output is below pre-pandemic levels in most economies because of very weak services spending. The latter will recover significantly at some point over the coming year, as social distancing and other pandemic control measures disappear. EQUITIES: Chart III-1US Equity Indicators US Equity Indicators US Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3US Equity Sentiment Indicators US Equity Sentiment Indicators US Equity Sentiment Indicators   Chart III-4US Stock Market Breadth US Stock Market Breadth US Stock Market Breadth Chart III-5US Stock Market Valuation US Stock Market Valuation US Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6US Earnings US Earnings US Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance   FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9US Treasurys And Valuations US Treasurys And Valuations US Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Chart III-11Selected US Bond Yields Selected US Bond Yields Selected US Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components Chart III-13US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets   CURRENCIES: Chart III-16US Dollar And PPP US Dollar And PPP US Dollar And PPP Chart III-17US Dollar And Indicator US Dollar And Indicator US Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18US Dollar Fundamentals US Dollar Fundamentals US Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals   COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning   ECONOMY: Chart III-28US And Global Macro Backdrop US And Global Macro Backdrop US And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29US Macro Snapshot US Macro Snapshot US Macro Snapshot Chart III-30US Growth Outlook US Growth Outlook US Growth Outlook Chart III-31US Cyclical Spending US Cyclical Spending US Cyclical Spending Chart III-32US Labor Market US Labor Market US Labor Market Chart III-33US Consumption US Consumption US Consumption Chart III-34US Housing US Housing US Housing Chart III-35US Debt And Deleveraging US Debt And Deleveraging US Debt And Deleveraging   Chart III-36US Financial Conditions US Financial Conditions US Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report “Moderate Releveraging And Currency Stability: An Impossible Dream?” dated September 5, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Grassroots Organizing in the Digital Age: Considering Values and Technology in Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street by Agarwal, Barthel, Rost, Borning, Bennett, and Johnson, Information, Communication & Society, 2014. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst “July 2021,” dated June 24, 2021, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 4 “Are We Underestimating Short-Term Fiscal Multipliers?” IMF World Economic Outlook, October 2012 5 Please see US Political Strategy Outlook "Third Quarter Outlook 2021: Game Time," dated June 30, 2021, available at usps.bcaresearch.com 6 “Unfavorable Views of China Reach Historic Highs in Many Countries,” PEW Research Center, October 2020.
Foreword Today we are publishing a charts-only report focused on the S&P 500, Cyclicals/Defensives, Growth/Value, and Small/Large. Many of the charts are self-explanatory; to some we have added a short commentary. The charts cover macro, valuations, fundamentals, technicals, and the uses of cash. Our goal is to equip you with all the data you need to make investment decisions along these style dimensions. We also include performance, valuations and earnings growth expectations tables for all styles, sectors, industry groups, and industries (GICS 1, 2 and 3). We hope you will find this publication, which we plan to update on a monthly basis, useful. Overarching Investment Themes Macro Economic growth remains robust, albeit slowing from a high peak. The business cycle has moved to an unusual slowdown stage, characterized by high growth. Investors’ inflation fears are dissipating, and the reflation trade is on the way out. However, concerns remain: According to the Consumer Confidence Survey, higher inflation is getting embedded into consumer expectations, potentially propagating a vicious cycle of stronger demand and higher prices (Chart 1). Fed rhetoric is becoming more hawkish. Yet, investors are shrugging it off, concluding a more active Fed is worth it to tame inflation. Companies are struggling to fill job openings and are hit with rising materials prices. However, corporate America's pricing power remains at an all-time high, helping offset the margin squeeze (Chart 2). Chart 1Consumer Confidence Survey: Inflation Expectations Consumer Confidence Survey: Inflation Expectations Consumer Confidence Survey: Inflation Expectations Chart 2Corporate Pricing Power Corporate Pricing Power Corporate Pricing Power Post-pandemic economic recovery was plagued by shortages and supply-chain disruptions. While it will take a long time for the supply issues to be resolved, bottlenecks are showing early signs of easing as delivery times are starting to fall (Chart 3). Last, but not least, consumers have money to spend, but prefer to splurge on services and experiences rather than goods. Chart 3Philadelphia Fed Business Survey: Delivery Times Philadelphia Fed Business Survey: Delivery Times Philadelphia Fed Business Survey: Delivery Times Valuations And Profitability The US stock market remains expensive, trading more than two standard deviations above the long-term average (Chart 4). Cyclicals look even worse, trading three standard deviations above Defensives. The six-month forward earnings outlook for the S&P 500 remains healthy with the BCA earnings model pointing towards higher growth. Hopefully, the index will grow into its elevated valuation. Small, Value, and Cyclicals also have impressive earnings growth expectations relative to their safer counterparts, but growth has peaked across the board, which does not bode well for performance. Chart 4Valuations Indicator (S&P 500) Valuations Indicator (S&P 500) Valuations Indicator (S&P 500) Uses Of Cash Share buybacks and other shareholder-friendly activities are on the rise again and are expected to gain steam this year and next. A falling denominator in the EPS ratio is another factor that will propel the S&P 500 higher (Chart 5). Capex is still lagging. A pickup in Capex will signal that the post-pandemic recovery is firmly on track, and life is fully back to normal as companies are comfortable investing in future growth. This will give the US equity rally, especially Cyclicals, a new lease of life (Chart 6). Chart 5Buybacks Buybacks Buybacks Chart 6Capex/Sales Capex/Sales Capex/Sales Investment Implications Normalization has been sending ripples through the US equity markets, as investors rotate back into Growth, and away from the reflation trade, and give a cold shoulder to small caps. We recommend a rotation from Value into Growth. While we are agnostic between Small and Large, we prefer both small- and large-cap Growth to large caps in general. While we think that the value trade has (mostly) run its course, we still like the Cyclicals most exposed to Consumer and Business Services, Infrastructure, and Oil.     Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com   S&P 500 Chart 7Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 8Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 9Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Chart 10Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Cyclicals Vs Defensives Chart 11Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 12Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 13Valuation And Technicals Valuation And Technicals Valuation And Technicals Chart 14Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Growth Vs Value Chart 15Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 16Valuations, Profitability And Technicals Valuations, Profitability And Technicals Valuations, Profitability And Technicals Small Vs Large Chart 17Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 18Profitability Profitability Profitability Chart 19Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Valuations And Technicals Chart 20Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash Uses Of Cash  Table 1Performance US Equity Chart Pack US Equity Chart Pack Table 2Valuations And Forward Earnings Growth US Equity Chart Pack US Equity Chart Pack Recommended Allocation Is It A Small World After All? Is It A Small World After All? Footnotes  .
Dear Client, China Investment Strategy will take a summer break next week. We will resume our publication on July 14th. Best regards and we wish you a happy and healthy summer. Jing Sima, China Strategist   Highlights A USD rebound and higher domestic bond yields pose near-term challenges to Chinese risk assets. A sharp deceleration in credit growth in the past seven months will lead to weaker-than-expected data from China’s old-economy sectors in the second half of the year.  Robust global trade has propelled Chinese exports, allowing the country to pursue financial deleverage and structural reforms. However, next year policymakers will face increased pressure to support the domestic economy as the global economic recovery peaks and demand slows. Investors should maintain an underweight stance towards Chinese stocks in 2H21, but remain alert to any improvements in China’s policy tone.  An easing monetary policy may signal a potential upgrade catalyst in 1H22. Feature Most recent macro figures confirm that China’s impressive economic upcycle has peaked. We expect that the official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs, which will be released as this report is published, will come in modestly down. We maintain the view that a major relapse in economic activity is unlikely, but the strong tailwinds that have propelled China's recovery since Q2 last year have since abated and will lead to softer growth. Meanwhile, the rate of economic and export expansions has given Chinese policymakers confidence to scale back leverage and continue with market reforms. In the second half of the year, investors' sentiment towards Chinese stocks will be tested based on three risks: A rebound in the US dollar index. A tighter liquidity environment and higher interest rates. A weakening in macro indicators beyond market expectations. As the global economic recovery peaks into 2022, pressures to support the domestic economy will become more urgent if policymakers want to maintain an average rate of 5% real GDP growth in 2020 - 2022. The current policy settings are not yet favorable to overweight Chinese risk assets. Major equity indexes remain richly valued and the market could easily correct if domestic rates move higher. However, signs of policy easing may emerge by yearend, which would prompt us to shift our view to overweight Chinese stocks in both absolute and relative terms. The Case For A Dollar Rebound On a tactical basis (next three months), a rebound in the US dollar index may curb investors’ enthusiasm for Chinese stocks. A stronger dollar will give the RMB’s appreciation some breathing room and will be reflationary for China’s economy. However, in the short term a stronger USD will also lead to weaker foreign inflows to China’s equity markets. Chinese stock prices have become more closely and negatively correlated with the dollar index since early 2020 (Chart 1). A weaker dollar is usually accompanied by a global economic upturn and a higher risk appetite from investors, propelling more foreign portfolio flows to emerging markets (which includes Chinese risk assets). Although foreign inflows account for a small portion of the Chinese A-share market cap, global institutional investors’ sentiment has become more influential and has led fluctuations in Chinese onshore stock prices (Chart 2). Chart 1Closer Correlations Between Chinese Stocks And The Dollar Index Closer Correlations Between Chinese Stocks And The Dollar Index Closer Correlations Between Chinese Stocks And The Dollar Index Chart 2Foreign Investors Matter To Chinese Onshore Stock Prices Foreign Investors Matter To Chinese Onshore Stock Prices Foreign Investors Matter To Chinese Onshore Stock Prices Chart 3Rising Market Expectations For The Fed's Rate Liftoff Rising Market Expectations For The Fed's Rate Liftoff Rising Market Expectations For The Fed's Rate Liftoff The US Federal Reserve delivered a slightly more hawkish surprise at its June FOMC meeting with the message that it will move the projected timing of its first fed fund rate liftoff from 2024 to 2023. Since then, market expectations have shifted from growth and inflation to focusing on the next monetary policy tightening phase, with the short end of the US yield curve rising sharply (Chart 3). Given that currency markets trade off the short end of the yield curve, higher US interest rate expectations will at least temporarily lift the US dollar. The timing and pace of the Fed’s tapering of asset purchases and rate hikes will be determined by how rapidly the US economy approaches the US central bank’s definition of “maximum employment.” BCA’s US Bond Investment strategist anticipates that sizeable and positive non-farm payroll surprises will start in late summer/early fall, which will catalyze a move higher in bond yields. As such, we expect additional upside risks in the dollar index in the coming months, which will discourage foreign investors’ appetite for Chinese equities. Bottom Line: A rebound in the dollar index will be a near-term downside risk to Chinese stocks. Risk Of Higher Chinese Interest Rates Another near-term risk to Chinese stock prices is a tightening in domestic liquidity conditions and a rebound in interest rates, particularly in Q3. Chart 4The PBoC Has Managed To Keep Domestic Rates Low While Pulling Back Overall Stimulus The PBoC Has Managed To Keep Domestic Rates Low While Pulling Back Overall Stimulus The PBoC Has Managed To Keep Domestic Rates Low While Pulling Back Overall Stimulus So far this year the PBoC has kept liquidity conditions accommodative to avoid massive debt defaults, while allowing a faster deceleration in the pace of credit expansion and a sharp contraction in shadow banking (Chart 4). In the coming months, however, the trend may reverse. Even though we do not think China’s current inflation and growth dynamics warrant meaningful and sustainable monetary policy tightening, there is still room for rates to normalize to their pre-pandemic levels in the next few months. Our view is based on the following:  First, there was a major delay in local government bond issuance in the first five months of the year. The supply of government bonds will pick up meaningfully in Q3 to meet the annual quota for 2021. An increase in government bond issuance will remove some liquidity from the banking system because the majority of these local government bonds are purchased by commercial banks. Adding to the liquidity gap is a large number of one-year, medium-term lending facility (MLF) loans that will be due in 2H21. Secondly, the PBoC may shift its policy tightening from reducing the volume of total credit creation (measured by total social financing) to raising the price of money. Credit growth (on year-over-year basis) in the first five months of 2021 dropped by three percentage points from its peak in Q4 last year, much faster than the 13-month peak-to-trough deceleration during the 2017/18 policy tightening cycle. As the rate of credit creation approaches the government’s target for the year, which we expect around 11%, the pressure to further compress credit expansion has eased into 2H21. China’s policy agenda is still focused on de-risking in the financial and real estate sectors, therefore, we expect policymakers to keep overall monetary conditions restrictive by raising the price of money. Furthermore, we do not rule out the possibility of a hike in mortgage rates. Chart 5Rising Risk For A Bear Flattening In Domestic Yield Curve In Q3 Rising Risk For A Bear Flattening In Domestic Yield Curve In Q3 Rising Risk For A Bear Flattening In Domestic Yield Curve In Q3 Lastly, as the Fed prepares market expectations for its rate liftoff and China’s domestic economy is still relatively solid, the PBoC may seize the opportunity to guide market-based interest rates towards their pre-pandemic levels. Thus, the market will likely price in tighter liquidity conditions while lowering expectations for the economy and inflation. The short end of the yield curve will rise faster than the longer end, resulting in a flattening of the curve (Chart 5). There is a nontrivial risk that the market will react negatively to tighter liquidity conditions and rising bonds yields, particularly when the economy is slowing. We mentioned in previous reports that rising policy rates and bond yields do not necessarily lead to lower stock prices, if rates are rising while credit keeps expanding and corporate profit growth accelerates. However, currently credit impulse has decelerated sharply, and corporate profit growth has most likely peaked in Q2. Therefore, even a small increase in bond yields or market expectations of higher rates will likely trigger risk asset selloffs. Bottom Line: Bond yields will move higher in Q3, risking market selloffs. Chinese Economy Standing On One Leg China’s economic fundamentals also pose downside risks to Chinese stock prices. Macro indicators on a year-over-year comparison will soften further in 2H21 when low base effects wane, although they will weaken from very high levels. This year’s sharp credit growth deceleration will start to drag down domestic demand, with the risk of corporate profits disappointing the market. A positive tailwind from global trade prevented China's old economy from decelerating more in the first half of the year. It is reflected in the nominal imports and manufacturing orders components in the BCA Activity Index (Chart 6). However, while rising commodity prices boosted the value of Chinese imports, the volume of imports has been moving sideways of late (Chart 7). Chart 6Our BCA Activity Index Is Still Rising... Our BCA Activity Index Is Still Rising... Our BCA Activity Index Is Still Rising... Chart 7...But The Volume Of The Import Component Has Rolled Over ...But The Volume Of The Import Component Has Rolled Over ...But The Volume Of The Import Component Has Rolled Over Chart 8Export Growth Is Moderating From Current Level Export Growth Is Moderating From Current Level Export Growth Is Moderating From Current Level Moreover, China’s export volume is peaking as the reopening in other countries shifts consumer demand from goods to services. Strong export growth would likely decelerate and converge to global industrial production growth in the coming 12 months, even though a regression-based approach suggests that export growth will stay above trend-growth if global economic activity remains robust (Chart 8). All three components of the official Li Keqiang Index, which measures China’s industrial sector activity and incorporates electricity consumption, railway transportation and bank lending, have rolled over (Chart 9). Among the three components in BCA’s Li Keqiang Leading Indicator, only the monetary conditions index improved on the back of lower real rates. Contributions from the money supply and credit expansion components to the overall indicator have been negative (Chart 10). Chart 9The Official Li Keqiang Index Is Weakening... The Official Li Keqiang Index Is Weakening... The Official Li Keqiang Index Is Weakening... Chart 10...So Is Our BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator ...So Is Our BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator ...So Is Our BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator Chart 11Household Consumption Recovery Remains A Laggard Household Consumption Recovery Remains A Laggard Household Consumption Recovery Remains A Laggard The recovery in household consumption remains well behind the industrial sector in the current cycle (Chart 11). We expect consumption and services to continue recovering very gradually. Apart from China’s long-standing structural issues, such as sliding household income growth and a high propensity to save, the cyclical recovery in consumption is dependent on China’s domestic COVID-19 situation. The country is on track to fully vaccinate 40% of its population by the end of June and 80% by year-end (Chart 12). However, hiccups in the service sector recovery are expected through 2H21, given China’s “zero tolerance” policy on confirmed COVID cases, which could trigger sporadic local lockdowns (Chart 13). Chart 12China Is Racing To Reach “Full Inoculation Rate” By Yearend China Outlook: A Mid-Year Recap China Outlook: A Mid-Year Recap Chart 13Expect Some Hiccups In Service Sector Recovery In 2H21 Expect Some Hiccups In Service Sector Recovery In 2H21 Expect Some Hiccups In Service Sector Recovery In 2H21 Bottom Line: Any moderation in exports in the rest of 2021 may add to the slowdown in China’s economic activity. Don’t Count On Fiscal Support Chart 14Fiscal Spending Has Been Disappointing In 1H21 Fiscal Spending Has Been Disappointing In 1H21 Fiscal Spending Has Been Disappointing In 1H21 During the first five months of the year, fiscal spending has downshifted (Chart 14). The amount of local government special-purpose bonds (SPBs) issued was far less than in the same period of the past two years, and below this year’s approved annual quota. Although we expect fiscal support to increase into 2H21, backloading SPBs would qualify, at best, as a remedial measure rather than a meaningful boost to economic activity. The RMB3 trillion SPBs to be issued in 2H21 represent only about 10% of this year’s total credit expansion. To substantially boost credit impulse and economic activity, the pickup in SPB issuance will need to be accompanied by looser monetary policy and an acceleration in bank loans (Chart 15). We do not expect that liquidity conditions will remain as lax as in 1H21. Additionally, given that the central government’s focus is to rein in the leverage of local governments and their affiliated financial vehicles (LGFV), provincial officers have little incentive to take on more bank loans against a restrictive policy backdrop. Historically, a stronger fiscal impulse linked to hefty increases in local government bond issuance has not necessarily led to meaningful improvements in infrastructure investment, which has been on a structural downshift since 2017 (Chart 16). Following a V-shaped recovery in 2H20, the growth in infrastructure investment will likely continue to slide in 2H21 due to sluggish government spending. Chart 15Bank Loans Still Hold The Key To Stimulus Impulse Bank Loans Still Hold The Key To Stimulus Impulse Bank Loans Still Hold The Key To Stimulus Impulse Chart 16Don't Count On SPBs To Meaningfully Boost Infrastructure Investment Don't Count On SPBs To Meaningfully Boost Infrastructure Investment Don't Count On SPBs To Meaningfully Boost Infrastructure Investment Bottom Line: There are no signs that the overall policy stance is easing to facilitate a higher fiscal multiplier from an upturn in local government bond issuance. As such, fiscal support for infrastructure spending and economic activity will disappoint in 2H21 despite more SPB issuance. Investment Conclusions Monetary conditions may tighten in Q3 although credit growth will decelerate at a slower pace. Pressures to support domestic demand will be more pronounced next year as tailwinds abate from the global recovery and domestic massive stimulus. Our view is that Chinese authorities will likely ease on the policy tightening brake towards the end of this year and perhaps even signal some reflationary measures in early 2022.  Therefore, while we maintain an underweight stance on Chinese stocks for the time being, investors should remain alert to any improvements in China's policy direction. In particular, any monetary policy easing by end this year/early 2022 may signal a potential catalyst to upgrade Chinese stocks to overweight in absolute terms. Although both Chinese onshore and investable equities are currently traded at a discount relative to global stocks, they are richly valuated compared with their 2017/18 highs (Chart 17). China's economy is slowing and the corporate sector has substantially increased its leverage in the past decade. We believe that the current discount in Chinese equities relative to global stocks is warranted. Chart 18 presents a forecast for A-share earnings growth in US dollars, based on earnings’ relationship with the official Li Keqiang index. The chart shows that while an earnings contraction is not probable, without more stimulus the growth rate may fall sharply in the next 12 months from its current elevated level. This aspect, combined with only a minor valuation discount relative to global stocks, paints an uninspiring outlook for Chinese onshore stocks. Chart 17Chinese Onshore Stocks Are Traded At A Slight Discount To Global Equities Chinese Onshore Stocks Are Traded At A Slight Discount To Global Equities Chinese Onshore Stocks Are Traded At A Slight Discount To Global Equities Chart 18An Uninspiring Domestic Equity Earnings Outlook An Uninspiring Domestic Equity Earnings Outlook An Uninspiring Domestic Equity Earnings Outlook Our baseline view is that Chinese authorities will be more willing to step up policy supports into 2022. Fiscal impulse will likely turn negative for most major economies next year and global economic recovery will have peaked. In this scenario, both China’s economy and stocks will have the potential to outperform their global peers next year.   Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
On Small Versus Large Caps On Small Versus Large Caps Initial public offerings (IPOs) are a source of future small-cap index constituents. Last year was a fruitful year since 165 companies went public. However, just to put things into perspective, 1999 and 2000 saw 476 and 380 IPOs respectively. IPOs are on the tear this year as well – raking in $171B and already topping the 2020 total. Some 80% of IPOs last year were for unprofitable companies, which is nearly two standard deviations above the historical average of 40% (see chart). While a good crop of IPOs is a great feeder ground for the small-cap indexes, it is concerning that so many unprofitable companies hit the market and often at multi-billion-dollar valuations. Euphoria is certainly the word that comes to mind, and investors’ current willingness to back companies without earnings may be a drag on overall small company earnings’ performance over the next few years. Bottom Line: We recommend investors to fade a rebound in small caps and maintain a neutral size preference. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Strategy Report.  
Highlights The US is withdrawing from the Middle East and South Asia and making a strategic pivot to Asia Pacific. The third quarter will see risks flare around Iran and the US rejoin the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal. The result is briefly negative for oil prices but the rise of Iran is a new geopolitical trend that will increase Middle Eastern risk over the long run. The geopolitical outlook is dollar bullish, while the macroeconomic outlook is getting less dollar-bearish due to China’s risk of over-tightening policy. Stay neutral USD and be wary of commodities and emerging markets in the third quarter. European political risk is bottoming. The German and French elections are at best minor risks. However, the continent is ripe for negative black swans, especially due to Russian aggression. Go tactically long global large caps and defensives. Feature Chart 1Three Key Views On Track (So Far) Three Key Views On Track (So Far) Three Key Views On Track (So Far) We chose “No Return To Normalcy” as the theme of our 2021 outlook. While the COVID-19 vaccine promised economic recovery, we argued that normalization would create complacency regarding fundamental changes that have taken place in the geopolitical environment. A contradiction between an improving macroeconomic backdrop and a foreboding geopolitical backdrop would develop in 2021 and beyond. The “reflation trade” has begun to lose steam as we go to press. However, global recovery will still be the dominant story in the second half of the year as vaccination spreads. The question for the third quarter and the rest of the year is whether reflation will continue. As a matter of forecasting, we think it will. But as a matter of investment strategy, we are taking a more defensive stance until China relaxes economic policy. In our annual outlook we highlighted three key geopolitical views: (1) China’s headwinds, both at home and abroad (2) US détente with Iran and pivot to Asia (3) Europe’s opportunity. All three trends are broadly on track and can be illustrated by looking at equity performance in the relevant regions for the year so far: Chinese stocks sold off, UAE stocks rallied, and European stocks rallied (Chart 1). However, these trends are not exclusively tied to absolute equity performance. The most important question is what happens to global growth and the US dollar as these three key views continue. Stay Neutral On The Dollar It paid off for us to maintain a neutral stance on the dollar. True, the global recovery and exorbitant US trade and budget deficits are bearish for the dollar and bullish for other currencies. But the greenback’s “counter-trend bounce” is proving more formidable than many investors expected. The fundamentals of the American economy and global position remain strong. Since the outbreak of COVID-19, the US has secured its recovery with fiscal policy, maintained rule of law amid a contested election, innovated and distributed vaccines, benefited from more flexible social restrictions, refurbished global alliances, and put pressure on its geopolitical rivals. In essence, the combined effect of President Trump’s and Biden’s policies has been to make America “great again” (Chart 2). From a geopolitical perspective, the dollar is appealing. Chart 2Trump-Biden Make America Great Again? Trump-Biden Make America Great Again? Trump-Biden Make America Great Again? In addition, the first two geopolitical views mentioned above – China’s headwinds and the US-Iran détente – imply a negative environment for China and the renminbi. The reason for the US to do a suboptimal deal with Iran, both in 2015 and 2021, is to reduce the risk of war and buy time to enable a strategic pivot to Asia Pacific. Three US presidents have been elected on the pledge to conclude the “forever wars” in the Middle East and South Asia. Biden is withdrawing US troops from Afghanistan in September. There can be little doubt Biden is committed to an Iran deal, which is supposed to free up the US’s hands (Chart 3). Meanwhile the US public and Congress are unified in their desire to better defend US interests against China’s economic and military rise. There has not yet been a stabilization of US-China policies. Biden is not likely to hold a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping until late October at earliest – and that is a guess, not a confirmed summit. The Biden administration has completed its review of China policy and is maintaining the Trump administration’s hawkish posture, as predicted. The US and China may resume their strategic and economic dialogue at some point but it is impossible to go back to the status quo ante 2015. That was the year the US adopted a more confrontational stance toward China – a stance later supercharged by Trump’s election and trade tariffs. The hawkish consensus on China is one of the rare unifying factors in a deeply divided America. The Biden administration explicitly says the US-China relationship is now defined by “competition” instead of “engagement.”1 One exception to this neutral view on the dollar has been our decision to go long the Japanese yen and Swiss franc, which has not panned out so far. Our reasoning is that geopolitical risk will boost these currencies but otherwise the reduction of geopolitical risk will weigh on the dollar in the context of global growth recovery. So far geopolitical risk has remained subdued while the US dollar has outperformed. We are still sympathetic to these safe-haven currencies, however, as they are attractively valued as long as one expects geopolitical risks to materialize (Chart 4). Chart 3US Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran US Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran US Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Our third key view, that EU was the real winner of the US election last year, remains on track. This is marginally positive for the euro at the expense of the dollar. Given the above points, we favor an equal-weighted basket of the euro and the dollar relative to the renminbi (Chart 5). Chart 4Safe-Haven Currencies Attractive Safe-Haven Currencies Attractive Safe-Haven Currencies Attractive Chart 5Favor Euro And Dollar Over Renminbi Favor Euro And Dollar Over Renminbi Favor Euro And Dollar Over Renminbi The geopolitical outlook is dollar-bullish. The macroeconomic outlook is dollar-bearish, except that China’s economy looks to slow down. We expect China to ease policy in the second half of the year but it may come late. We remain neutral dollar in the third quarter. Wait For China To Relax Policy July 1 marks the centenary of the Communist Party of China. The main thing investors should know is that the Communist Party predates China’s capitalist phase by sixty years. The party adopted capitalism to improve the economy – it never sacrificed its political or foreign policy goals. This poses a major geopolitical problem today because the Communist Party’s consolidation of power across Greater China, symbolized by Beijing’s revocation of Hong Kong’s special status in 2019, has convinced the western democracies that China is no longer compatible with the liberal world order. China launched a 13.8% of GDP monetary-and-fiscal stimulus over 2018-20 due to the trade war and COVID-19 pandemic. So the economy is stable for the hundredth anniversary celebration. The centenary goals are largely accomplished: GDP is larger, poverty is nearly extinguished, although urban incomes are still lagging (Chart 6). General Secretary Xi Jinping will mark the occasion with a speech. The speech will contribute to his governing philosophy, Xi Jinping Thought, a synthesis of communist Mao Zedong Thought and the pro-capitalist “socialism with Chinese characteristics” pioneered by General Secretary Deng Xiaoping in the 1980s-90s. The effect is to reassert Communist Party and central government primacy after the long period of decentralization that enabled China’s rapid growth phase. It is also to endorse an inward economic turn after the four-decade export-manufacturing boom. The Xi administration’s re-centralization of policy has entailed mini-cycles of tightening and loosening control over the economy. The administration leans against the country’s tendency to gorge itself on debt and grow at any cost – until it must lean the other way for fear of triggering a destabilizing slowdown. For this reason Beijing tightened policy proactively last year, producing a sharp drop in money, credit, and fiscal expansion in 2021 that now threatens to undermine the global recovery. By our measures, any further tightening will result in undershooting the regime’s money and credit targets, i.e. overtightening, and hence threaten to drag on the global recovery (Chart 7). Chart 6China's Communist Party Centenary Goals China's Communist Party Centenary Goals China's Communist Party Centenary Goals Chart 7China Verges On Over-Tightening Policy China Verges On Over-Tightening Policy China Verges On Over-Tightening Policy Overtightening would be a policy mistake with potentially disastrous consequences. So the base case should be that the government will relax policy rather than undermine the post-COVID recovery. However, investors cannot be confident about the timing. The 2015 financial turmoil and renminbi devaluation occurred because policymakers reacted too slowly. One reason to believe policy will be eased is that after July 1 the government will turn its attention to the twentieth national party congress in 2022, the once-in-five-years rotation of the Central Committee and Politburo. The party congress begins at the local level at the beginning of next year and culminates in the fall of 2022 with the national rotation of top party leaders. Xi Jinping was originally slated to step down in 2022. So he needs to squash any last-minute push against him by opposing factions of the party. He may have himself named chairman of the Communist Party, like Mao before him. Most importantly he will put his stamp on the “seventh generation” of China’s leaders by promoting his followers into key positions. All of this suggests that the Xi administration cannot risk triggering a recession, even if its preferences remain hawkish on economic policy. Policy easing could come as early as the end of July. As a rule of thumb, we have noticed that the Politburo’s July meeting on economic policy is often an inflection point, as was the case in 2007, 2015, 2018, and 2020 (Table 1). Some observers claim the April Politburo meeting already signaled an easing in policy, although we do not see that. If July clearly signals relaxation, global investors will cheer and emerging market assets and commodities will rise. Table 1China’s Politburo Often Hits Inflection Point On Economic Policy In July Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Still we maintain a defensive posture going into the third quarter because we do not have a high level of confidence that policymakers will act preemptively. A market riot may precede and motivate the inflection point in policy. Also the negative impact of previous policy tightening will be felt in the third quarter. China plays and industrial metals are extremely vulnerable to further correction (Chart 8). Chart 8China Plays And Metals Vulnerable To Further Correction China Plays And Metals Vulnerable To Further Correction China Plays And Metals Vulnerable To Further Correction The earliest occasion for a Biden-Xi summit comes at the end of October, as mentioned. While US-China talks will occur at some level, relations will remain fundamentally unstable. While a Biden-Xi summit may improve the atmosphere and lead to a new round of strategic and economic dialogue, or Phase Two trade talks, the fact is that the US is seeking to contain China’s rise and China is seeking to break out of the strictures of the US-led world order. The global elite and mainstream media will put a lot of emphasis on the post-Trump return to diplomatic “normalcy” and summits. But this is to overemphasize style at the expense of substance. Note that the positive feelings of the Biden-Putin summit on June 16 fizzled in less than a week when Russia allegedly dropped bombs in the path of a British destroyer in the Black Sea. The US and UK were training Ukraine’s military. Britain denies any bombs were dropped but Russia says next time they will hit their target. (More on this below.) This episode is instructive for US-China relations: summitry is overrated. China is building a sphere of influence and the US no longer believes dialogue alone is the answer. Tit-for-tat punitive measures and proxy battles in China’s neighboring areas, from the Korean peninsula to the Taiwan Strait to the South and East China Seas, are the new normal. Bottom Line: Tactically, stay defensive on global risk assets, especially China plays. Strategically, maintain a constructive outlook on the cycle given the global recovery and China’s need eventually to relax monetary and fiscal policy. US-Iran Deal Likely – Then The Real Trouble Starts The US will likely rejoin the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) by August and pull out of its longest-ever war in Afghanistan in September. The US is wrapping up its “forever wars” to meet the demands of a war-weary public. Ironically, the long-term consequence is to create power vacuums that invite new geopolitical conflicts in the context of the US’s great power struggle with China and Russia. But for now a deal with Iran – once it is settled – reduces geopolitical risk by reducing the odds of military escalation in the region. The Iran talks are more significant than the Afghanistan pullout. We are confident in a deal because Biden can rejoin the 2015 deal unilaterally – it was never approved by the US Senate as a formal treaty. The Iranians will not support any militant action so aggressive as to scupper a deal that offers them the chance of reviving their economy at a critical time in the regime’s history. Reviving the deal poses a downside risk for oil prices in the third quarter though not over the long run. It is negative in the short run because investors will have to price not only Iran’s current and future production (Chart 9) but also any resulting loss of OPEC 2.0 discipline. Brent crude is trading at $76 per barrel as we go to press, above the $65-$70 per barrel average that our Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects to see over the coming five years (Chart 10). Chart 9Iran's Oil Production Will Return Iran's Oil Production Will Return Iran's Oil Production Will Return Chart 10Brent Price Faces Short-Term Downside Risk From Iranian Crude Brent Price Faces Short-Term Downside Risk From Iranian Crude Brent Price Faces Short-Term Downside Risk From Iranian Crude The oil price ceiling is enforced by the cartel of oil producers who fear that too high of prices will incentivize US shale oil production as well as the global shift to renewable energy. The Russians have always dragged their feet over oil production cuts and are now pushing for production hikes. The government needs an oil price of around $50-55 per barrel for the budget to break even. The Saudis need higher prices to break even, at $70-75 per barrel. Moscow must coordinate various oil producers, led by the country’s powerful oligarchs and their factions, which is inherently more difficult than the Saudi position of coordinating one producer, Aramco. The Russians and Saudis have maintained cartel discipline so far in 2021, as expected, because the wounds of the market-share war last year are still raw. They retreated from that showdown in less than a month. However, a major escalation in Saudi Arabia’s strategic conflict with Iran could push the Saudis to seek greater market share at Iran’s expense, as occurred before the original Iran deal in 2014-15. Hence our view that the risk to oil prices will shift from the upside to the downside in the second half of the year if the US-Iran deal is reconstituted. Over the long run, the deal is not negative for oil prices. The deal is a tradeoff for lower geopolitical risk today but higher risk in the future. The reason is that Iran’s economic recovery will strengthen its strategic hand and generate a backlash in the region. The global oil supply and demand balance will fluctuate according to circumstances but regional conflict will inject a risk premium over time. Biden’s likely decision to rejoin the 2015 deal should be seen as a delaying tactic. It is impossible to go back to 2015, when the US had mustered a coalition of nations to pressure Iran and when Iran’s “reformist” faction stood to receive a historic boost from the opening of the country’s economy. Now the US lacks a coalition and the reformists are leaving office in disgrace, with the hardliners (“principlists”) taking full power for the foreseeable future. Iran is happy to go back to complying with a deal that consists of sanctions relief in exchange for temporary limits on its nuclear program. The 2015 deal’s restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program begin expiring in 2023 and continue to expire through 2040. Biden has no chance of negotiating a newer and more expansive deal that extends these sunset clauses while also restricting Iran’s ballistic missile program and regional militant activities. He will say that easing sanctions is premised on a broader “follow on” deal to achieve these US goals. But the broader deal is unlikely to materialize anytime soon. The Iranians will commit to future talks but they will have no intention of agreeing to a more expansive deal unless forced. The country’s leaders will never abandon their nuclear program after witnessing the invasions of non-nuclear Libya and Ukraine – in stark contrast with nuclear-armed North Korea. Moreover Biden cannot possibly reassemble the P5+1 coalition with Russia and China anytime soon. The US is directly confronting these states. They could conceivably work with the US when Iran is on the brink of obtaining nuclear weapons but not before then. They did not prevent North Korea. The Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the soon-to-be-inaugurated President Ebrahim Raisi, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, the Ministry of Intelligence, and other pillars of the regime are focused exclusively on strengthening the regime in advance of Khamenei’s impending succession sometime in the coming decade. The succession could easily lead to domestic unrest and a political crisis, which makes the 2020s a critical period for the Islamic Republic. With Tehran focused on a delicate succession, it is not a foregone conclusion that Iran will go on the offensive to expand its sphere of influence immediately after the US deal. But sooner or later a major new geopolitical trend will emerge: the rise of Iran. With sanctions removed, trade and investment increasing, and Chinese and Russian support, Iran will be capable of pursuing its strategic aims in the region more effectively. It will extend its influence across the “Shia Crescent,” including Iraq. The fear that this will inspire in Israel and the Gulf Arab states has already generated a slow-boiling war in the region. This war will intensify as the US will be reluctant to intervene. The purpose of the deal is to enable the war-weary US to reduce its active involvement in the region. The US foreign policy and defense establishment do not entirely see it this way – they emphasize that the US will remain engaged. But US allies in the Middle East will not be convinced. The region already has a taste for the way this works after the US’s precipitous withdrawal from Iraq in 2011, which lead to the rise of the Islamic State terrorist group. Biden will try not to be so precipitous but the writing is on the wall: the US will reduce its focus and commitment. A scramble for power in the region will begin the moment the ink dries on Biden’s signature of the JCPA. Israel and the Arab states are forming a de facto alliance – based on last year’s Abraham Accords – to prepare for Iran’s push to dominate the region. Even if Iran is not overly aggressive (a big if), Israel and the Gulf Arabs will overreact as a result of their fear of abandonment. They will also seek to hedge their bets by improving ties with the Chinese and Russians, making the Middle East the scene of a major new proxy battle in the global great power struggle. As a risk to our view: if the Biden administration changes course this summer and refuses to lift sanctions or rejoin the Iran deal – low but not zero probability – then tensions with Iran will explode almost instantaneously. The Iranians will threaten to close the Strait of Hormuz and a crisis will erupt in the third or fourth quarter. Bottom Line: The US will most likely rejoin the Iranian nuclear deal by August to avoid an immediate crisis or war. The Biden administration will wager that it can lend enough support to regional allies to keep Iran contained. This might work, as the Iranians will focus on fortifying the regime ahead of its leadership succession. However, Iran’s hardline leadership will see an opportunity in America’s withdrawal from its “forever wars.” Iran will increasingly cooperate with Russia and China. Iran’s conflict with Israel and Saudi Arabia will be extremely difficult to manage and will escalate over time, quite possibly creating a revolution or war in Iraq. The Gulf Arabs are already under immense pressure from the green energy revolution. Thus while oil prices might temporarily fall on the return of Iranian exports, they will later see upward pressure from a new wave of Middle Eastern instability. European Political Risk Has (Probably) Bottomed By contrast with all the above we have viewed Europe as a negligible source of (geo)political risk in 2021. European policy uncertainty is falling in Europe relative to these other powers and the rest of the world (Chart 11). Chart 11Europe's Relative Policy Uncertainty Bottoming Europe's Relative Policy Uncertainty Bottoming Europe's Relative Policy Uncertainty Bottoming Chart 12EU Break-Up Risk Hits Floor (Again) EU Break-Up Risk Hits Floor (Again) EU Break-Up Risk Hits Floor (Again) The risk of a break-up of the European Union has wilted and remains at historic lows (Chart 12). There is no immediate threat of any European countries emulating the UK and attempting to exit. Even Italian support for the euro has surged. Immigration flows have plummeted. European solidarity is not on the ballot in the upcoming German and French elections. Germany is choosing between the status quo and a “green revolution” that would not really be a revolution due to the constraints of coalition politics. The Greens have lost some momentum relative to their polling earlier this year but underlying trends suggest they will surprise to the upside in the September 26 vote (Charts 13A and 13B). They embrace EU solidarity, robust government spending, weariness with the Merkel regime, and concerns about climate change, Russia, China, and social justice. Chart 13AGerman Greens Will Surprise To Upside Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Chart 13BGerman Greens Will Surprise To Upside Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran We expect the Greens to surprise to the upside. But as they are forced into a coalition with the ruling Christian Democrats then they will be limited to raising spending rather raising taxes (Table 2). The market will cheer this result. Table 2German Greens’ Ambitious Tax Hike Proposals Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran If the Greens disappoint then a right-leaning government and too early fiscal tightening could become a risk – but it is a minor risk because Merkel’s hand-picked successor, the CDU Chancellor Candidate Armin Laschet, will be pro-Europe and fiscally dovish, just like the mainstream of his party under Merkel. The only limitation on this dovishness is that it would take another global shock for there to be enough votes in the Bundestag to loosen the schuldenbremse or “debt brake.” In France, President Emmanuel Macron is likely to win re-election – the populist candidate Marine Le Pen remains an underdog who is unlikely to make it through France’s two-round electoral system. In Italy, Prime Minister Mario Draghi is overseeing a national unity coalition that will dole out EU recovery funds. An election cannot be held ahead of the presidential election in January, which will be secured by the establishment parties as a major check on any future populist ruling coalition. The risk in these countries, as in Spain and elsewhere, is that neoliberal structural reform and competitiveness are falling by the wayside. Fiscal largesse is positive for securing the recovery but long-term growth potential will remain depressed (Chart 14). Chart 14European And Global Fiscal Stimulus (Updated June 2021) Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Europe remains stuck in a liquidity trap over the long run. It depends on the rest of the world for growth. This is a problem given that China’s potential growth is slowing and there is no ready substitute that will prop up global growth. Europe is increasingly ripe for negative “black swan” events. The power vacuum in the Middle East described above will lead to instability and regime failures that will threaten European security. Russia will remain aggressive, a reflection of its crumbling structural foundations. The Putin administration has not changed its strategy of building a sphere of influence in the former Soviet Union and pushing back against the West, as signaled by the threat to bomb ships that sail in Crimean waters – a unilateral expansion of Russia’s territorial waters following the Crimean invasion. The Biden administration is not seeking anything comparable to the diplomatic “reset” with Russia from 2009-11, which ended in acrimony. In other words, European political risk may be bottoming as we speak. Investment Takeaways Chart 15Limited Equity Upside From Likely US Infrastructure Bill Limited Equity Upside From Likely US Infrastructure Bill Limited Equity Upside From Likely US Infrastructure Bill US Peak Fiscal Stimulus: The Biden administration is highly likely to pass an infrastructure package through Congress, either as a bipartisan deal with Republicans or as part of the American Jobs Plan. The result is another $1-$1.5 trillion fiscal stimulus, albeit over an eight-year period, with infrastructure funding taking until 2024-25 to ramp up. Biden’s other plans probably will not pass before the 2022 midterm election, which will likely bring gridlock. Investors are well aware of these proposals and the policy setting will probably be frozen after this year. Hence there is limited remaining upside for global materials sector and US infrastructure plays (Chart 15). The extravagant US fiscal thrust of 2020-21 will turn into a huge fiscal drag in 2022 (Chart 16). The Federal Reserve, however, will remain ultra-dovish as long as labor market slack persists – regardless of who is at the helm. Chart 16US Fiscal Drag Very Large In 2022 Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Third Quarter Outlook 2021: The Pivot To Asia Runs Through Iran Chart 17Go Long Large Caps And Defensives Go Long Large Caps And Defensives Go Long Large Caps And Defensives China’s Headwinds Persist: China may or may not ease policy in time to prevent a market riot. China plays and industrial metals are highly exposed to a correction and we recommend steering clear. US-Iran Deal Weighs On Oil Price: Tactically we are neutral on oil and oil plays. An Iran deal could depress oil prices temporarily – and potentially in a major way if the Saudis agree with the Russians on increasing production. Fundamentals are positive but depend on the OPEC 2.0 cartel. The cartel faces the risk that higher prices will incentivize both alternative oil providers and the green revolution. Europe’s Opportunity: We continue to see the euro and European stocks offering value. Given the troubles with Russia we favor developed Europe plays over emerging Europe. The German election would be a bullish catalyst for European assets but headwinds from China will prevail, which is negative for cyclical European stocks. The Russian Duma election, also in September, creates high potential for Russia to clash with the West between now and then. Tactically, go long global large caps and defensives (Chart 17).   Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Independent Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders recently felt it was necessary to warn against a second cold war. Sanders, a democratic socialist, is a reliable indicator of the left wing of the Democratic Party and a dissenter who puts pressure on the center-left Biden administration. His fears underscore the dominance of the new hawkish consensus. Appendix China China: GeoRisk Indicator China: GeoRisk Indicator Russia Russia: GeoRisk Indicator Russia: GeoRisk Indicator UK UK: GeoRisk Indicator UK: GeoRisk Indicator Germany Germany: GeoRisk Indicator Germany: GeoRisk Indicator France France: GeoRisk Indicator France: GeoRisk Indicator Italy Italy: GeoRisk Indicator Italy: GeoRisk Indicator Canada Canada: GeoRisk Indicator Canada: GeoRisk Indicator Spain Spain: GeoRisk Indicator Spain: GeoRisk Indicator Taiwan – Province Of China Taiwan Territory: GeoRisk Indicator Taiwan Territory: GeoRisk Indicator Korea Korea: GeoRisk Indicator Korea: GeoRisk Indicator Turkey Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator Brazil Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator Australia Australia: GeoRisk Indicator Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Highlights The US business cycle is shifting into a slowdown stage: US economic and earnings growth will remain robust but decelerate from their peak.  Treasury rates have stabilized, and inflation fears, if not dissipated, have become priced in.  The consumer is flash with cash, and pent-up demand has not yet faded.  Demand for services exceeds demand for goods.  Valuations are rich, and short-term consolidation is likely. Considering this market backdrop, we recommend a barbell positioning for equity portfolios – a combination of Growth and Cyclicals: Shift allocation towards stable growth sectors, such as Technology, which are getting a shot in the arm from rates stabilization and the growth slowdown. Take a granular approach to selection of cyclical sectors and industries, with preference for the ones most exposed to consumer pent-up demand for goods and services and to a revival of global trade flows. Differentiate between Value and Cyclicals:  Cyclicals are more “growthy” than run-of-the-mill Value sectors.   Feature In our report of June 7, 2021, we outlined our investment framework. In this report we apply our investment principles to analyze the state of the equity markets today and derive investment recommendations. Business Cycle Is Shifting Into A Slowdown Stage The pandemic is barely over, but the markets have already galloped through both the recovery and expansion stages of the business cycle on the back of economic reopening, fiscal and monetary stimulus, and pent-up demand (Table 1). Table 1Stages Of The Business Cycle Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals We posit that the business cycle is at the crest of the expansion stage and is shifting into a moderate slowdown. While growth is to remain robust, it has most likely peaked and is starting to decelerate: The ISM Composite reading is elevated but has slipped from a high of 64.2 in March to 62.6 in June (Chart 1). According to Bloomberg consensus estimates, GDP growth is to slow from 6.4% in 2021 to 4% in 2022. The earnings cycle is also peaking. In Q1-2021 US equities delivered 53% YoY earnings growth. Going forward, expectations are for 21% (Chart 2). Chart 1ISM Composite Has Peaked ISM Composite Has Peaked ISM Composite Has Peaked Chart 2EPS Growth Has Also Peaked EPS Growth Has Also Peaked EPS Growth Has Also Peaked While earnings growth is expected to remain robust, a change in pace often manifests itself in a change of market leadership from Value to Growth. Prices Set To Rise But At A Slower Pace Since the beginning of this year, investors’ eyes have been fixed on rising inflation readings. The crux of the debate was centered on whether high inflation is here to stay or is a transitory phenomenon. While we don’t have a definitive answer yet, there is a sufficient body of evidence to suggest that inflation is likely to decelerate. First, the 5-year inflation breakeven has stabilized indicating that the market expects consumer price increases to moderate (Chart 3). Second, the recent spike in the inflation reading has been exacerbated by the base effect of comparison with the darkest days of the pandemic in March-May 2020. Inflation troughed in June of 2020, which will anchor this coming summer’s inflation numbers to a higher base. (Chart 4). Chart 3Inflation Breakeven Stabilized Inflation Breakeven Stabilized Inflation Breakeven Stabilized Chart 4Base Effects Of The Spring 2020 Are To Roll Off Base Effects Of The Spring 2020 Are To Roll Off Base Effects Of The Spring 2020 Are To Roll Off Third, inflation is likely to dissipate to more normal levels later in the year thanks to millions rejoining the labor force upon expiration of supplemental employment insurance benefits in the fall, and the supply chain gradually becoming unclogged. Last, the bubble in commodities prices has burst with prices of lumber, corn and steel coming down from their highs by more than 30%, keeping a lid on PPI, and subsequently on the price of finished goods (Chart 5 & Chart 6) . Chart 5Bubble In Commodities Burst Bubble In Commodities Burst Bubble In Commodities Burst Chart 6PPI To Follow Commodity Prices PPI To Follow Commodity Prices PPI To Follow Commodity Prices Rates Are Stabilizing After rising by nearly 1% from 0.5% to 1.5% in the course of just four months from November 2020 to February 2021, the 10-year Treasury yield has been range bound between 1.5% and 1.7% despite fireworks in the US economic data ranging from CPI readings to unemployment beats (Chart 7). The fact that the bond market is refusing to budge no matter how positive a macro release number we get, confirms our view that a post Covid-19 economic revival and accelerated growth have been priced in. Case in point: The Citi Economic Surprise Index (CESI) turned down from its February highs and is approaching zero. Chart 7Rates Are Range Bound Since March Rates Are Range Bound Since March Rates Are Range Bound Since March Given the tight positive correlation (44%) between CESI and UST10Y, and inflation moderating, it is unlikely that the bond market will enter another aggressive sell-off phase (Chart 8). It is possible that rates will continue to grind higher over the summer, but the rate of ascent, which is more important for growth-oriented assets than the level (excluding extreme readings), is likely to be slow. Chart 8Positive Economic Data Is Priced In Positive Economic Data Is Priced In Positive Economic Data Is Priced In Consumers Are Flash With Cash After a series of helicopter cash drops, most consumers came out of the recession in a better financial shape than they entered it. According estimates by Peter G Peterson Foundation, only 22% and 19% of second and third round of stimulus checks have been spent (in addition, some of the money was used to pay off debt). Personal savings have increased by roughly $1.5 trillion from January 2020 trough, and disposable income has increased by 6% (Chart 9). With plentiful jobs and quit rates off the map, we expect consumer confidence to remain high and support spending. The investment implication is that we favor parts of the equity market most exposed to American consumer. Chart 9Consumers Are Flash With Cash Consumers Are Flash With Cash Consumers Are Flash With Cash Services Are In Higher Demand Than Goods After months of consumer behavior altered by fears of the pandemic, economic reopening has brought about strong demand for services. Indeed, the latest Non-manufacturing ISM PMI reading was 64 compared to 61 for Manufacturing, which has clearly peaked. As a result, we favor service sectors, both in the consumer and industrial space (Chart 10). Chart 10Demand For Services Outstrips Demand For Goods Demand For Services Outstrips Demand For Goods Demand For Services Outstrips Demand For Goods Global Trade Flows Are Soaring The global push for vaccinations and pent-up demand have jump-started trade flows around the globe. Despite shipping bottlenecks and container shortages, global trade is thriving, strengthening demand for industrial goods and transportation services (Chart 11). Chart 11Global Trade Soars Global Trade Soars Global Trade Soars Valuations Are Elevated The US equity market had a fantastic run over the past year, delivering 93% return from March 2020 trough, and is now trading at 30x trailing PE. Forward-looking PE is also elevated at 23x. About 40% of S&P 500 industry groups are trading in the top 10% of their historical valuations. In a way, markets have borrowed returns from the future (Chart 12). With valuations close to an all-time high, equity markets do not have much safety margin and are vulnerable to a correction which may be triggered by hawkish rhetoric from the Fed, or upside inflation or employment surprises. Having said that, we are bullish on equity markets on a three to six months horizon. Chart 12US Equities Are Expensive US Equities Are Expensive US Equities Are Expensive Lastly, high valuation is not necessarily an impediment to a continued bull market but more of a speed limit: Returns of US equities are to be modest going forward. To keep portfolio return volatility down and enhance compounding effects, we recommend carrying a healthy allocation to such defensive sectors as Health Care. We would stay away from bond proxies like Utilities and Telecom. Investment Implications To sum it all up: Economic and earnings growth is to remain robust but come down from the peak, inflation is to decelerate but stay high, rates are to remain stable, consumer spending is to stay robust, demand for services is to exceed demand for goods and global trade flows are soaring. What do these economic developments mean for portfolio positioning? What styles and sectors will fare best in the current economic environment? Growth does well when rates and inflation are stabilizing thanks to the long duration nature of its earnings stream, and shines in a slowdown when growth becomes scarcer. Cyclicals thrive in an environment of falling inflation, but a mature cycle is not an ideal backdrop for their outperformance. In terms of sector selection, we favor Cyclicals with exposure to consumers, playing growth through the “new economy”, i.e. Software and Services, and Internet Retailing. We will fund the new positions by taking profits from recent winners, Financials and Materials. The following is a brief rationale for these allocations. Value/Growth Rotation Between November 5, 2020 and May 7, 2021, long-duration Growth equities underperformed Value equities by 16%, beaten down by rising rates and accelerating economic growth. However, recently the case for Growth has strengthened. With rates stabilizing and inflation decelerating, there are already early signs that Growth stocks are staging a comeback, outperforming Value by 2.5% since May 10. Chart 13 shows that, in an enviroment of slowing inflation, Growth tends to outperform Value (Chart 14). Chart 13Growth Underperforms Value Since October 2020 Growth Underperforms Value Since October 2020 Growth Underperforms Value Since October 2020 Chart 14Growth Has Outperformed When Inflation Decelerates Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Further, peak economic and earnings growth, as well as the business cycle moving into a slowdown stage, bode well for Growth sectors (Chart 15). Chart 15Growth Shines In A Slowdown Stage Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Chart 16Growth Is Less Frothy Now Growth Is Less Frothy Now Growth Is Less Frothy Now Further, zooming into fundamentals and valuations, we observe that Growth stocks remain expensive, trading at a forward multiple of 27x, which is a 53% premium to Value, but some of the froth has come off as the style is now trading 3 points lower than back in December 2020 (Chart 16). Comparing Growth and Value earnings expectations, Value stocks are expected to grow about 10% faster than Growth stocks (Chart 17). The crux of the current Growth/Value dilemma is that, while optically Value is more attractive: cheaper than Growth and offering higher earnings growth, it is also much more sensitive to a slowdown in economic growth and rates stabilization (even if rates remain high). Thus, if we are right and rates and inflation have indeed steadied, and growth is slowing. Growth will outperform Value despite the latter’s superior fundamentals. The explanation lies in a sector composition of the two styles. Value’s top allocation is Financials, for which stabilizing rates and a flattening yield curve are detrimental. Growth’s top allocation is Information Technology (40% of the index), which thrives in an environment of lower growth and stable rates (Chart 18). All in all, we recommend topping up Growth sectors in a portfolio to be better positioned for an imminent change in regime. Chart 17Value Is Expected To Have Higher Earnings Growth Value Is Expected To Have Higher Earnings Growth Value Is Expected To Have Higher Earnings Growth Chart 18Growth Is Exposed To Tech, Value To Financials Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Cyclicals Vs Defensives Similarly to Value, Cyclicals have outperformed Defensives by about 10.7% since November. However, in March this rally ran out of steam, and relative returns remain range bound Chart 19. Further, performance of Cyclicals is sensitive to the stages of the business cycle. Normally, in a slowdown stage, Cyclicals lag. Chart 20 shows performance of Cyclicals during the slowdown stage of the business cycles. Chart 19Cyclicals Have Not Outperformed Defensives Since March Cyclicals Have Not Outperformed Defensives Since March Cyclicals Have Not Outperformed Defensives Since March Chart 20Slowdown Regime Doesn’t Favor Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals However, this cycle may turn out somewhat different due to supply-chain disruptions and pent-up demand. Many of the conditions supporting Cyclicals are still in place: The potential infrastructure package, improving global trade and easy financial conditions. Earnings expectations relative to Defensives remain robust, and valuations have recently compressed from a 97% premium in February 2021, to 17% in May (Chart 21). Hence, we are not yet ready to give up on Cyclical stocks but will be granular in our allocations, favoring industry groups most exposed to services, global trade, infrastructure, and the US consumer. Chart 21Cyclicals Have Rerated Rel To Defensives Cyclicals Have Rerated Rel To Defensives Cyclicals Have Rerated Rel To Defensives Are Cyclicals The Same As Value? The reader may observe that we favor Cyclicals over Value and wonder if they are not one and the same. While recently Value and Cyclicals have been nearly 90% correlated (Chart 22), this relationship changes over time. Cyclicals have higher exposure than Value to stable growth sectors like Technology, and Consumer Discretionary (Chart 23). We prefer Cyclicals to Value because Technology is a quintessential growth sector favored by the current macroeconomic backdrop, and the Consumer Discretionary sector is exposed to increases in discretionary income and consumer demand for services. Choosing between Value and Cyclicals, we pick Cyclicals (Chart 23). Chart 22Relationship Between Value And Cyclicals Changes Over Time Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Chart 23Cyclicals Have More Exposure To Stable Growth Than Value Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals  Investment Recommendations Overweight Growth-Oriented And Cyclical Sectors Growth-oriented industries groups and industries benefiting from rate stabilization, such as Software and IT Services, Semiconductors, and Internet Retail. Valuations are expensive but are justified by strong expected long-term earnings growth. Cyclical industries exposed to consumer demand for services and experiences, such as Hotels, Restaurants, Entertainment, and Airlines. Discretionary goods industry groups such as Autos & Components, and Consumer Durables. Industrial service-oriented industry groups, such as Transportation and Professional Services Global trade and infrastructure exposed industries such as Transportation, Construction and Engineering, and Building Materials. Equal Weight Defensive Sectors Health care valuations and returns have been subdued due to disruptions wrecked by the pandemic. However, in addition to trading at 16x forward earnings, the sector expects solid earnings growth (10% over the next 12 months) and is likely to benefit from post-Covid-19 normalization in health care and diminished policy risks. To be more specific, policy risk for Big Pharma is higher as it is a bipartisan target, while managed health care got a big positive policy surprise when Biden wisely decided earlier this year not to re-fight the health care battles of the Obama administration. Underweight Sectors Negatively Affected By Rate And Inflation Stabilization (Off High Levels) Rate stabilization and yield-curve flattening is detrimental to rate-sensitive sectors such as Banks and Insurance. Inflation deceleration will be detrimental to industry groups with high pricing power and high exposure to raw materials. Since commodities prices have rolled over, the Metals and Mining industry group may take a pause. We will also avoid bond-proxy sectors like Utilities and Consumer Staples: Rates have stabilized but a bull market in bonds is highly unlikely Bottom Line Peak growth, inflation and rates stabilization herald a new lease of life for Growth stocks. Strong consumption and pent-up demand for goods and services as well as a revival of global trade support further outperformance of Cyclicals.   Irene Tunkel Chief Strategist, US Equity Strategy irene.tunkel@bcaresearch.com   Recommended Allocation Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals Rotate Into Growth Stocks, Be Granular In The Selection Of Cyclicals
Highlights President Biden has called for the US intelligence community to investigate the origins of COVID-19 and one of Biden’s top diplomats has stated the obvious: the era of “engagement” with China is over. This clinches our long-held view that any Democratic president would be a hawk like President Trump. The US-China conflict – and global geopolitical risk – will revive and undermine global risk appetite. China faces a confluence of geopolitical and macroeconomic challenges, suggesting that its equity underperformance will continue. Domestic Chinese investors should stay long government bonds. Foreign investors should sell into the bond rally to reduce exposure to any future sanctions. The impending agreement of a global minimum corporate tax rate has limited concrete implications that are not already known but it symbolizes the return of Big Government in the western world. Our updated GeoRisk Indicators are available in the Appendix, as well as our monthly geopolitical calendar. Feature In our quarterly webcast, “Geopolitics And Bull Markets,” we argued that geopolitical themes matter to investors when they have a demonstrable relationship with the macroeconomic backdrop. When geopolitics and macro are synchronized, a simple yet powerful investment thesis can be discerned. The US war on terror, Russia’s resurgence, the EU debt crisis, and Brexit each provided cases in which a geopolitically informed macro view was both accessible and actionable at an early stage. Investors generally did well if they sold the relevant country’s currency and disfavored its equities on a relative basis. Chart 1China's Decade Of Troubles China's Decade Of Troubles China's Decade Of Troubles Of course, the market takeaway is not always so clear. When geopolitics and macroeconomics are desynchronized, the trick is to determine which framework will prevail over the financial markets and for how long. Sometimes the market moves to its own rhythm. The goal is not to trade on geopolitics but rather to invest with geopolitics. One of our key views for this year – headwinds for China – is an example of synchronization. Two weeks ago we discussed China’s macroeconomic challenge. In this report we discuss China’s foreign policy challenge: geopolitical pressure from the US and its allies. In particular we address President Biden’s call for a deeper intelligence dive into the origins of COVID-19. The takeaway is negative for China’s currency and risk assets. The Great Recession dealt a painful blow to the Chinese version of the East Asian economic miracle. By 2015, China’s financial turmoil and currency devaluation should have convinced even bullish investors to keep their distance from Chinese stocks and the renminbi. If investors stuck with this bearish view despite the post-2016 rally, on fear of trade war, they were rewarded in 2018-19. Only with China’s containment of COVID-19 and large economic stimulus in 2020 has CNY-USD threatened to break out (Chart 1). We expect the renminbi to weaken anew, especially once the Fed begins to taper asset purchases. Our cyclical view is still bullish but US-China relations are unstable so we remain tactically defensive. Forget Biden’s China Review, He’s A Hawk Chinese financial markets face a host of challenges this year, despite the positive factors for China’s manufacturing sector amid the global recovery. At home these challenges consist of a structural economic slowdown, a withdrawal of policy stimulus, bearish sentiment among households, and an ongoing government crackdown on systemic risk. Abroad the Democratic Party’s return to power in Washington means that the US will bring more allies to bear in its attempt to curb China’s rise. This combination of factors presents a headwind for Chinese equities and a tailwind for government bonds (Chart 2). This is true at least until the government should hit its pain threshold and re-stimulate. Chart 2Global Investors Still Wary Global Investors Still Wary Global Investors Still Wary New stimulus may not occur in 2022. The Communist Party’s leadership rotation merely requires economic stability, not rapid growth. While the central government has a record of stimulating when its pain threshold is hit, even under the economically hawkish President Xi Jinping, a financial market riot is usually part of this threshold. This implies near-term downside, particularly for global commodities and metals, which are also facing a Chinese regulatory backlash to deter speculation. In this context, President Biden’s call for a deeper US intelligence investigation into the origin of COVID-19 is an important confirming signal of the US’s hawkish turn toward China. Biden gave 90 days for the intelligence community to report back to him. We will not enter into the debate about COVID-19’s origins. From a geopolitical point of view it is a moot point. The facts of the virus origin may never be established. According to Biden’s statement, at least one US intelligence agency believes the “lab leak theory” is the most likely source of the virus (while two other agencies decided in favor of animal-to-human transmission). Meanwhile Chinese government spokespeople continue to push the theory that the virus originated at the US’s Fort Detrick in Maryland or at a US-affiliated global research center. What is certain is that the first major outbreak of a highly contagious disease occurred in Wuhan. Both sides are demanding greater transparency and will reject each other’s claims based on a lack of transparency. If the US intelligence report concludes that COVID originated from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the Chinese government and media will reject the report. If the report exonerates the Wuhan laboratory, at least half of the US public will disbelieve it and it will not deter Biden from drawing a hard line on more macro-relevant policy disputes with China. The US’s hawkish bipartisan consensus on China took shape before COVID. Biden’s decision to order the fresh report introduces skepticism regarding the World Health Organization’s narrative, which was until now the mainstream media’s narrative. Previously this skepticism was ghettoized in US public discourse: indeed, until Biden’s announcement on May 26, the social media company Facebook suppressed claims that the virus came from a lab accident or human failure. Thus Biden’s action will ensure that a large swathe of the American public will always tend to support this theory regardless of the next report’s findings. At the same time Biden discontinued a State Department effort to prove the lab leak theory, which shows that it is not a foregone conclusion what his administration will decide. The good news is that even if the report concluded in favor of the lab leak, the Biden administration would remain highly unlikely to demand that China pay “reparations,” like the Trump administration demanded in 2020. This demand, if actualized, would be explosive. The bad news is that a future nationalist administration could conceivably use the investigation as a basis to demand reparations. Nationalism is a force to be reckoned with in both countries and the dispute over COVID’s origin will exacerbate it. Traditionally the presidents of both countries would tamp down nationalism or attempt to keep it harnessed. But in the post-Xi, post-Trump era it is harder to control. The death toll of COVID-19 will be a permanent source of popular grievance around the world and a wedge between the US and China (Chart 3). China’s international image suffered dramatically in 2020. So far in 2021 China has not regained any diplomatic ground. Chart 3Death Toll Of COVID-19 Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) The US is repairing its image via a return to multilateralism while the Europeans have put their Comprehensive Agreement on Investment with China on hold due to a spat over sanctions arising from western accusations of genocide (a subject on which China pointedly answered that it did not need to be lectured by Europeans). Notably Biden’s Department of State also endorsed its predecessor’s accusation of genocide in Xinjiang. Any authoritative US intelligence review that solidifies doubts about the WHO’s initial investigation – even if it should not affirm the lab leak theory – would give Biden more ammunition in global opinion to form a democratic alliance to pressure China (for example, in Europe). An important factor that enables the US to remain hawkish on China is fiscal stimulus. While stimulus helps bring about economic recovery, it also lowers the bar to political confrontation (Chart 4). Countries with supercharged domestic demand do not have as much to fear from punitive trade measures. The Biden administration has not taken new punitive measures against China but it is clearly not worried about Chinese retaliation. Chart 4Large Fiscal Stimulus Lowers The Bar To Geopolitical Conflict Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) China’s stimulus is underrated in this chart (which excludes non-fiscal measures) but it is still true that China’s policy has been somewhat restrained and it will need to stimulate its economy again in response to any new punitive measures or any global loss of confidence. At least China is limited in its ability to tighten policy due to the threat of US pressure and western trade protectionism. Simultaneous with Biden’s announcement on COVID-19, his administration’s coordinator for Indo-Pacific affairs, Kurt Campbell, proclaimed in a speech that the era of “engagement” with China is officially over and the new paradigm is one of “competition.” By now Campbell is stating the obvious. But this tone is a change both from his tone while serving in President Obama’s Department of State and from his article in Foreign Affairs last year (when he was basically auditioning for his current role in the Biden administration).1 Campbell even said in his latest remarks that the Trump administration was right about the “direction” of China policy (though not the “execution”), which is candid. Campbell was speaking at Stanford University but his comments were obviously aimed for broader consumption. Investors no longer need to wait for the outcome of the Biden administration’s comprehensive review of policy toward China. The answer is known: the Biden administration’s hawkishness is confirmed. The Department of Defense report on China policy, due in June, is very unlikely to strike a more dovish posture than the president’s health policy. Now investors must worry about how rapidly tensions will escalate and put a drag on global sentiment. Bottom Line: US-China relations are unstable and pose an immediate threat to global risk appetite. The fundamental geopolitical assessment of US-China relations has been confirmed yet again. The US is seeking to constrain China’s rise because China is the only country capable of rivaling the US for supremacy in Asia and the world. Meanwhile China is rejecting liberalization in favor of economic self-sufficiency and maintaining an offensive foreign policy as it is wary of US containment and interference. Presidents Biden and Xi Jinping are still capable of stabilizing relations in the medium term but they are unlikely to substantially de-escalate tensions. And at the moment tensions are escalating. China’s Reaction: The Example Of Australia How will China respond to Biden’s new inquiry into COVID’s origins? Obviously Beijing will react negatively but we would not expect anything concrete to occur until the result of the inquiry is released in 90 days. China will be more constrained in its response to the US than it has been with Australia, which called for an international inquiry early last year, as the US is a superior power. Australia was the first to ban Chinese telecom company Huawei from its 5G network (back in 2018) and it was the first to call for a COVID probe. Relations between China and Australia have deteriorated steadily since then, but macro trends have clearly driven the Aussie dollar. The AUD-JPY exchange rate is a good measure for global risk appetite and it is wavering in recent weeks (Chart 5). Chart 5Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat Australian Dollar Follows Macro Trends, Rallies Amid China Trade Spat Tensions have also escalated due to China’s dependency on Australian commodity exports at a time of spiking commodity prices. This is a recurring theme going back to the Stern Hu affair. The COVID spat led China to impose a series of sanctions against Australian beef, barley, wine, and coal. But because China cannot replace Australian resources (at least, not in the short term), its punitive measures are limited. It faces rising producer prices as a result of its trade restrictions (Chart 6). This dependency is a bigger problem for China today than it was in previous cycles so China will try to diversify. Chart 6Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia Constraints On China's Tarrifs On Australia By contrast, China is not likely to impose sanctions on the US in response to Biden’s investigation, unless Biden attacks first. China’s imports from the US are booming and its currency is appreciating sharply. Despite Beijing’s efforts to keep the Phase One trade deal from collapsing, Biden is maintaining Trump’s tariffs and the US-China trade divorce is proceeding (Chart 7). Bilateral tariff rates are still 16-17 percentage points higher than they were in 2018, with US tariffs on China at 19% (versus 3% on the rest of the world) while Chinese tariffs on the US stand at 21% (versus 6% on the rest of the world). The Biden administration timed this week’s hawkish statements to coincide with the first meeting of US trade negotiators with China, which was a more civil affair. Both countries acknowledged that the relationship is important and trade needs to be continued. However, US Trade Representative Katherine Tai’s comments were not overly optimistic (she told Reuters that the relationship is “very, very challenging”). She has also been explicit about maintaining policy continuity with the Trump administration. We highly doubt that China’s share of US imports will ever surpass its pre-Trump peaks. The Biden administration has also refrained so far from loosening export controls on high-tech trade with China. This has caused a bull market in Taiwan while causing problems for Chinese semiconductor stocks’ relative performance (Chart 8). If Biden’s policy review does not lead to any relaxation of export controls on commercial items then it will mark a further escalation in tensions. Chart 7US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit US Tarrifs Reduce China In Trade Deficit Bottom Line: Until Presidents Biden and Xi stabilize relations at the top, the trade negotiations over implementing the Phase One trade deal – and any new Phase Two talks – cannot bring major positive surprises for financial markets. Chart 8US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage US Export Controls Amid Chip Shortage Congress Is More Hawkish Than Biden Biden’s ability to reduce frictions with China, should he seek to, will also be limited by Congress and public opinion. With the US deeply politically divided, and polarization at historically high levels, China has emerged as one of the few areas of agreement. The hawkish consensus is symbolized by new legislation such as the Strategic Competition Act, which is making its way through the Senate rapidly. Congress is also trying to boost US competitiveness through bills such as the Endless Frontier Act. These bills would subject China to scrutiny and potential punitive measures over a broad range of issues but most of all they would ignite US industrial policy , STEM education, and R&D, and diversify the US’s supply chains. We would highlight three key points with regard to the global impact of this legislation: Global supply chains are shifting regardless: This trend is fairly well established in tech, defense, and pharmaceuticals. It will continue unless we see a major policy reversal from China to try to court western powers and reduce frictions. The EU and India are less enthusiastic than the US and Australia about removing China from supply chains but they are not opposed. The EU Commission has recommended new defensive economic measures that cover supply chains in batteries, cloud services, hydrogen energy, pharmaceuticals, materials, and semiconductors. As mentioned, the EU is also hesitating to ratify the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment with China. Hence the EU is moving in the US’s direction independently of proposed US laws. After all, China’s rise up the tech value chain (and its decision to stop cutting back the size of its manufacturing sector) ultimately threatens the EU’s comparative advantage. The EU is also aligned with the US on democratic values and network security. India has taken a harder stance on China than usual, which marks an important break with the past. India’s decision to exclude Huawei from its 5G network is not final but it is likely to be at least partially implemented. A working group of democracies is forming regardless. The Strategic Competition Act calls for the creation of a working group of democracies but the truth is that this is already happening through more effective forums like the G7 and bilateral summits. Just as the implementation of the act would will ultimately depend on President Biden, so the willingness of other countries to adopt the recommendations of the working group would depend on their own executives. Allies have leeway as Biden will not use punitive measures against them: Any policy change from the EU, UK, India, and Australia will be independent of the US Congress passing the Strategic Competition Act. These countries will be self-directed. The US would have to devote diplomatic energy to maintaining a sustained effort by these states to counter China in the face of economic costs. This will be limited by the fact that the Biden administration will be very reluctant to impose punitive measures on allies to insist on their cooperation. The allies will set the pace of pressure on China rather than the United States. This gives the EU an important position, particularly Germany. And yet the trends in Germany suggest that the government will be more hawkish on China after the federal elections in September. Bottom Line: The Biden administration is unlikely to use punitive measures against allies so new US laws are less important than overall US diplomacy with each of the allies. Some allies will be less compliant with US policies given their need for trade with China. But so far there appears to be a common position taking shape even with the EU that is prejudicial to China’s involvement in key sectors of emerging technologies. If China does not respond by reducing its foreign policy assertiveness, then China’s economic growth will suffer. That drag would have to be offset by new supply chain construction in Southeast Asia and other countries. Investment Takeaways The foregoing highlights the international risks facing China even at a time when its trend growth is slowing (Chart 9) and its ongoing struggle with domestic financial imbalances is intensifying. China’s debt-service costs have risen sharply and Beijing is putting pressure on corporations and local governments to straighten out their finances (Chart 10), resulting in a wave of defaults. This backdrop is worrisome for investors until policymakers reassure them that government support will continue. Chart 9China's Growth Potential Slowing China's Growth Potential Slowing China's Growth Potential Slowing Chart 10China's Leaders Struggle With Debt China's Leaders Struggle With Debt China's Leaders Struggle With Debt China’s domestic stability is a key indicator of whether geopolitical risks could spiral out of control. In particular we think aggressive action in the Taiwan Strait is likely to be delayed as long as the Chinese economy and regime are stable. China has rattled sabers over the strait this year in a warning to the United States not to cross its red line (Chart 11). It is not yet clear how Biden’s policy continuity with the Trump administration will affect cross-strait stability. We see no basis yet for changing our view that there is a 60% chance of a market-negative geopolitical incident in 2021-22 and a 5% chance of full-scale war in the short run. Chart 11China PLA Flights Over Taiwan Strait Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Putting all of the above together, we see substantial support for two key market-relevant geopolitical risks: Chinese domestic politics (including policy tightening) and persistent US-China tensions (including but not limited to the Taiwan Strait). We remain tactically defensive, a stance supported by several recent turns in global markets: The global stock-to-bond ratio has rolled over. China is a negative factor for global risk appetite (Chart 12). Global cyclical equities are no longer outperforming defensives. There is a stark divergence between Chinese cyclicals and global cyclicals stemming from the painful transition in China’s bloated industrial economy (Chart 13). Global large caps are catching a bid relative to small caps (Chart 14). Chart 12Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over Global Stock-To-Bond Ratio Rolled Over Chart 13Global Cyclicals-To-Defensives Pause Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Chart 14Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps Global Large Caps Catch A Bid Versus Small Caps Cyclically the global economic recovery should continue as the pandemic wanes. China will eventually relax policy to prevent too abrupt of a slowdown. Therefore our strategic portfolio reflects our high-conviction view that the current global economic expansion will continue even as it faces hurdles from the secular rise in geopolitical risk, especially US-China cold war. Measurable geopolitical risk and policy uncertainty are likely to rebound sooner rather than later, with a negative impact on high-beta risk assets. Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Coda: Global Minimum Tax Symbolizes Return Of Big Government On Thursday, the US Treasury Department released a proposal to set the global minimum corporate tax rate at 15%. The plan is to stop what Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has referred to as a global “race to the bottom” and create the basis for a rehabilitation of government budgets damaged by pandemic-era stimulus. Although the newly proposed 15% rate is significantly below President Biden’s bid to raise the US Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income (GILTI) rate to 21% from 10.5%, it is the same rate as his proposed minimum tax on corporate book income. Biden is also raising the headline corporate tax rate from 21% to around 25% (or at highest 28%). Negotiators at the OECD were initially discussing a 12.5% global minimum rate. The finance ministers of both France and Germany – where the corporate income tax rates are 32.0% and 29.9%, respectively – both responded positively to the announcement. However, Ireland, which uses low corporate taxes as an economic development strategy, is obviously more comfortable with a minimum closer to its own 12.5% rate. Discussions are likely to occur when G7 finance ministers meet on June 4-5. Countries are hoping to establish a broad outline for the proposal by the G20 meeting in early July. It is highly likely that the OECD will come to an agreement. However, it is not a truly “global” minimum as there will still be tax havens. Compliance and enforcement will vary across countries. A close look at the domestic political capital of the relevant countries shows that while many countries have the raw parliamentary majorities necessary to raise taxes, most countries have substantial conservative contingents capable of preventing stiff corporate tax hikes (Table 1, in the Appendix). Our Geopolitical strategists highlight that the Biden administration’s compromise on the minimum rate reflects its pragmatism as well as emphasis on multilateralism. Any global deal will be non-binding but the two most important low-tax players are already committed to raising corporate rates well above this level: Biden’s plan is noted above, while the UK’s budget for March includes a jump in the business rate to 25% in April 2023 from the current 19%. Ireland and Hungary are the only outliers but they may eventually be forced to yield to such a large coalition of bigger economies (Chart 15). Chart 15Global Minimum Corporate Tax Impact Is Symbolic Rather Than Concrete Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Thus a nominal minimum corporate tax rate is likely to be forged but it will not be truly global and it will not change the corporate rate for most countries. The reality of what companies pay will also depend on loopholes, tax havens, and the effective tax rate. Bottom Line: On a structural horizon, the global minimum corporate tax is significant for showing a paradigm shift in global macro policy: western governments are starting to raise taxes and revenue after decades of cutting taxes. The experiment with limited government has ended and Big Government is making a comeback. On a cyclical horizon, the US concession on global minimum tax is that the Biden administration aims to be pragmatic and “get things done.” Biden is also working with Republicans to pass bills covering some bipartisan aspects of his domestic agenda, such as trade, manufacturing, and China. The takeaway from a global point of view is that Biden may prove to be a compromiser rather than an ideologue, unlike his predecessors.   Matt Gertken Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com   Roukaya Ibrahim Vice President Daily Insights RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Kurt M. Campbell and Jake Sullivan, "Competition Without Catastrophe," Foreign Affairs, September/October 2019, foreignaffairs.com. Section II: Appendix Table 1OECD: Which Countries Are Willing And Able To Raise Corporate Tax Rates? Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) Biden Confirmed As A China Hawk (GeoRisk Update) GeoRisk Indicator China China: GeoRisk Indicator China: GeoRisk Indicator Russia Russia: GeoRisk Indicator Russia: GeoRisk Indicator UK UK: GeoRisk Indicator UK: GeoRisk Indicator Germany Germany: GeoRisk Indicator Germany: GeoRisk Indicator France France: GeoRisk Indicator France: GeoRisk Indicator Italy Italy: GeoRisk Indicator Italy: GeoRisk Indicator Canada Canada: GeoRisk Indicator Canada: GeoRisk Indicator Spain Spain: GeoRisk Indicator Spain: GeoRisk Indicator Taiwan – Province Of China Taiwan-Province of China: GeoRisk Indicator Taiwan-Province of China: GeoRisk Indicator Korea Korea: GeoRisk Indicator Korea: GeoRisk Indicator Turkey Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator Brazil Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator Australia Australia: GeoRisk Indicator Australia: GeoRisk Indicator Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
Highlights Important leading indicators of Eurozone activity point to record growth in the coming quarters. Progress on the vaccination front, global pent-up demand, and easing fiscal policy will fuel the Euro Area recovery. Consensus growth expectations for the Eurozone do not reflect this upbeat outlook; hence, European economic surprises will remain firm. Robust economic surprises will help European stocks, especially small-cap ones. They will also allow for a stronger EUR/USD and rising German 10-year yields. The UK economy is strong, and the BoE will be among the first central banks to tighten policy meaningfully. However, investors understand the UK’s strength well. While the cyclical outlook for the pound is bright against both the USD and the EUR, the GBP is vulnerable to some near-term profit taking. Downgrade UK small-cap stocks to neutral on a tactical basis.  Feature The case for the Eurozone’s recovery is only growing stronger. However, consensus growth forecasts for the Euro Area remain modest. Faced with this dichotomy, the European economy has ample room to generate positive surprises in the coming months. This process will support European financial assets, small-cap stocks in particular. This contrasts with UK assets, where investors have already embedded generous growth assumptions in response to the country’s rapid pace of vaccination. A tactical downgrade of UK small-cap equities is appropriate. Surprise! Two indicators from outside the Eurozone point to an elevated likelihood that the European economy will generate some exceptionally strong growth numbers over the coming 12 months. First, the Swiss KOF Economic Barometer hit an all-time high in April. The KOF series is an excellent leading indicator of Switzerland’s economic activity, and it currently forecasts record GDP growth and PMIs for that country (Chart 1). This message of strength for Switzerland bodes well for the Eurozone. While the Swiss market is defensive, owing to its heavy exposure to healthcare and consumer staple stocks, the Swiss economy is pro-cyclical. Exports represent 60% of GDP, and exports to the Eurozone account for 40% of this total. Moreover, the growth-sensitive machinery, consumer goods, and chemicals categories account for almost 50% of shipments. Based on these observations, the KOF Economic Barometer forecasting ability unsurprisingly extends beyond Swiss economic variables; it also anticipates positive growth for the Global Manufacturing PMI, the Euro Area Manufacturing PMI, and the Eurozone’s forward earnings (Chart 2). Chart 1Climbing Swiss Peaks Climbing Swiss Peaks Climbing Swiss Peaks Chart 2A Good Sign For The Eurozone A Good Sign For The Eurozone A Good Sign For The Eurozone Second, an aggregation of Swedish economic data confirms the KOF indicator’s message and also calls for record economic activity in Europe. Our Swedish Economic Diffusion Index, which incorporates 14 data series from the Nordic country, points toward a further acceleration in the Euro Area PMIs relative to the US (Chart 3). It is also consistent with a pick-up in the performance of European equities relative to the US. These important indicators of the European economy reflect a variety of forces at play that increasingly point toward stronger growth. Among them, the improvement in the pace of vaccination is crucial to lifting the mood across the continent. As the top panel of Chart 4 illustrates, the number of daily vaccine doses administered across major Euro Area economies is accelerating sharply. While it took three months to inoculate 20% of the population, it only took one month to raise the vaccinated population to nearly 40% (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 3Sweden Leads The Eurozone Sweden Leads The Eurozone Sweden Leads The Eurozone Chart 4Accelerating Vaccinations Accelerating Vaccinations Accelerating Vaccinations Euro Area fiscal policy is also moving in a more growth-friendly direction. The Italian Budget announced on April 26 will add EUR248 billion in spending over the next six years. For the moment, Germany has abandoned its debt brake, and, as we wrote three weeks ago, the September election is likely to reify this outcome and further ease fiscal policy in Europe’s biggest economy. Spain is the second largest recipient of the NGEU funds, and it is expected to increase fiscal spending by EUR167 billion over the coming six years. In addition, France has yet to give clear hints about its plan, but next year’s elections are likely to result in further stimulus measures as well. Thus, fiscal easing in Europe will only increase from this point on (Chart 5). Chart 5The Expanding European Stimulus A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Accumulated pent-up demand remains another potent fuel for growth in the Euro Area. Unlike in the US, spending on durable goods in the Eurozone has not overtaken its pre-pandemic levels (Chart 6). Furthermore, global inventory-to-sales ratio are low, which hints at a coming inventory restocking cycle. These two trends will benefit Euro Area economic activity. The service sector recovery has more to go. Despite some recent improvements, the Eurozone’s Service PMI remains depressed compared to that of the US (Chart 7, top panel). However, the acceleration in the European vaccination campaign and the continued injection of fiscal support at the same time as the lockdowns ebb should result in a significant catch up in service activity in the Euro Area. Thus, the double-dip recession is on the verge of ending and giving way to a robust GDP expansion (Chart 7, bottom panel). Chart 6Ample European Pent-up Demand Ample European Pent-up Demand Ample European Pent-up Demand Chart 7The Service Sector Recovery Is Paramount The Service Sector Recovery Is Paramount The Service Sector Recovery Is Paramount Even though the recovery in GDP growth will lead to strong positive economic surprises for the Euro Area, consensus growth expectations for the region remain conservative. According to Bloomberg, Eurozone annual GDP growth is expected to reach 12.6% in Q2 because of an extremely strong base effect. However, growth will decelerate suddenly and hit 2.3% in Q3 and 4.3% in Q4. Growth is anticipated to be 4.1% in 2022. These are low thresholds to beat, and thus, economic surprises will remain positive. Chart 8Decomposing The Surprises Decomposing The Surprises Decomposing The Surprises The source of positive economic surprises is likely to be broad-based. If the service sector recaptures some of its previous shine, the Surveys and Business Cycle component and the Labor Market component of the Bloomberg surprises index will improve and remain positive for many months (Chart 8). Moreover, the absorption of pent-up demand will allow the Retail and Wholesale as well the Personal/Household components to remain robust or firm up further. Finally, the strength of the global manufacturing sector and the elevated potential for a global inventory restocking will allow the Industrial component to firm up anew. Bottom Line: The European economy is in a good place to validate the upbeat message from the KOF Economic Barometer or the Swedish Economic Diffusion Index. Since expectations for European economic activity are still limited for the second half of 2021, this strong growth performance will result in positive economic surprises. Investment Implications The heightened odds that Europe will generate significant positive economic surprises for the coming quarters means that investors’ perspective of the Euro Area will gradually improve. While this process will ultimately curtail the ability of Europe to beat expectations, it will also lift Eurozone assets. If our forecast is correct that European economic surprises will largely be positive over the coming 6 to 12 months, then European equities are more likely to generate generous returns than otherwise. Table 1 highlights that positive changes in the Economic Surprise Index (ESI) on a 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month horizon coincide with returns of the Euro Area MSCI equity benchmarks that have positive batting averages of 72%, 70%, and 73%, respectively. Moreover, the average and median returns are significantly higher than when the ESI deteriorates. Table 1Forecasting Strong Surprises Means Forecasting Strong Equity Returns A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance The signal from the ESI is weaker if we do not make forecasts about its direction. The batting averages of subsequent 3-month and 6-month equity returns following an improving ESI are 63% and 69%, respectively, and the median subsequent returns are higher than if today’s ESI is deteriorating, but not to the same extent as when we make a forecast of the ESI. 12-month returns for the Eurozone MSCI index have a 58% chance of being positive, if the ESI increases over a 12-month window, which is lower than the 63% batting average if the ESI worsens. Moreover, average and median 12-month expected returns are somewhat higher if the ESI has been deteriorating rather than improving over the past 12-month period. European small cap equities will be prime beneficiaries of the coming growth outperformance. From an economic perspective, this makes sense because small-cap stocks are geared more toward domestic growth than large-cap equities, which are dominated by multinationals. Table 2 shows that 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month periods of improvement in the surprise index precede an outperformance of small-cap relative to large-cap stocks over similar windows of time. Thus, the current positive level of the European ESI and its ability to rise further should favor small-cap European equities. Table 2Favor Small-Cap Stocks A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Table 3A Bullish Backdrop For EUR/USD A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance The same exercise shows that the outlook also favors the euro. European economic surprises should continue to outpace the US, because Eurozone growth will catch up to the US, but investors already have much loftier expectations for US activity than for the Euro Area. Table 3 illustrates that periods when the Eurozone’s ESI is greater than that of the US, EUR/USD generates a positive 3-month return 65% of the time, with a median gain of 1.3%. When the US ESI is higher, the EUR/USD depreciates 55% of the time, with a median loss of -0.5%. Chart 9Rising German Yields? Rising German Yields? Rising German Yields? Finally, the potential for stronger European ESI is negative for Bunds. Speeches by various members of the European Central Bank Governing Council indicate that the ECB will tolerate higher yields, if they reflect stronger economic activity. As the European vaccination campaign advances and the fiscal stimulus increases, the need to maintain depressed Bunds yields recedes. Hence, a continuation of positive ESI readings is now more likely to boost these yields. Additionally, the gap between the European ESI and the US one will remain positive, thus, a period of rising German yields relative to the US is more likely (Chart 9).  Bottom Line: The ability of the European economy to continue to surprise positively should generate attractive equity returns on the continent. Moreover, this economic backdrop is consistent with an outperformance of small-cap equities, as well as an appreciating EUR/USD. Under these circumstances, Bunds yields should experience more upside. Country Focus: The UK’s Outlook Is Brightening, Unsurprisingly Last week, the Bank of England left the total size of its asset purchase program in place at GBP875 billion, even if the weekly pace of purchases was slowed to GBP3.4 billion from GBP4.4 billion. The BoE also raised its 2021 growth forecast to 7.5%, from 5% in February.  The BoE is joining the Bank of Canada as one of the first central banks to taper its asset purchase program. It will also be one of the first central banks to increase interest rates, after the Norges Bank, but ahead of the Fed. In a way, the UK shares many similarities with our recent positive depiction of the Swedish economy. Chart 10Support For Household Net Worth Support For Household Net Worth Support For Household Net Worth The rapid pace of vaccination in the UK allows for a vigorous economic recovery. In all likelihood, the UK economy will have contracted in Q1 2021 because of the severe lockdowns that prevailed then; however, these lockdowns are being eased and economic fundamentals point up. Our Global Fixed Income and Foreign Exchange strategists recently demonstrated that house prices are increasing on the back of rising mortgage approvals and falling household debt-servicing obligations (Chart 10). The robust readings of the RICS House Prices survey only confirm the positive outlook for housing prices. Expanding house prices will elevate consumption. An appreciating housing stock boosts the wealth of households and leads to higher UK consumer confidence. Moreover, business confidence is improving; the rise in capex intentions not only indicates that investments will increase, but is also a precursor to climbing job vacancies (Chart 11). Brighter labor market prospects often result in rising consumption, especially if wages firm up, as we argued seven weeks ago. The current bout of economic strength points to some upside in UK inflation as well. The elevated PMI readings and the rapid increase in construction activity are reliable forecasters of higher CPI prints (Chart 12). However, this not a uniquely British phenomenon, and it remains to be seen how durable this rising inflation will be. Chart 11UK Consumption Will Rise More UK Consumption Will Rise More UK Consumption Will Rise More Chart 12Accelerating UK Inflation Accelerating UK Inflation Accelerating UK Inflation   Despite this positive economic outlook, investors should adopt a more cautious tactical stance toward UK markets. The problem for British assets is that investors have understood UK’s vaccination strength so well that they embed much optimism in the price of financial instruments levered to domestic economic activity. In contrast to the Eurozone, Bloomberg consensus forecast anticipate Q2 year-on-year GDP growth of 20.7%, 6.1% for Q3 and 6.5% for Q4. Cable is particularly ripe for some near-term profit taking. Our Intermediate-Term Technical Indicator and the 52-week rate of change of GBP/USD, as well as net speculative positions and sentiment, all point to a correction in that pair (Chart 13). Moreover, the 13-week momentum measure for EUR/GBP shows that the rapid decline in this cross is also overdone. As a result, BCA’s Foreign Exchange strategists closed their short EUR/GBP position to book some gains.  It is also time to downgrade British mid- and small-cap stocks from our current overweight stance, at least on a tactical basis. Compared to large-cap UK stocks, small-cap names have moved in a parabolic fashion, and the ratio’s elevated 52-week rate-of-change measure warns of a pullback, especially in light of the deterioration in near-term momentum (Chart 14). The message from technical indicators is particularly concerning, because the forward earnings of small-cap stocks are plunging relative to large cap ones (Chart 15). Additionally, valuation multiples on UK small-cap stocks have vastly outpaced those of their larger counterparts, despite a rapid decline in relative RoE (Chart 16). Chart 13Cable Is Ripe For Some Near-Term Profit Taking Cable Is Ripe For Some Near-Term Profit Taking Cable Is Ripe For Some Near-Term Profit Taking Chart 14UK Small-Cap Stocks Are Technically Vulnerable UK Small-Cap Stocks Are Technically Vulnerable UK Small-Cap Stocks Are Technically Vulnerable Chart 15Deteriorating Profit Performance Deteriorating Profit Performance Deteriorating Profit Performance Chart 16Quite The Valuation Premium Quite The Valuation Premium Quite The Valuation Premium Ultimately, these cautious views are of a short-term nature. BCA’s Foreign Exchange strategists remain upbeat on the pound on a 12- to 24-month basis. Cable continues to trade at a deep discount to our purchasing-power parity estimate, which adjusts for the composition of price indexes in the UK and the US (Chart 17). Moreover, real short rate differentials still favor GBP/USD. The pound also trades at a discount to the euro based on long-term valuation metrics. Most importantly, real interest rates differentials at both the short- and long-end of the curve, as well as the outlook for the evolution of monetary policy in the UK relative to the Euro Area, indicate a significantly lower EUR/GBP (Chart 18). Chart 17Despite Nera-term risks, Cable's Cyclical Underpinning Is Strong Despite Nera-term risks, Cable's Cyclical Underpinning Is Strong Despite Nera-term risks, Cable's Cyclical Underpinning Is Strong Chart 18Lower EUR/GBP Ahead Lower EUR/GBP Ahead Lower EUR/GBP Ahead For small-cap equities, the cyclical picture is more complex. On the one hand, their domestic exposure and a higher pound over the coming 12 to 24 months should help them, unlike the large-cap UK stocks, which derive most of their income from abroad and are negatively affected by a higher GBP. On the other hand, UK small-cap stocks have become so expensive that we need to see how an appreciating pound will boost their earnings relative to large-cap stocks before adjusting our neutral stance. Bottom Line: The strong UK economy will allow the BoE to be one of the first major DM central banks to tighten policy. This will support a further appreciation of the pound against both the dollar and the euro over the coming 12 to 24 months. Nonetheless, the GBP has been overbought on a tactical basis and is vulnerable to a near-term pullback. Similarly, compared to large-cap equities, we are downgrading small-cap UK stocks from overweight to neutral on a tactical basis.   Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Jeremie Peloso, Associate Editor JeremieP@bcaresearch.com   Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Trades Currency Performance A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Corporate Bonds A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Equity Performance Major Stock Indices A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Geographic Performance A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance Sector Performance A Surprising Dance A Surprising Dance ​​​​​​​ Closed Trades