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Materials

U.S. dollar softness has failed to lift equities of late, a tentative warning that correlations are changing as the U.S. economy cools.

China's reflation policies have succeeded in reviving iron ore and steel prices, which are up 45.6% and 52.6% from their January lows, along with the profitability of domestic steelmakers.

The powerful short covering bounce in the S&P steel index is starting to fizzle. The latest upleg had been driven by a surge in Chinese domestic steel prices. That, combined with news that the country plans to reduce steel capacity in the coming three to five years, was enough to send shorts scrambling for cover. However, it will take time for the global steel market to rebalance. In the short run, the jump in Chinese steel prices has already encouraged domestic producers to re-ramp steel production (second panel). Persistent sluggishness in indicators of China's domestic consumption mean that steel inventories are likely to build as production picks up anew, which will put upward pressure on exports to the rest of the world. Fading construction growth and tightening lending standards in many developed countries suggest that increased steel supply from China will have a negative impact on steel prices. We reiterate our recent downgrade back to underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S15STEL - NUE, STLD, RS, X, CMC, ATI, WOR, CRS, AKS, TMST, HAYN, SXC, ZEUS. End Of The Steel Rally? End Of The Steel Rally?

This week <i>Global Alpha Sector Strategy</i> in conjunction with <i>Emerging Markets Strategy</i> is sending out a <i>Special Report</i> on EM deep cyclical sectors, discussing debt and cash flow dynamics, identifying how far advanced the capital expenditure down cycle is, and determining if recent EM deep cyclical strength should be bought or faded.

Chinese PPI deflation will likely continue to ease going forward. There are non-trivial odds that the PPI deflation may turn positive. Our models predict a sharp upturn in China's profit cycle. Meanwhile, Anti-corruption investigation cases have dropped substantially since the beginning of the year, a sign that the Communist Party may be reorienting priorities to boost economic growth.

The Fed's recent dovishness represents an acknowledgement of the feedback loop between Fed policy and financial conditions. Expect Fed hawkishness to ramp back up prior to the next rate hike, likely in June.

The Fed's recent dovishness represents an acknowledgement of the feedback loop between Fed policy and financial conditions. Expect Fed hawkishness to ramp back up prior to the next rate hike, likely in June.

A Chinese reflationary cycle is unfolding. Capital spending is showing signs of regained vigor, driven by both housing and infrastructure. Chinese PPI deflation will ease further. This will help reduce balance sheet stress of materials producers and boost overall industrial profits. Remain positive on Chinese investable stocks.

Materials stocks have traditionally been late cycle plays, as earnings outperform when the economy is heating up and global resource utilization is burgeoning. That is not currently the case, as the global manufacturing sector is battling recessionary conditions. As long as this backdrop persists, it will be difficult for materials stocks to sustain any rallies. True, Chinese money growth has perked up, but this may not lead to increased manufacturing activity and/or import demand, given high existing debt-loads, weak export growth and soft domestic activity measures such as real estate and fixed asset investment. Meanwhile, global trade remains poor. The Baltic Dry Index continues to sink, signaling ongoing weakness in global trade (top panel). That will sustain downward pressure on capital goods prices. Our materials sector pricing power proxy continues to contract, and our sales-per-share model is heading south. The implication is that the negative side of operating leverage has not yet fully played out. To make matters worse, the sector is carrying excessive leverage, warning that there is little room for error and/or to absorb a prolonged period of weak pricing power. Stay clear. bca.uses_in_2016_03_15_002_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_03_15_002_c1
The heavily-shorted S&P steel index has enjoyed some relief of late, as short sellers were given an excuse to cover when China announced it would attempt to shut roughly 10% of its productive capacity in the next few years. While that is a necessary development to eventually rebalance markets, there are no quick fixes. Chinese steel production has already been drifting lower for some time, but exports continue to trend higher. The country has accumulated massive inventories as a consequence of previous overproduction and sinking domestic demand growth. The sharp downturn in infrastructure investment (shown inverted) is likely to sustain upward export pressure, thereby keeping global markets oversupplied. Without a rebound in resource end markets, steelmakers must rely on other sources of demand growth such as global construction. However, even these outlets are also losing steam. The chart shows that BCA's proxy for global commercial REIT supply is contracting at a steep rate, consistent with weak steel uptake. The implication is chronic downward pressure on steel utilization rates, and by extension, pricing power and profits. We recommend selling into strength and reducing positions back to underweight. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: NUE, STLD, RS, X, CMC, ATI, CRS, WOR, AKS, HAYN, SXC, TMST, ZEUS. bca.uses_in_2016_03_15_003_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_03_15_003_c1