Norway
Highlights The Evergrande crisis is not China’s Lehman moment. Nonetheless, Chinese construction activity will decelerate further in response to this shock. Global equities are frothy enough that a weaker-than-expected Chinese construction sector will remain a near-term risk to stocks prices. European markets are more exposed to this risk than US ones. Tactically, this creates a dangerous environment for cyclicals in general and materials in particular. Healthcare and Swiss stocks would be the winners. Despite these near-term hurdles, we maintain a pro-cyclical portfolio stance, which we will protect with some temporary hedges. We will lift these hedges if the EURO STOXX corrects into the 430-420 zone. A busy week for European central banks confirms our negative stance on EUR/GBP, EUR/SEK, and EUR/NOK. While EUR/CHF has upside, Swiss stocks should outperform Euro Area defensives. Stay underweight UK Gilts in fixed-income portfolios. Feature The collapse of property developer Evergrande creates an important risk for European markets. It threatens to slow Chinese construction activity further, which affects European assets that are heavily exposed to the Chinese real estate sector, directly and indirectly. This risk is mostly frontloaded, as Chinese authorities cannot afford a complete meltdown of the domestic property sector. Moreover, this economy has slowed significantly and more policy support is bound to take place. Additionally, forces outside China create important counterweights that will allow Europe to thrive despite the near-term clouds. While we see more short-term risk for European stocks and cyclical sectors, the 18-month cyclical outlook remains bright. Similarly, European stocks will not outperform US ones when Chinese real estate activity remains a source of downside surprise; but they will afterward. China’s Construction Slowdown Is Not Over The Evergrande crisis is not China’s Lehman moment. Beijing has the resources to prevent a systemic meltdown and understands full well what is at stake. At 160% of GDP, China’s nonfinancial corporate debt towers well above that of other major emerging markets and even that of Japan in the 1980s (Chart 1). If an Evergrande bankruptcy were allowed to topple this debt mountain, China would experience the kind of debt-deflation trap that proved so disastrous in the 1930s. A further deterioration of conditions in Chinese real estate activity is nonetheless in the cards, even if the country avoids a global systemic financial shock. First, the inevitable restructuring of Evergrande will result in losses for bond holders, especially foreign ones. Consequently, risk premia in the Chinese off-shore corporate bonds market will remain wide following the resolution of the Evergrande debacle. While Chinese banks are likely to recover a large proportion of the funds they lent to the real estate giant, they too will face higher risk premia. At the margin, the rising cost of capital will curtail the number of projects real estate developers take on over the coming two to three years. Second, the eventual liquidation of Evergrande will hurt confidence among real estate developers. This process may take many forms, but, as we go to press, the most discussed outcome is a breakup and restructuring where state-owned enterprises and large local governments absorb Evergrande’s operations. Evergrande’s employees, suppliers, and clients who have deposited funds while pre-ordering properties will be made whole one way or the other. However, shareholders and management will not. Wiping out shareholders and senior management will send a message to the operators of other developers, which will negatively affect their risk taking (Chart 2). Chart 1China Cannot Afford A Lehman Moment
China Cannot Afford A Lehman Moment
China Cannot Afford A Lehman Moment
Chart 2Downside To Chinese Construction Activity
Downside To Chinese Construction Activity
Downside To Chinese Construction Activity
Third, one of President Xi Jinping’s key policy objectives is to tame rampant income inequality in the Chinese economy. Rapidly rising real estate prices and elevated unaffordability only worsen this problem. Hence, Beijing wants to avoid blind stimulus that mostly pushes house prices higher but that would have also boosted construction activity. Thus, if credit growth is pushed through the system, the regulatory tightening in real estate will not end. This process is likely to result in further contraction in floor space sold and started. Bottom Line: The Evergrande crisis is unlikely to morph into China’s Lehman moment. However, its fallout on the real estate industry means that Chinese construction activity will continue to contract in the coming six to twelve months or so. Chinese Construction Matters For European Equities The risk of further contraction in Chinese construction activity implies a significant near-term risk for European equities, especially relative to US ones. Even after the volatility of the past three weeks, global equities remain vulnerable to more corrective action. Speculative activity continues to grip the bellwether US market. Our BCA Equity Speculation Index is still around two sigma. Previous instances of high readings did not necessarily herald the end of bull markets; however, they often resulted in sideways and volatile trading, until the speculative excesses dissipated (Chart 3). The case for such volatile trading is strong. The Fed is set to begin its taper at its November meeting. Moreover, an end of the QE program by the middle of next year and the upcoming rotation of regional Fed heads on the FOMC will likely result in a first rate hike by the end of 2022. Already, the growth rate of the global money supply has declined, and the real yield impulse is not as supportive as it once was. Therefore, the deterioration in our BCA Monetary Indicator should perdure (Chart 4), which will heighten the sensitivity of global stocks to bad news out of China. Chart 3Rife With Speculation
Rife With Speculation
Rife With Speculation
Chart 4Liquidity Deterioration At The Margin
Liquidity Deterioration At The Margin
Liquidity Deterioration At The Margin
Chart 5Still Too Happy
Still Too Happy
Still Too Happy
Investor sentiment is also not as washed out as many news stories ascertain. The AAII survey shows that the number of equity bulls has fallen sharply, but BCA’s Complacency-Anxiety Index, Equity Capitulation Indicator and Sentiment composite are still inconsistent with durable market bottoms. Moreover, the National Association of Active Investment Managers’ Exposure Index is still very elevated. When this gauge is combined with the AAII bulls minus bears indicator, it often detects floors in the US dollar-price of the European MSCI index (Chart 5). For now, this composite sentiment measure is flashing further vulnerability for European equities, especially if China remains a source of potential bad news in the coming months. Economic linkages reinforce the tactical risk to European stocks. Chinese construction activity affects the Euro Area industrial production because machinery and transportation goods represent 50% of Europe’s export to China (Chart 6). This category is very sensitive to Chinese real estate activity. Moreover, Europe’s exports to other nations are also indirectly affected by the demand from Chinese construction. Financial markets bear this footprint. Excavator sales in China are a leading indicator of construction activity. Historically, they correlate well with both the fluctuations of EUR/USD and the performance of Eurozone stocks relative to those of the US (Chart 7). Hence, if we anticipate that the problems Evergrande faces will weigh on excavator sales in the coming months, then the euro will suffer and Euro Area stocks could continue to underperform. Chart 6Europe's Exports To China Are Sensitive To Construction Activity
Europe's Exports To China Are Sensitive To Construction Activity
Europe's Exports To China Are Sensitive To Construction Activity
Chart 7A Near-Term Risk To European Assets
A Near-Term Risk To European Assets
A Near-Term Risk To European Assets
Similarly, the fallout from Evergrande’s problem will extend to the performance of European equity sectors. The sideways corrective episode in cyclical relative to defensive shares is likely to continue in the near term. This sector twist remains frothy, and often declines when Chinese credit origination is soft (Chart 8). Materials stocks are the most likely to suffer due to their tight correlation with Chinese excavator sales (Chart 9); meanwhile, healthcare equities will reap the greatest benefit as a result of their appealing structural growth profile and their strong defensive property. Geographically, Swiss stocks should perform best (Chart 9, bottom panel), because they strongly overweigh healthcare and consumer staple names. Moreover, as we recently argued, the SNB’s monetary policy is an advantage for Swiss stocks compared to Eurozone defensives.1 Additionally, Dutch equities, with their 50% weighting in tech and their small 12% combined allocation to industrials and materials, could also enjoy a near-term outperformance as investors digest the sectoral impact of weaker Chinese construction activity. Chart 8The Vulnerability Of Cyclicals/Defensives Remains
The Vulnerability Of Cyclicals/Defensives Remains
The Vulnerability Of Cyclicals/Defensives Remains
Chart 9Responses To Weaker Construction
Responses To Weaker Construction
Responses To Weaker Construction
Bottom Line: No matter how the Evergrande story unfolds, its consequence on Chinese construction activity may still cause market tremors. Global equity benchmarks may be rebounding right now, but, ultimately, they remain vulnerable to this slowdown. Any negative surprise out of China is likely to cause Europe to underperform because of its greater exposure to Chinese construction activity. Investment Conclusion: This Too Shall Pass The risks to the European equity market and its cyclicals sectors will prove transitory and will finish by the end of the year. Beijing will tolerate some pain to the real estate sector, but the stakes are too high to let the situation fester for long. The main problem is China’s large debt. Already sequential GDP growth in the first half of 2021 was worse than the same period in 2020, and credit accumulation is just as weak as in early 2018 (Chart 10). In this context, if real estate activity deteriorates too much, aggregate profits will contract and, in turn, will hurt the corporate sector’s ability to service its debt. Employment and social tensions create another stress point that will force Beijing’s hand. At 47, the non-manufacturing PMI employment index is already well into the contraction zone (Chart 11). Weakness in construction activity will hurt the labor market further. In an environment where protests have been springing up all over China, the Communist Party does not want to see more stress applied to workers. Chart 10In The End, Stimulus Will Come
In The End, Stimulus Will Come
In The End, Stimulus Will Come
Chart 11Worsening Chinese Employment Conditions
Worsening Chinese Employment Conditions
Worsening Chinese Employment Conditions
These two constraints will force Beijing to alleviate the pain caused by a weaker construction sector. As a result, we still expect the Chinese credit and fiscal impulse to re-accelerate by Q2 2022. Developments outside of China will create another important offset that will allow risk assets to thrive once their immediate froth has receded. Strong DM capex will be an important driver of global activity next year. As Chart 12 shows, capex intentions in the US and the Euro Area are rapidly expanding, which augurs well for global investments. Moreover, re-building depleted inventories (Chart 13) will be a crucial component of the solution to global supply bottlenecks. Both activities will add to global demand. As an example, ship orders are already surging. Chart 12DM Capex Intentions Are Firming
DM Capex Intentions Are Firming
DM Capex Intentions Are Firming
Chart 13Don't Forget About Inventories
Don't Forget About Inventories
Don't Forget About Inventories
We maintain a pro-cyclical stance in European markets after weighing the near-term negatives against the underlying positive forces. For now, hedging the tactical risk still makes sense and our long telecommunication / short consumer discretionary equities remain the appropriate vehicle – so does being long Swiss stocks versus Euro Area defensives. However, we will use any correction in the EURO STOXX (Bloomberg: SXXE Index) to the 430-420 zone to unload this protection. Bottom Line: The potential market stress created by a slowdown in Chinese construction activity will be a temporary force. Beijing will not tolerate a much larger hit to the economy, especially as tensions are rising across the country. Thus, even if the stimulus response to the Evergrande crisis will not be immediate, it will eventually come, which will support Chinese economic activity. Additionally, the capex upside and inventory rebuilding in advanced economies will create an offset for slowing Chinese growth. Consequently, while we maintain a pro-cyclical bias over the medium term, we are also keeping in place our hedges in the near term, looking to shed them if SXXE hits the 430-420 zone. A Big Week For Central Banks Chart 14The BoE's Is Listening To The UK's Economic Conditions...
The BoE's Is Listening To The UK's Economic Conditions...
The BoE's Is Listening To The UK's Economic Conditions...
Last week, four European central banks held their policy meetings: The Riksbank, the Swiss National Bank, the Norges Bank, and the Bank of England. No major surprises came out of these meetings, with central banks discourses and policy evolving in line with their respective economies. The BoE veered on the hawkish side, highlighting that rates could rise before its QE program is over. This implies a small possibility of a rate hike by the end of 2021. However, our base case remains that the initial hike will be in the first half of 2022. The BoE is behaving in line with the message from our UK Central Bank Monitor (Chart 14). Moreover, the combination of rapid inflation and strong house price appreciation is incentivizing the BoE to remove monetary accommodation, especially because UK financial conditions are extremely easy (Chart 14, bottom panel). One caution advanced by the MPC is the uncertainty surrounding the impact of the end of the job furlough scheme this month. However, the global economy will be strong enough next spring to mitigate the risks to the UK. The results of last week’s MPC meeting and our view on the global and UK business cycles support the short EUR/GBP recommendation of BCA’s foreign exchange strategist,2 as well as the underweight allocation to UK Gilts of our Global Fixed Income Strategy group.3 The Norges Bank is the first central bank in the G-10 to hike rates and is likely to do so again later this year. While Norwegian core inflation remains low, house prices are strong, monetary conditions are extremely accommodative, and our Norway Central Bank Monitor is surging (Chart 15). The Norwegian central bank will continue to focus on these positives, especially in light of our Commodity and Energy team’s view that Brent will average more than $80/bbl by 2023.4 In this context, we anticipate the NOK to outperform the euro over the coming 24 months. Nonetheless, the near-term outlook for Norwegian stocks remains fraught with danger. Materials account for 17% of the MSCI Norway index and are the sector most vulnerable to a deterioration in Chinese construction activity. The Riksbank continues to disregard the strength of the Swedish economy. Relative to economic conditions, it is one of the most dovish central banks in the world. The Swedish central bank is completely ignoring the message from our Sweden Central Bank Monitor, which has never been as elevated as it is today (Chart 16). Moreover, the inexpensiveness of the SEK means that Swedish financial conditions are exceptionally accommodative. At first glance, this picture is bearish for the SEK. However, easy monetary conditions will cause Sweden’s real estate bubble to expand. Expanding real estate prices and transaction volumes will boost the profits of Swedish financials, which account for 27% of the MSCI Sweden index. Moreover, Swedish industrials remain one of our favorite sectors in Europe, and they represent 38% of the same index. As a result, equity flows into Sweden should still hurt the EUR/SEK cross. Chart 15...And The Norges Bank, To Norway's
...And The Norges Bank, To Norway's
...And The Norges Bank, To Norway's
Chart 16The Riksbank Is Blowing Real Estate Bubbles
The Riksbank Is Blowing Real Estate Bubbles
The Riksbank Is Blowing Real Estate Bubbles
Chart 17The CHF Still Worries The SNB
The CHF Still Worries The SNB
The CHF Still Worries The SNB
Finally, the SNB proved reliably dovish. Our Switzerland Central Bank Monitor is rising fast as inflation and house prices improve (Chart 17). However, the SNB is rightfully worried about the expensiveness of the CHF, which generates tight Swiss financial conditions (Chart 17, bottom panel). Consequently, the SNB will keep fighting off any depreciation in EUR/CHF. Thus, the SNB will be forced to expand its balance sheet because the ECB is likely to remain active in asset markets longer than many of its peers. This process will be key to the outperformance of Swiss stocks relative to other European defensive equities. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see European Investment Strategy “The ECB’s New Groove,” dated July 19, 2021, available at eis.bcarsearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy “Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?,” dated March 10, 2021, available at fes.bcarsearch.com 3 Please see European Investment Strategy “The UK Leads The Way,” dated August 11, 2021, available at eis.bcarsearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy “Upside Price Risk Rises For Crude,” dated September 16, 2021, available at fes.bcarsearch.com Tactical Recommendations
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Cyclical Recommendations
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Structural Recommendations
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Closed Trades
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Europe’s Evergrande Problem
Currency Performance Fixed Income Performance Equity Performance
As expected, the Norges Bank delivered its first rate hike on Thursday, bringing its benchmark policy rate to 0.25%. It is the first developed market central bank to raise rates in the post-COVID-19 crisis period. The central bank statement revealed that…
Highlights The US Climate Prediction Center gives ~ 70% odds another La Niña will form in the August – October interval and will continue through winter 2021-22. This will be a second-year La Niña if it forms, and will raise the odds of a repeat of last winter's cold weather in the Northern Hemisphere.1 Europe's natural-gas inventory build ahead of the coming winter remains erratic, particularly as Russian flows via Ukraine to the EU have been reduced this year. Russia's Nord Stream 2 could be online by November, but inventories will still be low. China, Japan, South Korea and India – the four top LNG consumers in Asia – took in 155 Bcf of the fuel in June. A colder-than-normal winter would boost demand. Higher prices are likely in Europe and Asia (Chart of the Week). US storage levels will be lower going into winter, as power generation demand remains stout, and the lingering effects from Hurricane Ida reduce supplies available for inventory injections. Despite spot prices trading ~ $1.30/MMBtu above last winter's highs – currently ~ $4.60/MMBtu – we are going long 1Q22 NYMEX $5.00/MMBtu natgas calls vs short NYMEX $5.50/MMBtu natgas calls expecting even higher prices. Feature Last winter's La Niña was a doozy. It brought extreme cold to Asia, North America and Europe, which pulled natural gas storage levels sharply lower and drove prices sharply higher as the Chart of the Week shows. Natgas storage in the US and Europe will be tight going into this winter (Chart 2). Europe's La Niña lingered a while into Spring, keeping temps low and space-heating demand high, which delayed the start of re-building inventory for the coming winter. In the US, cold temps in the Midwest hampered production, boosted demand and caused inventory to draw hard. Chart of the WeekA Return Of La Niña Could Boost Global Natgas Prices
A Return Of La Niña Could Boost Global Natgas Prices
A Return Of La Niña Could Boost Global Natgas Prices
Chart 2Europe, US Gas Stocks Will Be Tight This Winter
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
Summer in the US also produced strong natgas demand, particularly out West, as power generators eschewed coal in favor of gas to meet stronger air-conditioning demand. This is partly due to the closing of coal-fired units, leaving more of the load to be picked up by gas-fired generation (Chart 3). The EIA estimates natgas consumption in July was up ~ 4 Bcf/d to just under 76 Bcf/d. Hurricane Ida took ~ 1 bcf/d of demand out of the market, which was less than the ~ 2 Bcf/d hit to US Gulf supply resulting from the storm. As a result, prices were pushed higher at the margin. Chart 3Generators Prefer Gas To Coal
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
US natgas exports (pipeline and LNG) also were strong, at 18.2 Bcf/d in July (Chart 4). We expect US LNG exports, in particular, to resume growth as the world recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic (Chart 5). This strong demand and exports, coupled with slightly lower supply from the Lower 48 states – estimated at ~ 98 Bcf/d by the EIA for July (Chart 6) – pushed prices up by 18% from June to July, "the largest month-on-month percentage change for June to July since 2012, when the price increased 20.3%" according to the EIA. Chart 4US Natgas Exports Remain Strong
US Natgas Exports Remain Strong
US Natgas Exports Remain Strong
Chart 5US LNG Exports Will Resume Growth
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
Chart 6US Lower 48 Natgas Production Recovering
US Lower 48 Natgas Production Recovering
US Lower 48 Natgas Production Recovering
Elsewhere in the Americas, Brazil has been a strong bid for US LNG – accounting for 32.3 Bcf of demand in June – as hydroelectric generation flags due to the prolonged drought in the country. In Asia, demand for LNG remains strong, with the four top consumers – China, Japan, South Korea, and India – taking in 155 Bcf in June, according to the EIA. Gas Infrastructure Ex-US Remains Challenged A combination of extreme cold weather in Northeast Asia, and a lack of gas storage infrastructure in Asia generally, along with shipping constraints and supply issues at LNG export facilities, led to the Asian natural gas price spike in mid-January.2 Very cold weather in Northeast Asia, drove up LNG demand during the winter months. In China, LNG imports for the month of January rose by ~ 53% y-o-y (Chart 7).3 The increase in imports from Asia coincided with issues at major export plants in Australia, Norway and Qatar during that period. Chart 7China's US LNG Exports Surged Last Winter, And Remain Stout Over The Summer
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
Substantially higher JKM (Japan-Korea Marker) prices incentivized US exporters to divert LNG cargoes from Europe to Asia last winter. The longer roundtrip times to deliver LNG from the US to Asia – instead of Europe – resulted in a reduction of shipping capacity, which ended up compounding market tightness in Europe. Europe dealt with the switch by drawing ~ 18 bcm more from their storage vs. the previous year, across the November to January period. Countries in Asia - most notably Japan – however, do not have robust natural gas storage facilities, further contributing to price volatility, especially in extreme weather events. These storage constraints remain in place going into the coming winter. In addition, there is a high probability the global weather pattern responsible for the cold spells around the globe that triggered price spikes in key markets globally – i.e., a second La Niña event – will return. A Second-Year La Niña Event The price spikes and logistical challenges of last winter were the result of atmospheric circulation anomalies that were bolstered by a La Niña event that began in mid-2020.4 The La Niña is characterized by colder sea-surface temperatures that develops over the Pacific equator, which displaces atmospheric and wind circulation and leads to colder temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere (Map 1). Map 1La Niña Raises The Odds Of Colder Temps
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
NatGas: Winter Is Coming
The IEA notes last winter started off without any exceptional deviations from an average early winter, but as the new year opened "natural gas markets experienced severe supply-demand tensions in the opening weeks of 2021, with extremely cold temperature episodes sending spot prices to record levels."5 In its most recent ENSO update, the US Climate Prediction Center raised the odds of another La Niña event for this winter to 70% this month. If similar conditions to those of the 2020-21 winter emerge, US and European inventories could be stretched even thinner than last year, as space-heating demand competes with industrial and commercial demand resulting from the economic recovery. Global Natgas Supplies Will Stay Tight JKM prices and TTF (Dutch Title Transfer Facility) prices are likely to remain elevated going into winter, as seen in the Chart of the Week. Fundamentals have kept markets tight so far. Uncertain Russian supply to Europe will raise the price of the European gas index (TTF). This, along with strong Asian demand, particularly from China, will keep JKM prices high (Chart 8). The global economic recovery is the main short-term driver of higher natgas demand, with China leading the way. For the longer-term, natural gas is considered as the ideal transition fuel to green energy, as it emits less carbon than other fossil fuels. For this reason, demand is expected to grow by 3.4% per annum until 2035, and reach peak consumption later than other fossil fuels, according to McKinsey.6 Chart 8BCAs Brent Forecast Points To Higher JKM Prices
BCAs Brent Forecast Points To Higher JKM Prices
BCAs Brent Forecast Points To Higher JKM Prices
Spillovers from the European natural gas market impact Asian markets, as was demonstrated last winter. Russian supply to Europe – where inventories are at their lowest level in a decade – has dropped over the last few months. This could either be the result of Russia's attempts to support its case for finishing Nord Stream 2 and getting it running as soon as possible, or because it is physically unable to supply natural gas.7 A fire at a condensate plant in Siberia at the beginning of August supports the latter conjecture. The reduced supply from Russia, comes at a time when EU carbon permit prices have been consistently breaking records, making the cost of natural gas competitive compared to more heavy carbon emitting fossil fuels – e.g., coal and oil – despite record breaking prices. With Europe beginning the winter season with significantly lower stock levels vs. previous years, TTF prices will remain volatile. This, and strong demand from China, will support JKM prices. Investment Implications Natural gas prices are elevated, with spot NYMEX futures trading ~ $1.30/MMBtu above last winter's highs – currently ~ $4.60/MMBtu. Our analysis indicates prices are justifiably high, and could – with the slightest unexpected news – move sharply higher. Because natgas is, at the end of the day, a weather market, we favor low-cost/low-risk exposures. In the current market, we recommend going long 1Q22 NYMEX $5.00/MMBtu natgas calls vs short NYMEX $5.50/MMBtu natgas calls expecting even higher prices. This is the trade we recommended on 8 April 2021, at a lower level, which was stopped out on 12 August 2021 with a gain of 188%. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish Earlier this week, Saudi Aramco lowered its official selling price (OSP) by more than was expected – lowering its premium to the regional benchmark to $1.30/bbl from $1.70/bbl – in what media reports based on interviews with oil traders suggest is an attempt to win back customers electing not to take volumes under long-term contracts. This is a marginal adjustment by Aramco, but still significant, as it shows the company will continue to defend its market share. Pricing to Northwest Europe and the US markets is unchanged. Aramco's majority shareholder, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), is the putative leader of OPEC 2.0 (aka, OPEC+) along with Russia. The producer coalition is in the process of returning 400k b/d to the market every month until it has restored the 5.8mm b/d of production it took off the market to support prices during the COVID-19 pandemic. We expect Brent crude oil prices to average $70/bbl in 2H21, $73/bbl in 2022 and $80/bbl in 2023. Base Metals: Bullish Political uncertainty in Guinea caused aluminum prices to rise to more than a 10-year high this week (Chart 9). A coup in the world’s second largest exporter of bauxite – the main ore source for aluminum – began on Sunday, rattling aluminum markets. While iron ore prices rebounded primarily on the record value of Chinese imports in August, the coup in Guinea – which has the highest level of iron ore reserves – could have also raised questions about supply certainty. This will contribute to iron-ore price volatility. However, we do not believe the coup will impact the supply of commodities as much as markets are factoring, as coup leaders in commodity-exporting countries typically want to keep their source of income intact and functioning. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold settled at a one-month high last Friday, when the US Bureau of Labor Statistics released the August jobs report. The rise in payrolls data was well below analysts’ estimates, and was the lowest gain in seven months. The yellow metal rose on this news as the weak employment data eased fears about Fed tapering, and refocused markets on COVID-19 and the delta variant. Since then, however, the yellow metal has not been able to consolidate gains. After falling to a more than one-month low on Friday, the US dollar rose on Tuesday, weighing on gold prices (Chart 10). Chart 9
Aluminum Prices Recovering
Aluminum Prices Recovering
Chart 10
Weaker USD Supports Gold
Weaker USD Supports Gold
Footnotes 1 Please see the US Climate Prediction Center's ENSO: Recent Evolution, Current Status and Predictions report published on September 6, 2021. 2 Please see Asia LNG Price Spike: Perfect Storm or Structural Failure? Published by Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. 3 Since China LNG import data were reported as a combined January and February value in 2020, we halved the combined value to get the January 2020 amount. 4 Please see The 2020/21 Extremely Cold Winter in China Influenced by the Synergistic Effect of La Niña and Warm Arctic by Zheng, F., and Coauthors (2021), published in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences. 5 Please see the IEA's Gas Market Report, Q2-2021 published in April 2021. 6 Please see Global gas outlook to 2050 | McKinsey on February 26, 2021. 7 Please see ICIS Analyst View: Gazprom’s inability to supply or unwillingness to deliver? published on August 13, 2021. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
Over the past three months, the Norwegian krone has been the worst performing G10 currency. However, a buying opportunity is opening up for this cyclical currency versus both the USD and EUR. First, our Foreign Exchange strategists recently highlighted…
Highlights The dollar is fighting a tug of war between two diverging forces: an economic slowdown around the world but plunging real interest rates in the US. The litmus test for determining which force will gain the upper hand is if the DXY fails to break above the 93-94 level that marked the March highs. So far that appears to be the case. In the interim, investors can capitalize on a few themes that will ultimately unfold: an end to the China slowdown, a bet on real rates staying low for longer, and a play on the Olympics. The expressions of these themes are long AUD/MXN, long silver and long the yen, respectively. Natural disasters are also rising in frequency globally. Historically, this has coincided with rising currency volatility. Long CHF/NZD positions can be a potent play on this trend. We ultimately expect the dollar lower 9-12 months from now. The best currencies to express this view today are NOK and SEK. Feature We are a month into the second half of year, and it is instructive to revisit the dollar view and our roadmap towards year-end. As a starting point, two key themes are propping the dollar on a tactical basis: The first is a global economic slowdown, one that could be exacerbated by increased infections of the COVID-19 Delta variant. The dollar tends to rise in an environment where global growth is weak. This is especially the case when US growth is relatively resilient, like now (Chart I-1). The second is the resilience of the US equity market, not only due to superior earnings, but also as regulatory crackdowns hit shares in China specifically, and emerging markets in general. Equity inflows into the US were a key reason the dollar did not collapse in 2020. Renewed inflows into US equities will be particularly beneficial for the dollar (Chart I-2). This will especially be the case if technology and healthcare earnings keep surprising to the upside. Chart I-1The Dollar And Relative Economic Momentum
The Dollar And Relative Economic Momentum
The Dollar And Relative Economic Momentum
Chart I-2The US Is Leading The Earnings ##br##Cycle
The US Is Leading The Earnings Cycle
The US Is Leading The Earnings Cycle
At the same time, real interest rates in the US are very depressed. In its latest meeting, the Federal Reserve reiterated that it will keep running the economy hot, a thesis central to our bearish dollar view. This puts the dollar in a tug of war between two diverging forces: an economic slowdown around the world but plunging real interest rates in the US. Arbitrating The Tug Of War Historically, unless the world economy experiences a recession, the interest rate story has dominated currency market action. Our report last week showed that real interest rates matter for currencies both short term and longer term. Given our bias that global growth will moderate rather than contract, the future path of interest rates will once again become important for currency market action. In this light, lower real rates are negative for the US dollar. How long the outperformance of US equities will last is a tougher call. What we do know is that in a rising interest rate environment, the US equity market has tended to derate relative to the rest of the world. Our base case is that bond yields will be higher globally on a cyclical horizon, suggesting investors should fade the current outperformance of US equities. Scandinavian Currencies As A Strategic Dollar Play The best currencies to express a cyclically lower dollar are the NOK and SEK, for a few reasons other than the strong correlation with the DXY index (Chart I-3): Chart I-3NOK And SEK Are A Play On DXY
NOK and SEK Are A Play On DXY
NOK and SEK Are A Play On DXY
Economic momentum in both Norway and Sweden is picking up steam. In Norway, high oil prices will be a cyclical boost to the currency, as has been the case historically. Meanwhile, Sweden is benefiting from a strong manufacturing landscape, especially in autos where pricing has skyrocketed due to shortages. While the Swedish manufacturing PMI has moderated recently, it still sits at 65.8, the highest level since the mid-1990s. Both currencies remain very cheap according to our models. Our favored PPP model shows that NOK and SEK are trading at a discount of 20% and 17% respectively, amongst the cheapest in the G10 (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Dollar Is Expensive
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
Norway, Sweden and Canada are among the countries whose output gaps are expected to close relatively fast (Chart I-5). In the case of Norway (and Canada), the central bank has been vocal about curtailing monetary accommodation, as market conditions improve. The upside surprise in Swedish GDP this week lowers the odds of more monetary accommodation from the Riksbank. This will boost real rates in these countries, supporting their currencies. Chart I-5Output Gaps Across The G10
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
In a nutshell, if the dollar heads lower 9-12 months from now, this will benefit most procyclical currencies, with the NOK and SEK as winners. The Yen As An Olympian Chart I-6Currencies And The Olympics
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
We made the case last month that the yen was the most underappreciated G10 currency, and that certainly remains true. Since then, there has been improvement in the Japanese economy: The vaccination campaign is progressing smoothly, with 27% of the population having been inoculated from almost nil earlier this year. Meanwhile, about 38% have received at least one dose. This should curtail hospitalizations, despite the increase in new cases. Economic momentum remains tepid, but there are green shoots. Real cash earnings are inflecting higher, which is boosting household spending. There was also remarkable improvement in the Eco Watchers Survey, a sign of optimism among small and medium-sized businesses. Global trade remains strong, which is a boost to the Japanese external sector. While this may slow going forward, it will be a benign headwind. Japan is less exposed to China, a key market for exports, compared to its developed market peers like Australia and New Zealand. Meanwhile, China is already easing policy at the margin. The true catalyst for the yen could be the Olympics. Since the 1970s, the median performance of a currency hosting the Olympics is 4% over a year. The performance of the yen today falls well below the 25th percentile of this performance gap (Chart I-6). This year’s games have obviously been unique given the pandemic but given that the yen is the most shorted G10 currency, this is probably already in the price. It also it does raise the prospect that the yen rises from being an underdog to staging a powerful mean reversion rally. While Japan will not get a tourism boost this summer that will buffet discretionary spending, foreigners are likely to return as the pandemic is put behind us. It is remarkable that Japanese shares, even construction and material companies, that should have benefited from the leadup to the Olympics, have massively underperformed (Chart I-7). This suggests that at the margin, many investors have folded hands and sold Japanese equities indiscriminately. Chart I-7Japanese Shares Have Underperformed
Japanese Shares Have Underperformed
Japanese Shares Have Underperformed
Finally, real rates in Japan are among the highest in the G10. This will not only prevent Japanese concerns from deploying yen cash on foreign paper, but could also lead to some repatriation of funds, boosting the yen. Low Real Rates: Buy Silver (And Platinum) The case for buying silver has become compelling, at least on a tactical basis. First, the runup in prices from under $12/oz in March to almost $30/oz in August ushered silver into a well-defined wedge formation, with a series of higher lows. We are now sitting close to the lower bound of this wedge. Given our expectation that any DXY rally will be capped at 93-94, this puts a solid floor under silver prices around the $22-$23/oz level (Chart I-8). This makes for an attractive risk/reward since silver could overtake its 2011 highs near $50/oz, once strong resistance at $30/oz is breached. Second, similar to gold, silver benefits from low interest rates, plentiful liquidity, and the incentive for fiat money debasement. But unlike gold or even cryptocurrencies, physical use for silver is quite elevated. Silver fabrication demand benefits from electronic production (whereby there is a shortage, so it is bound to eventually increase), as well as new green industries such as solar power that are dominating the manufacturing landscape (Chart I-9). Meanwhile, our Commodity & Energy Strategists have flagged that the surplus of silver is expected to shrink significantly this year, driven by both industrial and investment demand (Chart I-10). Chart I-8Buy Some Silver
Buy Some Silver
Buy Some Silver
Chart I-9Silver Demand Is Picking Up
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
Chart I-10The Silver Surplus Is Shrinking
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
Third, silver is also a more potent play on a lower dollar. This is because the silver market is thinner and more volatile, with futures open interest at about one-third that of gold. Put another way, volatility in silver has always been historically higher than gold, which is why silver tends to outperform gold when the dollar is falling (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Silver Is A More Potent Play On The Dollar
Silver Is A More Potent Play On The Dollar
Silver Is A More Potent Play On The Dollar
It is worth pointing out that the velocity of money between the US and China is slowing again, suggesting growth is likely to start outperforming outside the US, beyond the current slowdown. The US benefits less from a pickup in Chinese growth, compared to other countries. This has generally pushed the dollar lower and set fire under the silver/gold ratio (Chart I-12). Finally, there is also a case to be made for platinum. It has lagged both gold and palladium prices (Chart I-13). Meanwhile, breakthroughs are being made in substituting palladium for platinum in gasoline catalytic converters. Chart I-12Money Velocity And The GSR
Money Velocity And The GSR
Money Velocity And The GSR
Chart I-13Platinum And Silver Have Lagged Gold
Platinum And Silver Have Lagged Gold
Platinum And Silver Have Lagged Gold
China Slowdown Almost Over: Buy AUD/MXN Soon We highlighted in February that a tactical opportunity had opened to go short the AUD/MXN cross. With the cross down 11% from its recent highs, an opportunity to go long will soon open up. China has started easing policy at the margin. The AUD/MXN cross correlates quite strongly with the Chinese credit cycle, as Australia is economically tied to China while Mexico depends more on the US (Chart I-14). The Australian PMI has remained quite firm, despite a slowdown in the Chinese credit impulse. Strong commodity prices have been a factor, but it also points to endogenous strength in the Aussie economy. Relative terms of trade favor the Aussie. We had expected terms of trade between Australia and Mexico to relapse on the basis of destocking in China, but that has not been the case (Chart I-15). With oil prices structurally challenged by EVs, while metal prices benefit from the buildout of green infrastructure, terms of trade will remain favorable for the cross longer term. Australian stocks have been underperforming the more defensive Mexican bourse (Chart I-16). This should reverse as cyclicals start to regain the upper hand. Chart I-14AUD/MXN Tracks Chinese Credit
AUD/MXN Tracks Chinese Credit
AUD/MXN Tracks Chinese Credit
Chart I-15AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
Chart I-16AUD/MXN And Relative Equity Prices
AUD/MXN And Relative Equity Prices
AUD/MXN And Relative Equity Prices
The timing for a long position is tricky as Chinese economic activity is likely to slow in the coming months, and cyclical equities could remain under pressure. Meanwhile, as value investors, we are also uncomfortable with AUD/MXN valuations. This suggests that in the very near term, short positions still make sense. That said, the 13-14 zone should provide formidable support to go long, an opportunity likely to unfold in the next 3 months (Chart 17). Chart I-17AUD/MXN And Momentum
AUD/MXN And Momentum
AUD/MXN And Momentum
A Final Thought On Rising Catastrophes We have been watching with obvious trepidation the rising incidence of catastrophes globally. The occurrence of weather events such as droughts, floods, storms, cyclones, and wildfires has been skyrocketing (Chart I-18). Chart I-18Disasters And Volatility
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
The direct play is to buy global construction and machinery stocks that are likely to benefit from increased reconstruction activity. It also favors agricultural futures. As for currency markets, the one observation is rising volatility with the VIX having spiked significantly in the years with numerous weather events. We are already long CHF/NZD and the yen as a play on rising currency volatility, and we will be exploring this thesis more deeply in future publications. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Data out of the US this week was relatively robust: The Markit manufacturing PMI for July edged up from 62.1 to 63.1. That said, the services PMI fell from 64.6 to 59.8. Durable goods orders were rather weak, rising 0.8% year on year in June, versus a consensus of a 2.2% increase. Admittedly, the core non-defense measure, excluding aircraft and parts, rose by 0.5% from 0.1%. Consumer confidence remains resilient, rising from 127.3 to 129.1 in July, well above expectations. Q2 GDP came in at 6.5% quarter on quarter, versus an 8.4% consensus. The US dollar DXY index fell this week. The Fed meeting highlighted that the authorities are in no rush to tighten monetary policy, despite what has been a robust recovery in labor market conditions and inflation. The aftermath of the meeting saw a drop in US real yields and the dollar. The Fed’s dovish stance has been a central theme to our bearish dollar view. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Data out of the eurozone this week softened: The manufacturing PMI fell to 62.6 in July from 63.4. The services PMI surprisingly improved, rising from 58.3 to 60.4 in July. Economic confidence rose from 117.9 to 119 in July. The German IFO survey was below consensus in July, but the expectations component did rise from 99.6 to 100.4. The euro rose by 1% this week. We went long the euro at 1.18 on expectations that at the margin, monetary policy in the euro area will shift in a more hawkish fashion. Since then, the ECB has adopted a symmetric inflation target, promising to keep interest rates low for longer. The euro’s indifference to this dovish development suggests a strong floor under the currency, and upside should euro area growth beat consensus. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward - April 2, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Japanese data was rather mixed this week: The Jibun manufacturing PMI eased slightly in July, to 52.2 from 52.4. The services component also fell to 46.4. Department store sales came in at 3.7% year on year in June. We highlighted last week that supermarket sales also remain strong. The yen was up 0.4% against the dollar this week. In the history of the Olympics, the incumbent currency has tended to rise over the course of the year. Given the yen is the most shorted developed-market currency currently, this sets it up for a coiled spring rebound. Report Links: The Case For Japan - June 11, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
There were some mixed data out of the UK this week: Retail sales in the UK were in line with expectations. The measure excluding automobiles and fuel rose by 7.4% year on year in June. The PMIs generally slowed from very strong levels. The manufacturing print for July was 60.4, while the services component came in at 57.8. House price inflation remains strong, with the nationwide measure coming in at 10.5% year on year in July. Mortgage approvals fell slightly in June but remain at a robust 81.3K. The pound rose by 1.5% this week. The big surprise in the UK has been a reversal in the COVID-19 infection rate, despite an economy that is reopening quite briskly. This sets cable up for a volatile few weeks and months, given a poor technical picture (speculations are cutting long positions from very aggressive levels). We like GBP long term but will stand aside for now. Report Links: Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low? - March 10, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Thoughts On The British Pound - December 18, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
The inflation report in Australia was in line with expectations for Q2: Headline CPI rose from 1.1% to 3.8%. The trimmed mean and median measure came in at 1.6% and 1.7% respectively. The AUD was flat this week, the worst performing G10 currency. The dominant story remains the renewed restrictions from a resurgence in COVID-19, particularly in Sydney. That said, weakness in AUD is starting to create an attractive reward/risk profile. Speculators are net short the Australian dollar, and our bias is that there has been spillover pressure from the recent turmoil in Asian/Chinese markets. In the end, this only makes for a coiled spring rebound in the AUD. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: The trade balance came in at NZ$261 million, even with stronger imports in June. The ANZ activity outlook index fell in July, to 26.3 from 31.6. The NZD was up 0.5% this week. The strong rally in NZD after a hawkish RBNZ a fortnight ago continues to fade. This week, we highlighted a new theme, which is the rising incidence of natural disasters. Historically, this has been great for agricultural prices, benefiting NZD. But it has also been accompanied by a tremendous rise in currency volatility, which hurts the NZD vis-à-vis safe-haven currencies. We are currently long CHF/NZD and will be exploring this theme in future publications. Report Links: How High Can The Kiwi Rise? - April 30, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Data out of Canada this week has been mixed: Retail sales fell month on month in May by 2.1% but this was above expectations. Inflation remains robust. Headline CPI was 3.1%, while the core trim, median and common measures came in at 2.6%, 2.4% and 1.7% respectively. The CAD rose by 0.8% this week. The backdrop for the loonie remains positive as the Bank of Canada is leaning against monetary accommodation by tapering asset purchases, and signaling interest rate increases, while the Fed remains on hold. These pin real interest rate differentials in favor of the loonie. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 The Outlook For The Canadian Dollar - October 9, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: Investor confidence from the Credit Suisse survey fell in July, from 51.3 to 42.8. Total sight deposits were unchanged at CHF 712 bn for the week of July 23. The Swiss franc was up 1.3% this week. Incoming Swiss inflation data next week will dictate whether the SNB steps up the pace of FX intervention. So far, there have been no big moves in the CHF exchange rate to implore central bank attention. A rebound in global bond yields will be a welcome relief since the franc tends to weaken in that environment. For the time being, we believe volatility can continue to rise. As such, the franc will benefit, justifying long CHF/NZD bets. Report Links: An Update On The Swiss Franc - April 9, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Norway this week: Retail sales were flat month on month in June. The NOK was up 1% this week. Our limit buy on Scandinavian currencies was triggered a fortnight ago, nudging us in the money with this week’s currency moves. We are not fighting the Norges Bank, which has signaled they will increase interest rates this year, ahead of both the Federal Reserve and the ECB. As such, we are short EUR/NOK and USD/NOK. Report Links: The Norwegian Method - June 4, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data from Sweden have been improving: The PPI for July came in at 9.6%, up from 7.9%. The June trade balance showed a healthy surplus of SEK 10.3 billion. The economic tendency survey for July came in at 122.4 from 119.8. Manufacturing confidence continues to inflect higher, rising from 125.2 to 129.2 in July. The SEK was the strongest performing G10 currency this week, rising 1.5%. Swedish Q2 GDP was a welcome positive surprise, up by 10.5% year on year and 0.9% quarter on quarter. This is paring back expectations of more stimulus from the Riksbank. We have been highlighting that SEK remains one of our most potent plays on a global growth recovery. As such, we are short EUR/SEK and USD/SEK. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Sweden Beyond The Pandemic: Poised To Re-leverage - March 19, 2020 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy and European Investment Strategy services conclude that the global environment and Norway’s continued economic strength will create potent tailwind for the Norwegian krone over a cyclical investment horizon. The…
Highlights The Norwegian economy will continue to grow above trend for the next two years or so. Norwegian inflation will firm up. Among Advanced Economies, the Norges Bank will lead the way in terms of policy tightening; however, money markets already embed this view. Nonetheless, the Norwegian krone remains an appealing value play, a result of its pronounced pro-cyclicality. USD/NOK and EUR/NOK will depreciate over the next 24 months. Norwegian equities face structural headwinds, but they should outperform their US and Euro Area counterparts. However, Norwegian stocks will lag behind Swedish equities. Buy Norwegian stocks / sell Dutch ones. Feature Norway remains an example of how to handle the pandemic successfully. Since the onset of the COVID-19 crisis, Norway has registered the lowest rate of infections per capita, in part aided by its early decision to close its borders. Fiscal stimulus was prompt and finely tailored to the sectors most in need of emergency funds. Moreover, the Norges Bank cut interest rates to zero for the first time since its founding in 1816. As nations across the world coordinated monetary and fiscal accommodation during the pandemic, Nordic economies had already mastered this paradigm. Thus, counter-cyclical buffers worked like a charm in Norway. For example, the contraction in Norwegian GDP was the most subdued within the G10, and the recovery is also impressive. Today, Norwegian GDP is 2% above pre-pandemic levels, inflation is near the target rate of 2%, and the central bank will be among the first to lift interest rates. In this Special Report, we explore whether or not conditions remain ripe for strong performances by both Norwegian equities and the NOK. In our view, the global environment and the continued economic strength of Norway will create potent tailwind for Norwegian assets over the coming two years or so. A Robust Economic Outlook The Norwegian economy is set to continue growing at a robust above-trend pace and inflation will remain above the Norges Bank’s target. The Pandemic Norway has moved largely beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of cases per 100 is a mere 2, which compares favorably to the US at 10, Germany at 4, France at 8, or its neighbor Sweden at 10. Norway closed its borders on March 12, 2020, to limit the entry of the virus on its territory, as health authorities opted for rapid containment measures. As a direct result of these policies, Norwegian consumers and workers gained greater peace of mind in their day-to-day dealings, and economic activity recovered rapidly. This process led to Norway’s GDP contracting by only 4.6% in Q2 2020, which compares favorably to contractions of 19.5% in the UK, 9.7% in Germany and 7.8% in Sweden. Norway’s vaccination campaign is also gaining momentum. At first, the country’s inoculation performance lagged. However, Norwegian procurement of vaccines has improved, and the pace of inoculation is accelerating (Chart 1, top panel). The result is that the share of the population that is fully vaccinated is inching toward 20% and accelerating. Authorities expect greater relaxation of containment measures this summer, which will allow mobility to improve (Chart 2). The local service sector will therefore receive a welcome fillip. Chart 1Norway's Vaccination Progress
Norway's Vaccination Progress
Norway's Vaccination Progress
Chart 2Mobility Will Pick Up
Mobility Will Pick Up
Mobility Will Pick Up
Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy remains an important complement to national health directives. During the crisis, the fiscal deficit reached 3.4% of GDP, which generated a fiscal thrust of 6% of GDP. Moreover, the drawdown from the Norwegian Oil Fund amounted to 12.5% of GDP. These provided targeted supports to industries, such as tourism and transport, while a furlough scheme protected household income. Thus, these programs effectively alleviated the pain on the sectors of the economy most affected by the pandemic. Going forward, Norway will also suffer from one of the smallest fiscal drag in the G10 for the remainder of 2021 and 2022 (Chart 3). Chart 3Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop
Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop
Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop
The Banking System The credit channel in Norway remains open and fluid, as a resilient banking system withstood the economic fallout from the pandemic. According to the Norges Bank, credit losses have been limited; they peaked at 1% of lending and are already declining. Additionally, banks have restricted exposure to the sectors hardest hit by the pandemic, such as travel and tourism, personal services, and transport (Chart 4). Moreover, the profitability of the banking system decreased, as global yields fell last year, but RoE remains around 10% and net interest margins hover near 2.5% and 1.5% for non-financial corporate loans and households lending, respectively. Crucially, the Norwegian banking system sports a regulatory Tier-1 capital-to-risk weighted-assets ratio of 20%, well above Basel III criteria or that of the Eurozone banks (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 4Norwegian Banks Are Faring Well
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Household Consumption Household consumption will remain a source of strength over the coming quarters. Household net worth is growing robustly as a result of the rapid appreciation of house prices across the country (Chart 5, top panel). Moreover, the share of debt held by households with a high debt-to-income ratio or a low debt-servicing capacity remains low, which suggests household balance sheets are firming (Chart 5, middle panel). Employment is also recovering well. After peaking at 9.5% in March 2020, the headline unemployment rate fell to 3.3% last month (Chart 5, bottom panel). Meanwhile, the number of employed workers bottomed in July 2020 and has been steadily recovering ever since. The only blemish is that, as of Q4 2020, the rate of underemployment among the prime-age population remains at 3.5%, which is somewhat elevated by national standards. This balance sheet and employment backdrop confirms the Norges Bank’s projection: the household savings rate will decline significantly over the coming two years (Chart 6, top panel). Hence, the marked pick-up in consumer confidence should translate into a major recovery in real consumption growth (Chart 6, bottom panel). Nonetheless, the service sector will likely be the main beneficiary of this improvement, as real retail sales are already well above their historical trend Chart 5Positive Household Fundamentals
Positive Household Fundamentals
Positive Household Fundamentals
Chart 6Consumption Will Improve Further
Consumption Will Improve Further
Consumption Will Improve Further
Net Exports Chart 7Years Of Underinvestment In Oil & Gas
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
The external sector will create another tailwind for the Norwegian economy. Prior to the pandemic, 71% of Norway’s exports flowed to Europe. Moreover, oil and gas represented 53% of shipments, and cyclically sensitive exports amounted to 74% of total or 24% of GDP. Thus, even if China’s economy slows, Europe’s economic re-opening will raise the Norwegian trade balance, which sits near a multi-decade low.1 Moreover, greater mobility in Europe and around the world will elevate demand for petroleum. In light of the tepid pace of investment in global oil and gas extraction over the past five years, our commodity strategists forecast further oil and gas price appreciation2 (Chart 7), which will boost Norway’s terms of trade. The national income will therefore expand smartly, especially because oil and gas shipments will increase thanks to growing production from the new Johan Sverdrup field. Capital Spending This context suggests that capital spending, which accounts for 26% of Norway’s output (Chart 8), will constitute an important tailwind to domestic activity. Capex is even more important to the Norwegian economy than it is for other Nordic economies or even Germany (Chart 9). Chart 8Capital Spending Is Important For Norway
Capital Spending Is Important For Norway
Capital Spending Is Important For Norway
Chart 9The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway
The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway
The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway
Norwegian capex is highly cyclical. Capital formation tracks our BCA Global Nowcast indicator (a combination of high-frequency economic and financial variables that proxy the global industrial cycle), as well as the domestic manufacturing PMI. These indicators suggest that capex should increase by 10-15% in the coming quarters (Chart 10). A Norges Bank survey of capex intentions, which are firming, corroborates this view. Chart 10Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover
Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover
Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover
On the energy front, the new Johan Sverdrup oil and gas discovery marks a major turnaround in capital spending for Norway. According to the Norges Bank, real petroleum investment will increase from approximately NOK 175bn in 2021 to NOK 198bn by 2024 (Chart 11). Moreover, years of global underinvestment in oil extraction suggests Norway will gain market share in exports as production accelerates. Total petroleum production is slated to increase by 10% over the next 4 years. More importantly, by 2025, over 50% of production from Norwegian oil fields will be natural gas and associated liquids (Chart 12). Demand for natural gas and NGLs will be more inelastic than demand for crude because the latter is threatened by the rising electrification of vehicles, while the former faces more sustainable demand as China, among others, moves to replace its coal polluting plants with cleaner alternatives. Chart 11Real Petroleum Investment Will Increase By 13% In 2024
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Chart 12Gas Production Is Rising In Importance
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Inflation This positive economic outlook suggests that Norwegian inflation will remain above the central bank’s target of 2%. Already, headline CPI stands at 3%. Meanwhile, core inflation is at 2%, but it is decelerating. However, this slowdown should be temporary. According to a Norges Bank survey, both long-term and near-term inflation expectations among economists, business leaders, and households are rising, which indicates that a deflationary mentality has not taken root in Norway. Moreover, wage expectations have quickly normalized following the trauma of 2020 (Chart 13). Capacity constraints further reinforce the notion that inflation has upside. The Norges Bank Regional Network survey shows that capacity and labor supply constraints are tighter than they were in the 2014 to 2017 period, when inflation averaged 2.3% and the policy rate fell to 0.5% (Chart 14). Moreover, according to the same survey, selling prices are also stronger than they were during the 2016 oil collapse (Chart 14, bottom panel) Chart 13No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality
No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality
No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality
Chart 14Capacity Doesn’t Point To Falling Inflation
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Bottom Line: The Norwegian economy will continue to grow above its trend rate of 1.5%, at least through to 2022. The acceleration in vaccination numbers will allow a reopening of the economy, while the fiscal drag will be limited and the banking system remains resilient. The outlook for households remains positive and employment is firming, which will lead to stronger consumption. Meanwhile, exports and capex have significant upside ahead. As a result, we anticipate Norwegian inflation will remain above target for the foreseeable future. The Norges Bank Will Lead The Pack The Norges Bank’s response to the pandemic was swift and all encompassing: It cut interest rates in the spring of 2020 from 1.5% to zero, the lowest level since the formation of the bank in 1816. It set up extraordinary F-loans at very generous interest rates, to provide ample liquidity to commercial banks. The longest maturity loan of 12 months had a prevailing interest rate of just 30 basis points. It also relaxed collateral requirements for these loans. It introduced swap lines with the Federal Reserve to provide US dollar funding to Norwegian firms. Since then, our Norges Bank monitor has rebounded powerfully from very depressed levels, which suggests that emergency policy settings have become unnecessary. Moreover, the Norwegian Central Bank Monitor towers above that of other G10 countries, which indicates that the Norges Bank should lead the pack in normalizing policy rates (Chart 15). Chart 15The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle
The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle
The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle
Chart 16The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher
The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher
The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher
The biggest improvement in our Norges Bank Monitor comes from its growth component, which has surged to its highest levels in over two decades. This improvement surpasses those that followed the global financial crisis and the burst of the dot-com bubble (Chart 16). In essence, the growth component of the Monitor signals that the Norwegian economy has achieved escape velocity. Norway’s robust economic turnover is increasing the velocity of money, which points to the need for higher interest rates. Money velocity can be regarded as the equilibrating mechanism between money supply and nominal output, from the classical Fisher equation MV=PQ (where M is the money supply, P is prices, Q is real output, and V is money velocity). Thus, rising money velocity (when PQ expands faster than M) signifies that the economy needs higher interest rates to encourage savings. In Norway’s case, the velocity of money is surging through 2021, which confirms that the Norges Bank may depart from its current emergency policy setting (Chart 17). Chart 17Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway
Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway
Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway
The OIS curve already reflects this reality. At the last central bank meeting in March, Governor Øystein Olsen stated that interest rates would increase in the second half of this year. Already, the central bank’s balance sheet has been expanding more slowly than that of its peers (Chart 18). In response to this messaging, investors now expect the Norges Bank to lead the Fed, ECB, Riksbank, and BoE in lifting interest rates (Chart 19). Chart 18The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over
The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over
The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over
Chart 19Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First
Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First
Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First
The Norges Bank must nonetheless manage a tough balancing act. Lifting rates too soon or too fast could torpedo the recovery, if the currency and bond yields increase too rapidly and tighten financial conditions in a disruptive fashion. However, not removing accommodation fast enough could lead to economic overheating. Bottom Line: The Norges Bank will be the first DM central bank to increase interest rates, most likely as soon as this September. The OIS curve already reflects this outlook; it prices in over 6 hikes by the end of 2023, more than any other DM money market curve. This pricing seems appropriate; thus, Norwegian money markets offer no compelling investment opportunity. Norway’s Problem: Sagging Productivity Both the OECD and the IMF view weak productivity growth as Norway’s biggest long-term hurdle. Despite the bright economic outlook for the next two years or so, we agree. Since 2004-2005, Norwegian productivity has sharply decelerated. At the turn of the millennium, the Norwegian’s mainland labor productivity was growing at 2.5%, or a percentage point above the average of the OECD. Today, labor productivity growth is a paltry 0.5%, placing Norway last among Nordic economies (Chart 20, left panel). Total factor productivity tells a similar story. After recording the fastest productivity expansion among G10 nation from 1990 to 2005, Norway’s TFP declined 11% and is now situated at the same level as it was in 1995. This deterioration is comparable to Italy’s TFP (Chart 20, left panel). Chart 20From Best To Last
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
According to the most recent OECD country report, one of the roots of Norway’s productivity problem is an absence of low-hanging fruit. Norway sports one of the highest GDP per hours worked in the world. This nation essentially sits near the global productivity frontier. Its product market regulations are generally not onerous (Chart 21, top panel). Likewise, more than 60% of both the service sector and the manufacturing sector’s workforce use ICT tools, which is at the highest level among OECD countries. Additionally, the jobs at risk of a negative impact from automation or technological changes represent a significantly smaller share of total employment than in most OECD nations (Chart 21, bottom panel). Chart 21Doing Things Right
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
The Dutch Disease, the hollowing out of the manufacturing sector due to a capital hungry resource sector, is the second root of Norway’s productivity problem. Historically and across countries, manufacturing is the sector that records the greatest productivity gains. However, since 1979, the oil and gas and the housing sectors have experienced the largest capital investments expansion in Norway. Meanwhile, the share of capex generated by the manufacturing sector has declined to a paltry 5% (Chart 22). Moreover, oil and gas represents a larger share of capex than the contribution of its gross value added to GDP. The same holds true for housing, whose share of capex doubled over the past 27 years. Meanwhile, manufacturing’s share of capex has consistently lagged its representation in GDP, which has steadily declined (Chart 23). These are the typical symptoms of the Dutch Disease; as long as oil prices remain in a secular decline, any cyclical improvement in productivity will prove to be transitory. Chart 22The Dutch Disease, Part I
The Dutch Disease, Part I
The Dutch Disease, Part I
Chart 23The Dutch Disease, Part II
The Dutch Disease, Part II
The Dutch Disease, Part II
Bottom Line: Despite an upbeat cyclical outlook, Norway’s deteriorating productivity trend constitutes a formidable structural headwind. There are no easy solutions, because Norway already sits near the global productivity frontier. Moreover, Norway suffers from a pronounced case of the Dutch Disease. For decades, the oil and gas sector has absorbed a share of capital that is greater than its role in the economy, starving the productivity-generating manufacturing sector from investments. With the oil sector entering a structural decline due to ESG concerns, this trend will not change without a significant change in the allocation of the Norwegian capital stock. Investment Implications The cyclical outlook (12 to 24 months) for the Norwegian currency and stock market remains appealing. The NOK’s Outlook Chart 24The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis
The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis
The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis
While money markets do not offer any compelling opportunities to play the Norges Bank’s hiking cycle, the krone remains attractive from a cyclical perspective. Over the next 12-18 months, the NOK should appreciate compared to both the US dollar and the euro on the back of four key pillars. On a purchasing power parity basis, the Norwegian krone is undervalued by 14%. This compares favorably with both the euro, which is undervalued by 12%, and the US dollar, which is overvalued by 12% (Chart 24). More importantly, our PPP model adjusts the consumption basket across countries, allowing for a more apples-to-apples comparison. The Norwegian krone is highly procyclical and will benefit from any improvement in the global backdrop. The performance of NOK/USD, NOK/EUR, and NOK/JPY moves in lockstep with global equities (Chart 25). Norwegian equities have greatly underperformed global bourses over the last decade, but, as we argue below, there is some room for mean reversion. Inflows into the Norwegian equity market should benefit the krone (Chart 26). Chart 25NOK Is A Procyclical ##br##Currency
NOK Is A Procyclical Currency
NOK Is A Procyclical Currency
Chart 26NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares
NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares
NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares
From a more fundamental perspective, the krone will benefit from positive income flows, given Norway’s large net international investment position (NIIP). In fact, ever since the first Norwegian oil fields began producing light sweet crude in the North Sea in the 1970s, Norway has maintained a structural trade surplus with most of its trading partners. This has allowed the country to build one of the biggest NIIP in the world (Chart 27), trailing only behind Hong Kong and Singapore. This large NIIP generates large income receipts that skew heavily toward equity dividends. This characteristic of the Norwegian balance of payment strengthens the bond between the NOK and global equities. Over the next few years, Norway’s trade balance should also get a boost, not only from rising oil and gas production, but also from an improvement in terms of trade, as we argued above. The trade balance has historically been the biggest driver of cross-border inflows into Norway, and that should remain positive for the basic balance and the NOK (Chart 28) Chart 28Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments
Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments
Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments
Chart 27Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position
Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position
Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position
On a structural basis, however, the Norwegian krone faces challenges. Declining productivity suggests that economic growth in Norway will be more inflationary. This will lower the fair value of the real exchange rate. Therefore, while we are positive on the NOK over the next 18 to 24 months, we will be cognizant not to overstay our welcome. Finally, as for NOK/SEK, the pair should rise as both oil and gas prices remain firm in the near term, but any structural challenges to both oil and/or Norwegian productivity will favor the SEK over the longer term (Chart 29). Chart 29NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices
NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices
NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices
The Equity Market Outlook Norwegian equities remain challenged as long-term holdings, but they are attractive on a cyclical basis. The poor profitability of Norwegian equities is their main long-term problem. Unlike Swedish stocks, Norwegian shares sport a return on equity in line with that of the Eurozone, not that of the US. Norway’s profit margins are weak and its asset turnover rivals that of the Euro Area (Chart 30). Additionally, the country’s poor productivity performance argues against a sudden reversal in RoEs. Chart 30Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden
Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden
Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden
Sectoral composition creates another structural handicap for the Norwegian market. Oslo overweighs Energy and Financials (Table 1). Energy stocks can experience periodic rallies, but their long-term outlook is bleak in a world moving away from carbon-based power. Meanwhile, financials are also likely to remain structural laggards. The regulatory legacy of the Great Financial Crisis has curtailed leverage, which is depressing the RoE of the banking sector. Greater competition and the emergence of the fintech industry are further undermining fee income. None of these factors will change anytime soon. Table 1Sectoral Breakdown
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
That being said, Norwegian equities remain a compelling opportunity for the next two years or so, despite their long-term problems. Norwegian stocks have an extremely negative beta to the US dollar. The historical sensitivity of the NOK to the USD in part explains this attribute, the other part being their elevated cyclicality. The dollar is one of the most counter-cyclical currencies in the world; thus, its weakness correlates with strong Norwegian forward earnings, which are heavily influenced by commodity prices and the global industrial cycle. This process also lifts Norwegian stock prices (Chart 31). Hence, BCA’s positive outlook on the global business cycle, as well as our negative stance on the dollar, points to significantly stronger Norwegian share prices.3 The slowdown in China’s economy is one risk that could cause some near-term tremors in Norwegian assets, which investors should use to build positions. In response to Beijing’s efforts to limit systemic risk, the Chinese credit impulse has slowed from 1.1% of GDP to 0.3%, and could flirt with the zero line. The ensuing investment slowdown will weigh on the global industrial sector and cause a temporary pullback in commodity prices. As Chart 32 illustrates, this will be negative for Norwegian equities; historically, following declines in Chinese yields, Norwegian forward earnings and stock prices weaken. However, global energy demand will remain robust even as China slows; therefore, correcting Norwegian equities create a buying opportunity. Chart 31Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet
Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet
Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet
Chart 32A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk
A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk
A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk
Norwegian stocks should also outperform US and Eurozone equities. Nonetheless, Norwegian equities enjoy their greatest appeal against the US benchmark. Norwegian stocks trade at valuation discounts ranging from 38% to 54% compared to their US counterparts. Meanwhile, Norway’s net earnings revisions remain depressed compared to the US. Most importantly, Norwegian stocks are more pro-cyclical and sensitive to EM and global financial conditions than US shares are. Consequently, Oslo outperforms New York when the broad trade-weighted dollar depreciates, EM currencies appreciate, and the global yield curve slope steepens (Chart 33). We expect these trends to intensify over the remainder of the business cycle. Chart 33Oslo Beats New York
Oslo Beats New York
Oslo Beats New York
Norwegian equities are also more responsive than Eurozone equities to global business-cycle oscillations. Norwegian equities outperform those of the Eurozone when the dollar depreciates (Chart 34). Additionally, a simple modelling exercise reveals that rising oil prices and global yields result in higher relative share prices in favor of Norway (Chart 35). Chart 34Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens
Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens
Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens
Chart 35Favor Norway Over ##br##The Euro Area
Favor Norway Over The Euro Area
Favor Norway Over The Euro Area
Sweden is the one market that maintains a hedge over Norway.4 Swedish stocks not only sport a RoE nine percentage point above that of Norway, they are also sensitive to the global business cycle. However, the main advantage of Swedish equities is their sectoral breakdown. Sweden has an enormous overweight in industrials (38% of the benchmark), while Norway greatly overweighs materials. In an environment in which China is likely to decelerate, but global capex and infrastructure spending will remain firm, Sweden’s industrials’ weighting gives it a powerful advantage over its neighbor’s stock market. Finally, we recommend the following high-octane trade: Long Norwegian / short Dutch stocks. The Amsterdam bourse has a 47% allocation to tech stocks and a greater “growth” bias than the S&P 500. This means that the relative performance of Norwegian stocks compared to Dutch equities is even more sensitive to the global business cycle, oil prices, and bond yields. As a result, our simple model incorporating both Brent prices and yields currently sends a strong buy signal in favor of Norway (Chart 36). Chart 36Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands
Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands
Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands
Bottom Line: The NOK will perform strongly against both the USD and the EUR over the coming 18 to 24 months. Norwegian equities are not an appealing long-term bet; however, they will experience significant upside over the coming two years, both in absolute terms and relative to the US and Euro Area stocks. While Oslo is unlikely to outperform Stockholm over this period, we recommend buying Norwegian stocks and selling the Dutch index. Mathieu Savary Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see European Investment Strategy Report, "A Surprising Dance," dated May 10, 2021. 2 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Report, "OPEC’s 2.0 Production Strategy In Focus," dated May 20, 2021. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Report, "Explaining Recent Weakness In The US Dollar," dated May 14, 2021. 4 Please see European Investment Strategy Report, "Take A Chance On Sweden," dated May 03, 2021.
Highlights The Norwegian economy will continue to grow above trend for the next two years or so. Norwegian inflation will firm up. Among Advanced Economies, the Norges Bank will lead the way in terms of policy tightening; however, money markets already embed this view. Nonetheless, the Norwegian krone remains an appealing value play, a result of its pronounced pro-cyclicality. USD/NOK and EUR/NOK will depreciate over the next 24 months. Norwegian equities face structural headwinds, but they should outperform their US and Euro Area counterparts. However, Norwegian stocks will lag behind Swedish equities. Buy Norwegian stocks / sell Dutch ones. Feature Norway remains an example of how to handle the pandemic successfully. Since the onset of the COVID-19 crisis, Norway has registered the lowest rate of infections per capita, in part aided by its early decision to close its borders. Fiscal stimulus was prompt and finely tailored to the sectors most in need of emergency funds. Moreover, the Norges Bank cut interest rates to zero for the first time since its founding in 1816. As nations across the world coordinated monetary and fiscal accommodation during the pandemic, Nordic economies had already mastered this paradigm. Thus, counter-cyclical buffers worked like a charm in Norway. For example, the contraction in Norwegian GDP was the most subdued within the G10, and the recovery is also impressive. Today, Norwegian GDP is 2% above pre-pandemic levels, inflation is near the target rate of 2%, and the central bank will be among the first to lift interest rates. In this Special Report, we explore whether or not conditions remain ripe for strong performances by both Norwegian equities and the NOK. In our view, the global environment and the continued economic strength of Norway will create potent tailwind for Norwegian assets over the coming two years or so. A Robust Economic Outlook The Norwegian economy is set to continue growing at a robust above-trend pace and inflation will remain above the Norges Bank’s target. The Pandemic Norway has moved largely beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of cases per 100 is a mere 2, which compares favorably to the US at 10, Germany at 4, France at 8, or its neighbor Sweden at 10. Norway closed its borders on March 12, 2020, to limit the entry of the virus on its territory, as health authorities opted for rapid containment measures. As a direct result of these policies, Norwegian consumers and workers gained greater peace of mind in their day-to-day dealings, and economic activity recovered rapidly. This process led to Norway’s GDP contracting by only 4.6% in Q2 2020, which compares favorably to contractions of 19.5% in the UK, 9.7% in Germany and 7.8% in Sweden. Norway’s vaccination campaign is also gaining momentum. At first, the country’s inoculation performance lagged. However, Norwegian procurement of vaccines has improved, and the pace of inoculation is accelerating (Chart 1, top panel). The result is that the share of the population that is fully vaccinated is inching toward 20% and accelerating. Authorities expect greater relaxation of containment measures this summer, which will allow mobility to improve (Chart 2). The local service sector will therefore receive a welcome fillip. Chart 1Norway's Vaccination Progress
Norway's Vaccination Progress
Norway's Vaccination Progress
Chart 2Mobility Will Pick Up
Mobility Will Pick Up
Mobility Will Pick Up
Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy remains an important complement to national health directives. During the crisis, the fiscal deficit reached 3.4% of GDP, which generated a fiscal thrust of 6% of GDP. Moreover, the drawdown from the Norwegian Oil Fund amounted to 12.5% of GDP. These provided targeted supports to industries, such as tourism and transport, while a furlough scheme protected household income. Thus, these programs effectively alleviated the pain on the sectors of the economy most affected by the pandemic. Going forward, Norway will also suffer from one of the smallest fiscal drag in the G10 for the remainder of 2021 and 2022 (Chart 3). Chart 3Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop
Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop
Norway's Advantageous Fiscal Backdrop
The Banking System The credit channel in Norway remains open and fluid, as a resilient banking system withstood the economic fallout from the pandemic. According to the Norges Bank, credit losses have been limited; they peaked at 1% of lending and are already declining. Additionally, banks have restricted exposure to the sectors hardest hit by the pandemic, such as travel and tourism, personal services, and transport (Chart 4). Moreover, the profitability of the banking system decreased, as global yields fell last year, but RoE remains around 10% and net interest margins hover near 2.5% and 1.5% for non-financial corporate loans and households lending, respectively. Crucially, the Norwegian banking system sports a regulatory Tier-1 capital-to-risk weighted-assets ratio of 20%, well above Basel III criteria or that of the Eurozone banks (Chart 4, bottom panel). Chart 4Norwegian Banks Are Faring Well
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Household Consumption Household consumption will remain a source of strength over the coming quarters. Household net worth is growing robustly as a result of the rapid appreciation of house prices across the country (Chart 5, top panel). Moreover, the share of debt held by households with a high debt-to-income ratio or a low debt-servicing capacity remains low, which suggests household balance sheets are firming (Chart 5, middle panel). Employment is also recovering well. After peaking at 9.5% in March 2020, the headline unemployment rate fell to 3.3% last month (Chart 5, bottom panel). Meanwhile, the number of employed workers bottomed in July 2020 and has been steadily recovering ever since. The only blemish is that, as of Q4 2020, the rate of underemployment among the prime-age population remains at 3.5%, which is somewhat elevated by national standards. This balance sheet and employment backdrop confirms the Norges Bank’s projection: the household savings rate will decline significantly over the coming two years (Chart 6, top panel). Hence, the marked pick-up in consumer confidence should translate into a major recovery in real consumption growth (Chart 6, bottom panel). Nonetheless, the service sector will likely be the main beneficiary of this improvement, as real retail sales are already well above their historical trend Chart 5Positive Household Fundamentals
Positive Household Fundamentals
Positive Household Fundamentals
Chart 6Consumption Will Improve Further
Consumption Will Improve Further
Consumption Will Improve Further
Net Exports Chart 7Years Of Underinvestment In Oil & Gas
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
The external sector will create another tailwind for the Norwegian economy. Prior to the pandemic, 71% of Norway’s exports flowed to Europe. Moreover, oil and gas represented 53% of shipments, and cyclically sensitive exports amounted to 74% of total or 24% of GDP. Thus, even if China’s economy slows, Europe’s economic re-opening will raise the Norwegian trade balance, which sits near a multi-decade low.1 Moreover, greater mobility in Europe and around the world will elevate demand for petroleum. In light of the tepid pace of investment in global oil and gas extraction over the past five years, our commodity strategists forecast further oil and gas price appreciation2 (Chart 7), which will boost Norway’s terms of trade. The national income will therefore expand smartly, especially because oil and gas shipments will increase thanks to growing production from the new Johan Sverdrup field. Capital Spending This context suggests that capital spending, which accounts for 26% of Norway’s output (Chart 8), will constitute an important tailwind to domestic activity. Capex is even more important to the Norwegian economy than it is for other Nordic economies or even Germany (Chart 9). Chart 8Capital Spending Is Important For Norway
Capital Spending Is Important For Norway
Capital Spending Is Important For Norway
Chart 9The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway
The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway
The Capex Share Of GDP Is Higher In Norway
Norwegian capex is highly cyclical. Capital formation tracks our BCA Global Nowcast indicator (a combination of high-frequency economic and financial variables that proxy the global industrial cycle), as well as the domestic manufacturing PMI. These indicators suggest that capex should increase by 10-15% in the coming quarters (Chart 10). A Norges Bank survey of capex intentions, which are firming, corroborates this view. Chart 10Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover
Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover
Capex Will Recover Strongly Capex Will Recover
On the energy front, the new Johan Sverdrup oil and gas discovery marks a major turnaround in capital spending for Norway. According to the Norges Bank, real petroleum investment will increase from approximately NOK 175bn in 2021 to NOK 198bn by 2024 (Chart 11). Moreover, years of global underinvestment in oil extraction suggests Norway will gain market share in exports as production accelerates. Total petroleum production is slated to increase by 10% over the next 4 years. More importantly, by 2025, over 50% of production from Norwegian oil fields will be natural gas and associated liquids (Chart 12). Demand for natural gas and NGLs will be more inelastic than demand for crude because the latter is threatened by the rising electrification of vehicles, while the former faces more sustainable demand as China, among others, moves to replace its coal polluting plants with cleaner alternatives. Chart 11Real Petroleum Investment Will Increase By 13% In 2024
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Chart 12Gas Production Is Rising In Importance
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Inflation This positive economic outlook suggests that Norwegian inflation will remain above the central bank’s target of 2%. Already, headline CPI stands at 3%. Meanwhile, core inflation is at 2%, but it is decelerating. However, this slowdown should be temporary. According to a Norges Bank survey, both long-term and near-term inflation expectations among economists, business leaders, and households are rising, which indicates that a deflationary mentality has not taken root in Norway. Moreover, wage expectations have quickly normalized following the trauma of 2020 (Chart 13). Capacity constraints further reinforce the notion that inflation has upside. The Norges Bank Regional Network survey shows that capacity and labor supply constraints are tighter than they were in the 2014 to 2017 period, when inflation averaged 2.3% and the policy rate fell to 0.5% (Chart 14). Moreover, according to the same survey, selling prices are also stronger than they were during the 2016 oil collapse (Chart 14, bottom panel) Chart 13No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality
No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality
No Signs Of A Deflation Mentality
Chart 14Capacity Doesn’t Point To Falling Inflation
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
Bottom Line: The Norwegian economy will continue to grow above its trend rate of 1.5%, at least through to 2022. The acceleration in vaccination numbers will allow a reopening of the economy, while the fiscal drag will be limited and the banking system remains resilient. The outlook for households remains positive and employment is firming, which will lead to stronger consumption. Meanwhile, exports and capex have significant upside ahead. As a result, we anticipate Norwegian inflation will remain above target for the foreseeable future. The Norges Bank Will Lead The Pack The Norges Bank’s response to the pandemic was swift and all encompassing: It cut interest rates in the spring of 2020 from 1.5% to zero, the lowest level since the formation of the bank in 1816. It set up extraordinary F-loans at very generous interest rates, to provide ample liquidity to commercial banks. The longest maturity loan of 12 months had a prevailing interest rate of just 30 basis points. It also relaxed collateral requirements for these loans. It introduced swap lines with the Federal Reserve to provide US dollar funding to Norwegian firms. Since then, our Norges Bank monitor has rebounded powerfully from very depressed levels, which suggests that emergency policy settings have become unnecessary. Moreover, the Norwegian Central Bank Monitor towers above that of other G10 countries, which indicates that the Norges Bank should lead the pack in normalizing policy rates (Chart 15). Chart 15The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle
The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle
The Norges Bank Should Lead The Tightening Cycle
Chart 16The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher
The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher
The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher The Growth Component Of Our Monitor Has Exploded Higher
The biggest improvement in our Norges Bank Monitor comes from its growth component, which has surged to its highest levels in over two decades. This improvement surpasses those that followed the global financial crisis and the burst of the dot-com bubble (Chart 16). In essence, the growth component of the Monitor signals that the Norwegian economy has achieved escape velocity. Norway’s robust economic turnover is increasing the velocity of money, which points to the need for higher interest rates. Money velocity can be regarded as the equilibrating mechanism between money supply and nominal output, from the classical Fisher equation MV=PQ (where M is the money supply, P is prices, Q is real output, and V is money velocity). Thus, rising money velocity (when PQ expands faster than M) signifies that the economy needs higher interest rates to encourage savings. In Norway’s case, the velocity of money is surging through 2021, which confirms that the Norges Bank may depart from its current emergency policy setting (Chart 17). Chart 17Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway
Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway
Money Velocity Is Rising In Norway
The OIS curve already reflects this reality. At the last central bank meeting in March, Governor Øystein Olsen stated that interest rates would increase in the second half of this year. Already, the central bank’s balance sheet has been expanding more slowly than that of its peers (Chart 18). In response to this messaging, investors now expect the Norges Bank to lead the Fed, ECB, Riksbank, and BoE in lifting interest rates (Chart 19). Chart 18The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over
The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over
The Norges Bank's Balance Sheet Impulse Has Rolled Over
Chart 19Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First
Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First
Money Markets Already Expect The Norges Bank To Tighten First
The Norges Bank must nonetheless manage a tough balancing act. Lifting rates too soon or too fast could torpedo the recovery, if the currency and bond yields increase too rapidly and tighten financial conditions in a disruptive fashion. However, not removing accommodation fast enough could lead to economic overheating. Bottom Line: The Norges Bank will be the first DM central bank to increase interest rates, most likely as soon as this September. The OIS curve already reflects this outlook; it prices in over 6 hikes by the end of 2023, more than any other DM money market curve. This pricing seems appropriate; thus, Norwegian money markets offer no compelling investment opportunity. Norway’s Problem: Sagging Productivity Both the OECD and the IMF view weak productivity growth as Norway’s biggest long-term hurdle. Despite the bright economic outlook for the next two years or so, we agree. Since 2004-2005, Norwegian productivity has sharply decelerated. At the turn of the millennium, the Norwegian’s mainland labor productivity was growing at 2.5%, or a percentage point above the average of the OECD. Today, labor productivity growth is a paltry 0.5%, placing Norway last among Nordic economies (Chart 20, left panel). Total factor productivity tells a similar story. After recording the fastest productivity expansion among G10 nation from 1990 to 2005, Norway’s TFP declined 11% and is now situated at the same level as it was in 1995. This deterioration is comparable to Italy’s TFP (Chart 20, left panel). Chart 20From Best To Last
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
According to the most recent OECD country report, one of the roots of Norway’s productivity problem is an absence of low-hanging fruit. Norway sports one of the highest GDP per hours worked in the world. This nation essentially sits near the global productivity frontier. Its product market regulations are generally not onerous (Chart 21, top panel). Likewise, more than 60% of both the service sector and the manufacturing sector’s workforce use ICT tools, which is at the highest level among OECD countries. Additionally, the jobs at risk of a negative impact from automation or technological changes represent a significantly smaller share of total employment than in most OECD nations (Chart 21, bottom panel). Chart 21Doing Things Right
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
The Dutch Disease, the hollowing out of the manufacturing sector due to a capital hungry resource sector, is the second root of Norway’s productivity problem. Historically and across countries, manufacturing is the sector that records the greatest productivity gains. However, since 1979, the oil and gas and the housing sectors have experienced the largest capital investments expansion in Norway. Meanwhile, the share of capex generated by the manufacturing sector has declined to a paltry 5% (Chart 22). Moreover, oil and gas represents a larger share of capex than the contribution of its gross value added to GDP. The same holds true for housing, whose share of capex doubled over the past 27 years. Meanwhile, manufacturing’s share of capex has consistently lagged its representation in GDP, which has steadily declined (Chart 23). These are the typical symptoms of the Dutch Disease; as long as oil prices remain in a secular decline, any cyclical improvement in productivity will prove to be transitory. Chart 22The Dutch Disease, Part I
The Dutch Disease, Part I
The Dutch Disease, Part I
Chart 23The Dutch Disease, Part II
The Dutch Disease, Part II
The Dutch Disease, Part II
Bottom Line: Despite an upbeat cyclical outlook, Norway’s deteriorating productivity trend constitutes a formidable structural headwind. There are no easy solutions, because Norway already sits near the global productivity frontier. Moreover, Norway suffers from a pronounced case of the Dutch Disease. For decades, the oil and gas sector has absorbed a share of capital that is greater than its role in the economy, starving the productivity-generating manufacturing sector from investments. With the oil sector entering a structural decline due to ESG concerns, this trend will not change without a significant change in the allocation of the Norwegian capital stock. Investment Implications The cyclical outlook (12 to 24 months) for the Norwegian currency and stock market remains appealing. The NOK’s Outlook Chart 24The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis
The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis
The Krone Is Undervalued On A PPP Basis
While money markets do not offer any compelling opportunities to play the Norges Bank’s hiking cycle, the krone remains attractive from a cyclical perspective. Over the next 12-18 months, the NOK should appreciate compared to both the US dollar and the euro on the back of four key pillars. On a purchasing power parity basis, the Norwegian krone is undervalued by 14%. This compares favorably with both the euro, which is undervalued by 12%, and the US dollar, which is overvalued by 12% (Chart 24). More importantly, our PPP model adjusts the consumption basket across countries, allowing for a more apples-to-apples comparison. The Norwegian krone is highly procyclical and will benefit from any improvement in the global backdrop. The performance of NOK/USD, NOK/EUR, and NOK/JPY moves in lockstep with global equities (Chart 25). Norwegian equities have greatly underperformed global bourses over the last decade, but, as we argue below, there is some room for mean reversion. Inflows into the Norwegian equity market should benefit the krone (Chart 26). Chart 25NOK Is A Procyclical ##br##Currency
NOK Is A Procyclical Currency
NOK Is A Procyclical Currency
Chart 26NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares
NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares
NOK Moves With A Rerating In Norwegian Shares
From a more fundamental perspective, the krone will benefit from positive income flows, given Norway’s large net international investment position (NIIP). In fact, ever since the first Norwegian oil fields began producing light sweet crude in the North Sea in the 1970s, Norway has maintained a structural trade surplus with most of its trading partners. This has allowed the country to build one of the biggest NIIP in the world (Chart 27), trailing only behind Hong Kong and Singapore. This large NIIP generates large income receipts that skew heavily toward equity dividends. This characteristic of the Norwegian balance of payment strengthens the bond between the NOK and global equities. Over the next few years, Norway’s trade balance should also get a boost, not only from rising oil and gas production, but also from an improvement in terms of trade, as we argued above. The trade balance has historically been the biggest driver of cross-border inflows into Norway, and that should remain positive for the basic balance and the NOK (Chart 28) Chart 28Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments
Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments
Norway's Basic Balance Should Improve Norway Balance Of Payments
Chart 27Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position
Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position
Norway Has A Large Net International Investment Position
On a structural basis, however, the Norwegian krone faces challenges. Declining productivity suggests that economic growth in Norway will be more inflationary. This will lower the fair value of the real exchange rate. Therefore, while we are positive on the NOK over the next 18 to 24 months, we will be cognizant not to overstay our welcome. Finally, as for NOK/SEK, the pair should rise as both oil and gas prices remain firm in the near term, but any structural challenges to both oil and/or Norwegian productivity will favor the SEK over the longer term (Chart 29). Chart 29NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices
NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices
NOK/SEK Will Track Crude Prices
The Equity Market Outlook Norwegian equities remain challenged as long-term holdings, but they are attractive on a cyclical basis. The poor profitability of Norwegian equities is their main long-term problem. Unlike Swedish stocks, Norwegian shares sport a return on equity in line with that of the Eurozone, not that of the US. Norway’s profit margins are weak and its asset turnover rivals that of the Euro Area (Chart 30). Additionally, the country’s poor productivity performance argues against a sudden reversal in RoEs. Chart 30Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden
Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden
Norway Is More Like The Eurozone Than Swden
Sectoral composition creates another structural handicap for the Norwegian market. Oslo overweighs Energy and Financials (Table 1). Energy stocks can experience periodic rallies, but their long-term outlook is bleak in a world moving away from carbon-based power. Meanwhile, financials are also likely to remain structural laggards. The regulatory legacy of the Great Financial Crisis has curtailed leverage, which is depressing the RoE of the banking sector. Greater competition and the emergence of the fintech industry are further undermining fee income. None of these factors will change anytime soon. Table 1Sectoral Breakdown
The Norwegian Method
The Norwegian Method
That being said, Norwegian equities remain a compelling opportunity for the next two years or so, despite their long-term problems. Norwegian stocks have an extremely negative beta to the US dollar. The historical sensitivity of the NOK to the USD in part explains this attribute, the other part being their elevated cyclicality. The dollar is one of the most counter-cyclical currencies in the world; thus, its weakness correlates with strong Norwegian forward earnings, which are heavily influenced by commodity prices and the global industrial cycle. This process also lifts Norwegian stock prices (Chart 31). Hence, BCA’s positive outlook on the global business cycle, as well as our negative stance on the dollar, points to significantly stronger Norwegian share prices.3 The slowdown in China’s economy is one risk that could cause some near-term tremors in Norwegian assets, which investors should use to build positions. In response to Beijing’s efforts to limit systemic risk, the Chinese credit impulse has slowed from 1.1% of GDP to 0.3%, and could flirt with the zero line. The ensuing investment slowdown will weigh on the global industrial sector and cause a temporary pullback in commodity prices. As Chart 32 illustrates, this will be negative for Norwegian equities; historically, following declines in Chinese yields, Norwegian forward earnings and stock prices weaken. However, global energy demand will remain robust even as China slows; therefore, correcting Norwegian equities create a buying opportunity. Chart 31Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet
Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet
Norwegian Stocks Are A Dollar-Bearish Bet
Chart 32A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk
A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk
A Chinese Slowdown Is A Risk
Norwegian stocks should also outperform US and Eurozone equities. Nonetheless, Norwegian equities enjoy their greatest appeal against the US benchmark. Norwegian stocks trade at valuation discounts ranging from 38% to 54% compared to their US counterparts. Meanwhile, Norway’s net earnings revisions remain depressed compared to the US. Most importantly, Norwegian stocks are more pro-cyclical and sensitive to EM and global financial conditions than US shares are. Consequently, Oslo outperforms New York when the broad trade-weighted dollar depreciates, EM currencies appreciate, and the global yield curve slope steepens (Chart 33). We expect these trends to intensify over the remainder of the business cycle. Chart 33Oslo Beats New York
Oslo Beats New York
Oslo Beats New York
Norwegian equities are also more responsive than Eurozone equities to global business-cycle oscillations. Norwegian equities outperform those of the Eurozone when the dollar depreciates (Chart 34). Additionally, a simple modelling exercise reveals that rising oil prices and global yields result in higher relative share prices in favor of Norway (Chart 35). Chart 34Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens
Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens
Norway Outperforms The Eurozone When The Dollar Weakens
Chart 35Favor Norway Over ##br##The Euro Area
Favor Norway Over The Euro Area
Favor Norway Over The Euro Area
Sweden is the one market that maintains a hedge over Norway.4 Swedish stocks not only sport a RoE nine percentage point above that of Norway, they are also sensitive to the global business cycle. However, the main advantage of Swedish equities is their sectoral breakdown. Sweden has an enormous overweight in industrials (38% of the benchmark), while Norway greatly overweighs materials. In an environment in which China is likely to decelerate, but global capex and infrastructure spending will remain firm, Sweden’s industrials’ weighting gives it a powerful advantage over its neighbor’s stock market. Finally, we recommend the following high-octane trade: Long Norwegian / short Dutch stocks. The Amsterdam bourse has a 47% allocation to tech stocks and a greater “growth” bias than the S&P 500. This means that the relative performance of Norwegian stocks compared to Dutch equities is even more sensitive to the global business cycle, oil prices, and bond yields. As a result, our simple model incorporating both Brent prices and yields currently sends a strong buy signal in favor of Norway (Chart 36). Chart 36Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands
Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands
Time To Buy Norway And Sell The Netherlands
Bottom Line: The NOK will perform strongly against both the USD and the EUR over the coming 18 to 24 months. Norwegian equities are not an appealing long-term bet; however, they will experience significant upside over the coming two years, both in absolute terms and relative to the US and Euro Area stocks. While Oslo is unlikely to outperform Stockholm over this period, we recommend buying Norwegian stocks and selling the Dutch index. Mathieu Savary Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see European Investment Strategy Report, "A Surprising Dance," dated May 10, 2021. 2 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Report, "OPEC’s 2.0 Production Strategy In Focus," dated May 20, 2021. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Report, "Explaining Recent Weakness In The US Dollar," dated May 14, 2021. 4 Please see European Investment Strategy Report, "Take A Chance On Sweden," dated May 03, 2021. Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Dear Client, Dhaval Joshi has started publishing the new BCA Research Counterpoint product, in which he will continue to apply his unique process to dig up original investment opportunities around the globe. I trust many of you will continue to read Dhaval’s excellent and thought-provoking work. I also hope to keep your readership as I take the helm of the European Investment Strategy product, where I will apply BCA’s time-tested method which emphasizes analysis of global liquidity and economic trends to forecast European market outcomes. Thank you for your continued trust and support. Best regards, Mathieu Savary Highlights The Eurozone’s economy lags the US’s because of weakness in the service sector. Poor vaccine rollouts and tighter fiscal policy explain this bifurcated outcome. Even though Europe will continue to trail the US this year, the summer period will see a sharp European recovery. Investors can take advantage of this rebound by buying the cyclical equities that have lagged during last year’s rally. Favor the French, Italian and Spanish equity markets over the German and Dutch markets. The Bank of England does not need to fight rising Gilt yields; favor the pound over the euro as the UK-German spread widens. The Norges Bank will be the first G-10 central bank to lift rates, which will hurt EUR/NOK. Fade any hawkish noise coming from the German election season. Feature The service sector constitutes the biggest drag on the Eurozone’s economy, which will cause European growth to trail that of the US further. The euro area’s fundamental problem is that it lags the US significantly on both vaccination and fiscal stimulus fronts. Nonetheless, by the summer, the European service sector will start catching up, which will favor a basket of sectors exposed to the economic re-opening that have lagged until now. The Service Sector Remains Under The Weather The consensus is correct to expect European growth to lag that of the US in 2021, even if the extent of the shortfall does not hit the 4% currently penciled in by Bloomberg. Chart 1The Service Sector Is the Problem
The Service Sector Is the Problem
The Service Sector Is the Problem
Unlike normal business cycles, the service sector is now Europe’s biggest handicap, while the manufacturing sector is performing in line with that of the US (Chart 1, top panel). On both sides of the Atlantic, industrial activity has benefited from the same set of positives in recent quarters. Goods purchases were the only outlet for pent-up demand built up in the first and second quarter of 2020. Extraordinarily accommodative global liquidity conditions and record-low interest rates boosted spending on big-ticket items, especially in light of the housing boom that has engulfed the globe. Finally, China’s rapid recovery fueled a swift rebound in the demand for natural resources, autos and machinery that benefited manufacturers the world over. Service activity did not enjoy a similar unified tailwind. Consequently, while the US Services PMI stands at a seven-year high, the Eurozone’s lingers at 45.7, in contraction territory (Chart 1, middle panel). The weaker confidence of European households sheds light on this bifurcated performance (Chart 1, bottom panel). Health and fiscal policies are the main headwinds in the Eurozone that have hurt its service sector and hampered the mood of its households, at least compared to the US. With regard to health policy, the poor vaccination rates on the European continent create the greatest problem. The vaccination effort has only reached 11.8, 11.1, 11.9 and 12.5 doses per 100 person in Germany, France, Italy and Spain respectively. In the US and the UK, authorities have already delivered more than 30 doses per 100 person (Chart 2). As a result, while infection and death per capita are rapidly declining in the US and in the UK, mortality is once again rising in France as well as in Italy and caseloads are increasing there and in Germany. Moreover, hospitalization rates and ICU usage in France, Germany, Italy or Portugal are once again trending up, and in some cases they are hitting threatening levels for the healthcare system. In response to these COVID-19 dynamics, governments in many major Eurozone countries are resorting to the re-imposition of restrictions. Italy has announced new lockdowns in half of its 20 regions while France just entered its third lockdown over the weekend. By contrast, the stringency of restrictions is set to ease in the UK and the US. In the US, limitations were already imposed or followed more laxly relative to the euro area (depending on the state) and mobility was improving (Chart 3). Chart 2Slow Vaccination In The Eurozone
Slow Vaccination In The Eurozone
Slow Vaccination In The Eurozone
Chart 3The Stringency Of Lockdowns Matter
The Stringency Of Lockdowns Matter
The Stringency Of Lockdowns Matter
Despite the lower mobility created by stricter restrictions in the Eurozone, the US government has opened the fiscal tap much more aggressively than European governments (Chart 4). Since the beginning of the crisis, the US fiscal help has reached 25% of GDP, while in Italy, Germany, France or Spain the budget deficits have swelled by a more modest 14%, 10%, 9% and 13% of GDP, respectively. True, European governments have also offered credit guarantees totaling EUR3 trillion euros, but these sums only have a very indirect impact on aggregate demand and should mostly be understood as liquidity insurance to prevent a liquidity crisis from morphing into a solvency crisis. Chart 4Tight Fists On The Continent
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
For the remainder of 2021, European fiscal policy is unlikely to be eased compared to the US. BCA Research’s Geopolitical strategy team anticipates the Biden government to add a further $2 trillion dollars of spending by the end of 2021, mostly in the form of long-term and infrastructure outlays, in addition to the $1.9 trillion recently legislated.While the European Union’s NGEU plan is an important step in the integration of European fiscal policy, its generous EUR750 billion envelope will be disbursed over five years. This implies a debt-based fiscal expansion of 1% per annum between 2021 and 2024 (the years of maximum disbursements). Individual state plans are also limited. Bottom Line: The European economy is lagging the US economy because of the inferior performance of its service sector. This disadvantage is the consequence of both a slower vaccine rollout that is negatively impacting mobility and a much more timid fiscal policy. Relief Is On Its Way The Eurozone’s service sector and domestic economic performance is nonetheless set to improve, despite the current health and fiscal policy deficiencies. First, the economy continues to adapt to its new socially distanced form. In the second quarter of 2020, the imposition of lockdowns caused the euro area’s quarterly GDP to collapse by 11%. The contribution to GDP of the retail, wholesale, artistic, entertainment, and hospitality sectors tumbled to -7.3%. In Q4 2020, as European governments were imposing equally stringent lockdowns, quarterly GDP growth fell to -0.1% and the contribution to growth of the same sectors only hit -0.54%. Second, the continental vaccination campaign is progressing. It is easy to worry that it will take a very long time to vaccinate the entire population, but the main reason to impose lockdowns is to preserve capacity in the healthcare system. Thus, the priority is to inoculate 50-year olds and above because they constitute 90% of hospitalizations. Through this aperture, even if the pace of vaccination remains tepid in Europe, the goal to decrease economic restrictions can reasonably be achieved by summer. Moreover, with Pfizer’s logistical issues corrected, the pace of vaccination can accelerate. Concerns remain over the population’s willingness to receive the vaccines, but these issues will fade as well. The current worries surrounding the AstraZeneca vaccines provide an example. The incidence of thromboembolic events is marginally higher than for the general population and the European Medicines Agency deemed the AstraZeneca vaccines safe, especially in light of the human costs of the disease it prevents. As caseloads and mortality rates decline in Israel, the UK and the US, even French elderlies will become more willing to receive their vaccines. Table 1Parsimonious But Constant Fiscal Stimulus…
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Third, fiscal policy will remain easy. True, European government support is tepid compared to the US, but the continual drip of new policy measures shows that authorities are not intransigent (Table 1). In all likelihood, the various furlough and employment protection schemes implemented since the spring of 2020 are likely to remain in place this year even if lockdowns decrease. Their impact on employment was major and they contributed meaningfully to preserve household income (Chart 5). Finally, COVID-19 is a seasonal illness and summer is on its way in Europe. The experience of 2020, when vaccines and testing were much more limited than they are today, has taught us that in the summer months, this coronavirus spreads much less. Therefore, seasonal patterns will allow a relaxation of social distancing measures. Chart 5Furloughs Played A Crucial Role
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
In this context, service activity in the Eurozone will improve, which will boost GDP. European households, like their US counterparts, have accumulated significant excess savings (Chart 6). Furthermore, global manufacturing activity will remain robust, which will support employment and household income in the Eurozone. Hence, consumer confidence will improve and some of the EUR300 billion in excess savings will make its way into the economy. The service sector should be the prime beneficiary of this money because households have already fulfilled a large proportion of their pent-up demand for goods. What they now want to do is to go out, go to restaurants and spend their income on experiences. The rebound in the contribution to GDP of the retail and recreation sectors will be accretive to job and household income, unleashing a virtuous circle of activity (Chart 7). Chart 6European Are Building Their Nest Egg too
European Are Building Their Nest Egg too
European Are Building Their Nest Egg too
Chart 7Services Will Contribute Again to Growth
Services Will Contribute Again to Growth
Services Will Contribute Again to Growth
Bottom Line: In 2021, the euro area’s economy will further lag that of the US, but investors should nonetheless expect a robust uptick in service activity this summer. How To Play The Summer Recovery? Chart 8Buy The Laggards / Sell the Leaders
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Five weeks ago, BCA Research’s US Equity Sector Strategy service designed a strategy to buy the laggards within a basket of sectors that should benefit from the recovery while selling the “back-to-work” stocks that had already priced in that recovery. This recommendation protects investors against potential hiccups in the re-opening trade and is simple to implement: sell/underweight the pro-cyclical sectors that stand above their February 19 relative peak and buy/overweight those that remain below their relative highs (Chart 8). In the Eurozone context, this strategy involves focusing on the cyclical sectors, and buying/overweighting these cyclical stocks that stand below their pre-COVID high relative to the MSCI benchmark while selling/underweighting those that have punched above this threshold. Chart 9 illustrates the sectors to favor and the ones to avoid using this methodology. In essence, not only should the “laggards” baskets experience a catch up in earnings, but also, the shift in sentiment should prompt a re-rating of relative valuations (Chart 10). Chart 9Who Are the Laggards And the Leaders?
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
This strategy makes sense beyond the COVID-19 dynamics. From a global perspective, the basket of sectors purchased (the laggards”) outperforms the former “leaders” after global bond yields increase (Chart 11, top panel). This relationship reflects the heavy representation of financials in the “laggards” basket while tech and the interest rates-sensitive automobile sector are key constituents of the “leaders” basket. Additionally, the former “leaders” are more exposed to the Chinese business cycle than the “laggards". Chart 10Relative Valuations will Adjust
Relative Valuations will Adjust
Relative Valuations will Adjust
Chart 11Macro Forces Favor The Laggards over the Leaders
Macro Forces Favor The Laggards over the Leaders
Macro Forces Favor The Laggards over the Leaders
The deceleration in the Chinese economy is a problem for the “leaders” relative performance (Chart 11, bottom panel). China’s credit impulse has rolled over as Beijing aims to prevent excess speculation in the real estate sector. Moreover, a regulatory tightening is taking place in the Middle Kingdom, which will further slow its economy. Already, the new orders-to-inventories ratio from the NBS PMI reflects the downside risk for the Chinese economy, which highlights the threat to the previous high-flying leaders. A strategy that favors the former “laggards” at the expense of the previous “leaders” also has implications for geographical allocation within euro area equities. As Table 2 shows, Italy, France and Spain over represent the “laggards” in their national benchmarks while the Netherlands and Germany overweight the “leaders”. On a net basis, the tech-heavy Netherlands is the country to avoid, with a 27% relative underweight for the “laggards”, while Spain and Italy should be favored, with their 24% and 22% overweight in the “laggards” relative to the “leaders”. Spain and Italy in particular will also benefit from a further narrowing in sovereign spreads that will boost the performance of their financial sector while the re-opening of trade continues. Additionally, investors should favor France at the expense of Germany. Table 2France, Italy, and Spain Over The Netherlands And Germany
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Bottom Line: The economic re-opening favors the Eurozone cyclicals that still trade below their February 19 2020 relative highs as the expense of those cyclicals that have already overtaken their pre-COVID peaks. This means buying/overweighting the Banks, Insurance, Energy and Aerospace & Defense sectors at the expense of the IT, Automobiles and Building products sectors. It also implies a preference for Italian and Spanish equities, especially relative to Dutch equities. Country Focus: The BoE Follows the Fed, Not The ECB Last Thursday, the Bank of England followed in the Fed’s footprints, not the ECB’s. The BoE refrained from adding to its asset purchases, even if this year, 10-year Gilt yields are rising in line with the Treasuries and rapidly outpacing Bund yields. However, the BoE remains committed to keeping short rates at record lows and it keeps the window open for rate cuts if economic conditions ever warrant it. We agree with the Bank of England that the UK’s economic outlook has improved in recent months. The extension of both the furlough schemes and tax holidays, along with the rapid pace of vaccination in the British Islands point to robust growth in the coming quarters. Nonetheless, the picture is not without blemish. Specifically, the UK’s exports to the EU are collapsing in wake of Brexit. Moreover, the pace of vaccination in the UK is set to slow a bit over the coming months. These risks to the outlook are unlikely to topple the economy, because the vigor of the UK’s housing market is an important support to domestic demand. While the UK’s labor market remains frail, the strength of the RICS housing survey suggests that real wages will stay well bid (Chart 12). The increase in household income will cause consumption to accelerate sharply once lockdowns are eased. This could accentuate inflationary pressures this year, and cause inflation over the next few years to trend higher relative to the euro area. Chart 12UK Real Wages Have Upside
UK Real Wages Have Upside
UK Real Wages Have Upside
With this economic backdrop, the market’s pricing of the SONIA curve is appropriate. Over the past month, the OIS curve has steepened significantly (Chart 13). The BoE is comfortable with that pricing and considers the back up in interest rates to be reflective of stronger growth and not constraining of activity. In fact, financial conditions are roughly unchanged since the MPC’s last meeting, which highlights that rising risk asset prices have compensated for an appreciating pound and rising gilt yields. Chart 13SONIA Is Climbing Up, And The BoE Is Fine With It
SONIA Is Climbing Up, And The BoE Is Fine With It
SONIA Is Climbing Up, And The BoE Is Fine With It
Bottom Line: The SONIA curve will continue to shift higher relative to the EONIA curve. Consequently, the spread between Gilt and Bund yields will widen further and EUR/GBP will depreciate more over the coming six to nine months, especially because the pound keeps trading at a discount. Moreover, thanks to their domestic focus and lower sensitivity to the pound, UK mid-cap and small-cap stocks will outperform the FTSE-100. Country Focus: Norges Bank, First Out Of The Gate Chart 14The Norges Bank Will Raise Rates First
The Norges Bank Will Raise Rates First
The Norges Bank Will Raise Rates First
Last Thursday, Governor Øystein Olsen indicated that the Norges Bank would increase interest rates from zero later this year, which validates the message of the Norwegian swap curve. Looking at economic fundamentals, investors should not bet against this outcome. BCA’s Central Bank Monitor confirms that the Norges Bank will be the first central bank in the West to lift interest rates (Chart 14). It is the only one of our Monitors in “Tight Money Required” territory. The message from our Norges Bank Monitor reflects the prompt recovery of the Norwegian economy. Thanks to rebounding Brent prices and rapidly expanding production at the new Johan Sverdrup oil field (the largest in the North Sea), Norwegian nominal exports are growing at a double-digit pace. Meanwhile Norwegian retail sales are increasing at a 16% annual rate. Beyond some near-term COVID worries, consumer spending will remain robust because the strong employment component of the PMI points to solid job gains and a rapidly rising consumer confidence. Finally, Norwegian inflation is already above the central bank’s target of 2%, with core CPI at 2.05% and headline inflation at 3.3%. Chart 15A Weaker EUR/NOK ahead
A Weaker EUR/NOK ahead
A Weaker EUR/NOK ahead
Thanks to Norway’s economic performance, the krone remains one of the favorite currencies of BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service. The global economic environment creates additional tailwind for the NOK. A continued global economic recovery will allow oil prices to rise further on a 12- to 18-month basis, which should lead to a weaker EUR/NOK (Chart 15). In a similar vein, the NOK is particularly sensitive to the USD dollar’s fluctuations. As a result, BCA’s negative cyclical stance toward the USD will create an important support for the NOK, even if the greenback’s countertrend bounce could last another quarter or so. Finally, along with the SEK, the NOK is the cheapest pro-cyclical currency in the G10, trading at a 5% discount to its fair value. Thus, the Norwegian krone should benefit greatly from continued risk taking this year. Bottom Line: The Norwegian krone remains one of the most attractive currencies in the world. The status of the Norges Bank as the front-runner to lift rates this year only amplifies the NOK’s appeal. A Few Words On Germany’s State Elections Chart 16German Party Polling
German Party Polling
German Party Polling
The defeat of Angela Merkel’s CDU party in the states of Baden-Wurttemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate highlights that the German electorate is moving slowly to the left. According to BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy Service, it is too early to tell whether a left-wing coalition will take power in Germany this fall. However, the marginal shift toward the SPD and the Green Party indicates that even the CDU will have to listen to the median voter’s demands (Chart 16). Practically, this means that German politics will push for more European integration and that ultimately, more fiscal stimulus will materialize in Europe over the coming years. As a result, investors should fade any hit to the euro or European assets caused by hawkish sounds made by CDU potential leaders during the campaign for the September federal election. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Investment Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Trades Closed Trades Currency Performance
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Fixed Income Performance Government Bonds
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Corporate Bonds
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Equity Performance Major Stock Indices
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Geographic Performance
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Sector Performance
Summer Of ‘21
Summer Of ‘21
Highlights UK Interest Rates: A series of rolling shocks dating back to the 2008 financial crisis has prevented the Bank of England (BoE) from normalizing crisis-era levels of interest rates, even during years when inflation was overshooting the BoE 2% target. Brexit and COVID-19 were the last of those two shocks, but the growth- and inflation-dampening effects of both are fading fast. Implications for Gilts & GBP: The BoE’s dovish rhetoric, including hints that negative policy rates are still a viable option, looks increasingly inappropriate. The surge in real UK bond yields seen over the past month is just the beginning of a medium-term process of interest rate normalization. Maintain below-benchmark duration on Gilts, while downgrading UK allocations within dedicated global fixed income portfolios to neutral. The pound has upside in this environment, especially if depressed UK productivity starts to recover. Feature Chart 1UK Real Yields: Deeply Negative
Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?
Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?
The UK has become one of the more peculiar corners of the global fixed income universe. The outright level of longer-term Gilt yields is in the middle of the pack among the major advanced economies. The story is much different, however, when breaking those nominal UK yields into the real and inflation expectations components. The deeply negative real yields on UK inflation-linked Gilts are the lowest among the majors, even in a world where sub-0% real yields are prevalent in most countries (Chart 1). The flipside of that deeply negative real yield is a high level of inflation expectations. The breakeven inflation rate derived from the difference between the nominal and real 10-year Gilt yields is 3.3%, the highest in the developed “linkers” universe. Inflation expectations in UK consumer surveys are at similar levels, well above the 2% inflation target of the Bank of England (BoE), suggesting little confidence in the central bank’s ability or willingness to hit its own inflation goals. In this Special Report, jointly published by BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy and Foreign Exchange Strategy, we investigate why UK real interest rates have remained so persistently negative and assess the possibility of a shift in the low interest rate regime in a post-Brexit, post-pandemic UK – a move that could be quite bearish for UK fixed income markets and bullish for the British pound. Can The BoE Ignore Cyclical Upward Pressure On UK Bond Yields? The UK has suffered from a series of shocks, starting with the 2008 crisis, that have limited the ability of the BoE to attempt to tighten monetary policy. The 2011/12 European debt crisis hurt the UK’s most important trading partners, while the 2016 Brexit vote began a multi-year process of uncertainty over the future of those trading relationships. The COVID-19 pandemic is the latest shock, triggering a recession of historic proportions. The UK economy contracted by -10% in 2020, the largest decline since “The Great Frost” downturn of 1709. UK bond yields collapsed in response as the BoE cut rates to near-0% and reinforced that easy stance with aggressive quantitative easing and promises to keep rates unchanged over at the next few years. Today, UK financial markets are waking up to a world beyond the current COVID-19 lockdowns. The UK is running one of the world’s most successful vaccination rollouts, with 23 million jabs, or 35 per 100 people, already having been administered. UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson recently unveiled a bold plan to fully reopen the UK economy from the current severe lockdowns by mid-year. The UK government’s latest budget called for additional spending measures over the next year, including maintaining the work furlough scheme that has supported household incomes during the pandemic. As a result, UK growth expectations have exploded higher. According to the Bloomberg consensus economics survey, UK nominal GDP growth is expected to surge to 8.4% over calendar year 2021, an annual pace not seen since 1990 (Chart 2). Nominal Gilt yields have begun to reprice higher to reflect those surging growth expectations, with the 5-year/5-year forward Gilt yield climbing 67bps so far in 2021. Real Gilt yields are also moving higher with the 10-year inflation-linked Gilt climbing 38bps year to date, providing additional interest rate support that has fueled a surge in the pound versus the dollar (bottom panel). Our own BoE Monitor - containing growth, inflation and financial variables that typically lead to pressure on the central bank to adjust monetary policy – is signaling a reduced need for additional policy easing (Chart 3). The momentum of changes in longer-maturity UK Gilts and the trade-weighted UK currency index are usually correlated to the ebbs and flows of the BoE Monitor. The latest surge higher in yields and the currency suggests that the markets are anticipating the type of recovery that will put pressure on the BoE to tighten. Chart 2A Growth-Driven Repricing Of Gilts & GBP
A Growth-Driven Repricing Of Gilts & GBP
A Growth-Driven Repricing Of Gilts & GBP
Chart 3Gilts & GBP Sniffing Out A Less Dovish BoE?
Gilts & GBP Sniffing Out A Less Dovish BoE?
Gilts & GBP Sniffing Out A Less Dovish BoE?
It may take a while to see the BoE turn more hawkish, however. The BoE has become one of least active central banks in the world over the past decade. After the BoE cut its official policy interest rate, the Bank Rate, by 500bps during the 2008 financial crisis and 2009 recession, rates were kept in a range between 0.25% and 0.75% for ten consecutive years. The BoE cut rates aggressively in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, lowering the Bank Rate in March 2020 from 0.75% to 0.1%, where it still stands. The BoE has used quantitative easing (QE) and forward guidance to try and limit movements in bond yields whenever cyclical surges in inflation could have justified tighter monetary policy. That has led to an extended period of a negative BoE Bank Rate, something not seen since the inflationary 1970s (Chart 4). Back then, the BoE was lagging the surge in UK inflation, but still hiking nominal interest rates. Today, the central bank is keeping nominal rates near 0% with much lower levels of inflation. Chart 4Over A Decade Of Negative Real UK Interest Rates
Over A Decade Of Negative Real UK Interest Rates
Over A Decade Of Negative Real UK Interest Rates
Short-term interest rate markets are still pricing in a very slow response from the BoE to the current growth optimism. Only 36bps of rate hikes over the next two years are discounted in the UK overnight index swap (OIS) curve. This go-slow response is in line with the BoE’s guidance on future rate hikes which, similar to the language used by other central banks like the Fed, calls for no pre-emptive rate hikes before inflation has sustainably returned to the BoE target. That combination would be consistent with current forward market pricing on both short-term interest rates and inflation. Chart 5BoE Keeping Real Rates Well Below R*
BoE Keeping Real Rates Well Below R*
BoE Keeping Real Rates Well Below R*
In Chart 5, we show the real BoE Bank Rate, constructed by subtracting UK core CPI inflation from the Bank Rate. We also show a forward real rate calculated using the forward UK OIS and CPI swap curves. The market-implied path of the real Bank Rate shows very little change over the next decade, with the real Bank Rate expected to average around -2.5%. This is far below the estimates of a neutral UK real rate (or “r-star”) of just under 2%, as calculated by the New York Fed or recent academic studies. The neutral UK real rate has likely dipped because of the pandemic. The UK Office For Budget Responsibility (OBR) estimates that there has been a long-term “scarring” of the UK economy from COVID-19 through supply-side factors like weaker investment spending, lower productivity growth and diminished labor force participation – equal to three percentage points of the level of potential GDP.1 The BoE estimates a smaller “scarring” of 1.75 percentage points of potential output, but coming with a 6.5% reduction in the size of the UK capital stock. While these are significant reductions in the supply-side of the UK economy, they are not enough to account for the 4.5 percentage point difference between pre-pandemic estimates of the UK r-star and the market-implied path of the real BoE Bank Rate over the next decade. The implication is that the markets are not expecting the BoE to deviate from its strategy of doing very little with interest rates, even as growth recovers from the pandemic shock. That can be seen in the recent upturn in UK inflation expectations that is evident in both market-implied and survey-based measures. Chart 6UK Inflation Expectations Reflect BoE Policy, Not Actual Inflation
UK Inflation Expectations Reflect BoE Policy, Not Actual Inflation
UK Inflation Expectations Reflect BoE Policy, Not Actual Inflation
The 5-year/5-year forward UK CPI swap rate now sits at 3.6%, not far off the 3.3% level of 5-10 year consumer inflation expectations from the latest YouGov/Citigroup survey (Chart 6). The fact that inflation expectations can remain so elevated at a time when headline CPI inflation is struggling to avoid deflation is striking. This indicates a belief that the BoE will do very little in the future to stop a booming UK economy that is expected to put sustained downward pressure on the UK unemployment rate over the next few years (bottom panel). This is from a relatively low starting point of the unemployment rate given the massive government support programs that have limited the amount of pandemic-related layoffs over the past year. The BoE should have reasons to be more concerned about a resurgence of UK inflation. In its latest Monetary Policy Report, the BoE published estimates showing that the entire collapse in UK inflation in 2020 was attributable to weaker demand for goods and services – especially the latter (Chart 7). This suggests that UK inflation could rebound by a similar amount as the UK economy reopens from pandemic lockdowns. According to the UK OBR, 21% of UK household spending is on items described as “social consumption”, like restaurants and hotels (Chart 8). This is a much larger proportion than seen in other major developed economies (excluding Spain) and explains why consumer spending plunged so much more dramatically in the UK during 2020 than in other countries. Chart 7Only A Temporary Drag On UK Inflation From COVID-19
Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?
Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?
Chart 8UK Households More Focused On “Social Consumption”
Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?
Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?
If the UK pandemic-related restrictions are eased as planned over the next few months, the potential for a sharp snapback in UK consumer spending is significant. The BoE estimates that UK households now have £125bn of “excess” savings thanks to government income support and reduced spending on discretionary items like dining out and vacations. This is the fuel to support a rapid recovery in consumption over the next 6-12 months, especially as personal income growth will get a boost as furloughed workers begin returning to work (Chart 9). Chart 9UK Economy On The Mend
UK Economy On The Mend
UK Economy On The Mend
Chart 10Big Boost To UK Growth From Housing & Government Spending
Big Boost To UK Growth From Housing & Government Spending
Big Boost To UK Growth From Housing & Government Spending
A similar argument can be made for investment spending – the BoE estimates that UK businesses have amassed £100bn pounds of excess cash, and the latest reading on the BoE’s Agents' Survey of UK firms shows a slight increase after months of decline (bottom panel). With a Brexit deal with the EU finally reached at the start of 2021, UK businesses can also look to increase investment spending that had been delayed because of the years of Brexit uncertainty. The UK economy is already getting a boost from a recovery in the housing market fueled by low interest rates, high household savings and improving consumer confidence. Mortgage approvals have soared to the highest level since 2007, while house prices are now expanding at a 6.4% annual rate (Chart 10). Add it all up, and the economic momentum in the UK is positive and likely to accelerate further in the coming months as a greater share of the population becomes vaccinated. The BoE’s dovish policy stance is likely to appear increasingly inappropriate relative to accelerating UK growth and inflation trends over the next several months. Thus, on a cyclical basis, UK bond yields, both nominal and real, have more upside potential even after the recent increase. Bottom Line: A series of rolling shocks dating back to the 2008 financial crisis has prevented the Bank of England (BoE) from normalizing crisis-era levels of interest rates, even during years when inflation was overshooting the BoE 2% target. Brexit and COVID-19 were the last of those two shocks, but the growth- and inflation-dampening effects of both are fading fast. Structural Forces Keeping UK Interest Rates Low Are Fading Looking beyond the cyclical drivers, the structural factors that have held down UK interest rates in recent years are also starting to fade. The supply side of the UK economy has suffered because of Brexit uncertainty. The OECD’s estimate of potential UK GDP growth fell from 1.75% in 2015 to 1.0% in 2020 (Chart 11). This was mostly due to declining productivity growth – a consequence of years of very weak business investment. The 5-year annualized growth rate of real UK investment spending fell to -3% in 2020, a contraction only matched during the past 30 years after the 1992 ERM crisis and 2008 financial crisis. That plunge in investment coincided with almost no growth in UK labor productivity over that same 5-year window. Chart 11The Road To Faster Potential UK Growth Starts With Investment
The Road To Faster Potential UK Growth Starts With Investment
The Road To Faster Potential UK Growth Starts With Investment
Slowing population growth also weighed on UK potential growth, slowing to the lowest level in 15 years in 2019 as immigration from EU countries to the UK fell sharply. COVID-19 also hurt immigration flows into the UK last year. The UK Office for National Statistics estimated that the non-UK born population in the UK fell by 2.7% between June 2019 and June 2020. Diminished potential GDP growth is a factor that would structurally reduce the equilibrium real UK interest rate. We are likely past the worst for that downward pressure on potential growth and real rates. Population growth should also stabilize as the UK borders open up again and pandemic travel restrictions are loosened. Measured productivity is already starting to see a cyclical recovery, while investment spending is likely to improve as cash-rich UK companies began to ramp up capital spending plans deferred by Brexit and COVID-19. While the process leading from faster investment spending into speedier productivity growth is typically slow, the key point is that the worst of downtrend is likely over. This is an important development that has implications for UK fixed income markets. When looking at an international comparison of real central bank policy rates within the developed economies, the UK has fallen into the grouping of countries with persistently negative policy rates, namely Japan, the euro area, Switzerland, Sweden and Norway (Chart 12). We have dubbed that group the “Secular Stagnation 5”, after the term made famous by former US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers describing a state where the “natural” real rate of interest (r-star) that equates savings with investment is structurally negative. Chart 12Does The UK Belong In The 'Secular Stagnation 5'?
Does The UK Belong In The 'Secular Stagnation 5'?
Does The UK Belong In The 'Secular Stagnation 5'?
Does the UK belong in the “Secular Stagnation 5”? As a way to assess this, we made some comparisons of selected UK data with the same data for those five countries. When looking at potential GDP growth and population growth, the UK sits right in the middle of the range of those growth rates for the five countries (Chart 13). UK productivity growth has underperformed the others recently but, prior to the 2016 Brexit shock, UK productivity was also in the middle of the Secular Stagnation 5 range. Chart 13Brexit Became A Major Hit To UK Potential Growth
Brexit Became A Major Hit To UK Potential Growth
Brexit Became A Major Hit To UK Potential Growth
Chart 14UK Economy Less Focused On Investment & Exports
UK Economy Less Focused On Investment & Exports
UK Economy Less Focused On Investment & Exports
On other measures, the UK is nothing like those other countries. The UK’s economy is far less geared towards exports and investment (Chart 14) and is more tilted towards consumer spending. That can be seen most clearly when looking at the data on savings/investment balances. The UK continuously runs a current account deficit, as opposed to the persistent surpluses seen in the Secular Stagnation 5 (Chart 15). Put another way, the UK is not a “surplus” country that saves more than it invests on a structural basis, a condition that typically depresses real interest rates. Chart 15The UK Is Not A Surplus Country
The UK Is Not A Surplus Country
The UK Is Not A Surplus Country
Chart 16Gilts Will Not Become A Low-Beta Market
Gilts Will Not Become A Low-Beta Market
Gilts Will Not Become A Low-Beta Market
Based on these cross-country comparisons, it is unusual for the UK to have such persistently low real interest rates. This has implications for UK bond yields. Over the past few years, Gilts have been transitioning from a status as a “high yield beta” market – whose yield movements are more correlated to swings in the overall level of global bond yields. The lower beta markets are in countries like Germany, France and Japan – all members of the Secular Stagnation club (Chart 16). The UK does not appear to warrant a permanent membership in that low-yielding group, based on structural factors. That is evident when looking at how Gilt yields are rising even with the BoE absorbing an increasing share of the stock of outstanding Gilts (bottom panel). We conclude that the transition of the UK to a low-beta market is related to the Brexit uncertainty post 2016 and the pandemic shock that has hit the consumer-focused UK economy exceptionally hard – both factors that are set to fade over the next year. Bottom Line: The BoE’s dovish rhetoric, including hints that negative policy rates are still a viable option, looks increasingly inappropriate. The surge in real UK bond yields seen over the past month is just the beginning of a medium-term process of interest rate normalization. Investment Conclusions Chart 17Downgrade Gilts To Underweight
Downgrade Gilts To Underweight
Downgrade Gilts To Underweight
Our assessment of the cyclical and structural drivers of UK interest rates leads us to the following conclusions on UK fixed income and currency strategy: Duration: Maintain a below-benchmark exposure to UK interest rate movements. Gilt yields will rise by more than is discounted in the forwards over the next 6-12 months (Chart 17), coming more through rising real yields as the UK economy continues its post-Brexit, post-pandemic recovery. Country Allocation: Downgrade strategic allocations to UK Gilts to neutral from overweight in dedicated fixed income portfolios. Our long-standing view that Brexit uncertainty would lead to the outperformance of Gilts versus other developed bond markets is no longer valid. It is still too soon to move to a full underweight stance on Gilts – a better opportunity will develop by mid-year once it is more evident that the current success on UK vaccinations leads to a faster reopening of the UK economy. Yield Curve: Maintain positioning for a bearish steepening of the UK Gilt yield curve. While there is limited scope for more steepening through an even larger increase in inflation breakevens from current elevated levels, the long end of the Gilt curve can move higher by more than the front end as the market re-rates Gilts to a higher-beta status with a higher future trajectory for UK interest rates. Corporate Credit: Downgrade UK investment grade corporate bond exposure to neutral from overweight in dedicated fixed income portfolios. UK corporate spreads have returned to the 2017 lows and, while an improving growth dynamic is not overly bearish for credit, there is no longer a compelling valuation-based case for staying overweight UK investment grade corporates. This move brings our recommended UK allocation in line with our neutral stance on US and euro area investment grade corporates. Chart 18GBP/USD Appears Cheap On A PPP Basis
GBP/USD Appears Cheap On A PPP Basis
GBP/USD Appears Cheap On A PPP Basis
Chart 19Low Productivity Is Weighing On The Pound
Low Productivity Is Weighing On The Pound
Low Productivity Is Weighing On The Pound
Currency: A growth-driven path towards interest rate normalization should be positive for the British pound, which remains undervalued versus the US dollar on a purchasing power parity basis (Chart 18).2 A move to 1.45 on GBP/USD is possible within the next six months. A broader move towards pound strength will require an improvement in business investment, as the trade-weighted pound looks fairly valued on our productivity-based model (Chart 19). We do maintain our view that EUR/GBP can approach 0.80 by year-end based on a relatively stronger cyclical improvement in UK growth versus the euro area. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 For further details on the OBR estimates of UK growth, inflation and fiscal policy, please see the March 2021 OBR Economic & Financial Outlook, which can be found here: https://obr.uk/ 2 Please see BCA Research Foreign Exchange Strategy Report, "Thoughts On The British Pound", dated December 18, 2020, available at fes.bcaresearch.com.