Russia
Executive Summary China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
A new equilibrium between NATO, which now includes Sweden and Finland, and Russia needs to be reestablished before geopolitical risks in Europe subside. Russia aims to inflict a recession on the EU which will revive dormant geopolitical risks embedded in each country. Investors should ignore the apparent drop in China’s geopolitical risk as it could rise further until Xi Jinping consolidates power at the Party Congress this fall. Stay on the sideline on Brazilian, South African, Australian, and Canadian equities despite the commodity bull market, at least until China’s growth stabilizes. Korean risk will rise, albeit by less than Taiwanese risk. The US political cycle ensures that Biden may take further actions against adversaries in Europe, Middle East, and East Asia, putting a floor under global geopolitical risk. Tactical Recommendation Inception Date Return LONG GLOBAL AEROSPACE & DEFENSE / BROAD MARKET EQUITIES 2020-11-27 9.3% Bottom Line: Geopolitical risk will rise in the near term. Stay long gold and global defensive stocks. Feature This month we update our GeoRisk Indicators and make observations about the status of political risk for each territory, and where risks are underrated or overrated by global financial markets. Russia GeoRisk Indicator Our “Original” quantitative measure of Russian political risk – the Russian “geopolitical risk premium” shown in the dotted red line below – has fallen to new lows (Chart 1). One must keep in mind that this geopolitical premium is operating under the assumption of a “free market” but the Russian market in the past few months had been anything but free. The Russian government and central bank had been manipulating the ruble and preventing capital outflows. Hence, Russian assets and any indicator derived from it does not reflect its true risk premium, merely the resolve of its government in the geopolitical struggle. Chart 1Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
While the Russia Risk Premium accurately detected the build-up in tensions before the invasion of Ukraine this year, today it gives the misleading impression that Russian geopolitical risk is low. In reality the risk level remains high due to the lack of strategic stability between Russia and the West, particularly the United States, and particularly over the question of NATO enlargement. Our “Old” Russia GeoRisk Indicator remains elevated but has slightly fallen back. This measure failed to detect the rise in risk ahead of this year’s invasion of Ukraine. We predicted the war based on non-market variables, including qualitative analysis. As a result of the failure of our indicator, we devised a “New” Russia GeoRisk Indicator after this year’s invasion, shown as the green line below. This measure provides the most accurate reading. It is pushing the upper limits, which we truncated at 4, as it did during the invasion of Georgia in 2008 and initial invasion of Ukraine in 2014. Related Report Geopolitical StrategyThird Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning Has Russian geopolitical risk peaked for Europe and the rest of the world? Not until a new strategic equilibrium is established between the US and Russia. That will require a ceasefire in Ukraine and a US-Russia understanding about the role of Finland and Sweden within NATO. However, Hungary is signaling that the EU should impose no further sanctions on Russia. Russia’s cutoff of natural gas exports to Europe will create economic hardship that will start driving change in European governments or policies. A full ban on Russian natural gas may not be implemented in the coming years due to lack of EU unanimity. Still, the EU cannot lift sanctions on Russia because that would enable economic recovery and hence military rehabilitation, which could enable new aggression. Also, Russia will not relinquish the territories it has taken from Ukraine even if President Putin exits the scene. No Russian leader will have the political capital to do that given the sacrifices that Russia has made. Bottom Line: Russia’s management of the ruble is distorting some of our risk indicators. Russia remains un-investable for western investors. Substantial sanction relief will not come until late in the decade, if at all. UK GeoRisk Indicator British political risk is rising, and it may surpass the peaks of the Brexit referendum period in 2016 now that Scotland is pursuing another independence referendum (Chart 2). Chart 2United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
New elections are not due until January 25, 2025 and the ruling Conservative Party has every reason to avoid an election over the whole period so that inflation can come down and the economy can recover. But an early election is possible between now and 2025. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has become a liability to his party but he is still a more compelling leader than the alternatives. If Johnson is replaced, then the change of leadership will only temporarily boost the Tories’ public approval. It will ultimately compound the party’s difficulties by dividing the party without resolving the Scottish question. Regardless, the Tories face stiff headwinds in the coming referendum debate and election, having been in power since 2010 and having suffered a series of major shocks (Brexit, the pandemic, inflation). Bottom Line: The US dollar is not yet peaking against pound sterling, As from a global geopolitical perspective it can go further. Investors should stay cautious about the pound in the short term. But they should prefer the pound to eastern European currencies exposed to Russian instability. Germany GeoRisk Indicator German political risk spiked around the time of the 2021 election and has since subsided, including over the course of the Ukraine war (Chart 3). However, risk will rise again now that Germany has declared that it is under “economic attack” from Russia, which is cutting natural gas in retaliation to Germany’s oil embargo. Chart 3Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
This spike in strategic tensions should not be underrated. Germany is entering a new paradigm in which Russian aggression has caused a break with the past policy of Ostpolitik, or economic engagement. Germany will have to devote huge new resources to energy security and national defense and will have to guard against Russia for the foreseeable future. Domestic political risk will also rise as the economy weakens and industrial activity is rationed. Germany does not face a general election until October 26, 2025. Early elections are rare but cannot be ruled out over the next few years. The ruling coalition does not have a solid foundation. It only has a 57% majority in the Bundestag and consists of an ideological mix of parties (a “traffic light” coalition of Social Democrats, Greens, and Free Democrats). Still, Germany’s confrontation with Russia will keep the coalition in power for now. Bottom Line: From a geopolitical point of view, there is not yet a basis for the dollar to peak and roll over against the euro. That is not likely until there is a ceasefire in Ukraine and/or a new NATO-Russia understanding. France GeoRisk Indicator French political risks are lingering at fairly high levels in the wake of the general election and will only partially normalize given the likelihood of European recession and continued tensions around Russia (Chart 4). Chart 4France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
President Emmanuel Macron was re-elected, as expected, but his Renaissance party (previously En Marche) lost its majority and Macron will struggle to win over 39 deputies to gain a majority of 289 seats in the Assembly. He will, however, be able to draw from an overall right-wing ideological majority – especially the Republicans – when it comes to legislative compromises. The election produced some surprises. The right-wing, anti-establishment National Rally of Marine Le Pen, which usually performs poorly in legislative elections, won 89 seats. The left-wing alliance (NUPES) underperformed opinion polls and has not formed a unified bloc within the Assembly. Still, the left will be a powerful force as it will command 151 seats (the sum of the left-wing anti-establishment leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon’s La France Insoumise party and the Communists, Socialists, and Greens). Macron’s key reform – raising the average retirement age from 62 to 65 – will require an ad hoc majority in the Assembly. The Republicans, with 74 seats, can provide the necessary votes. But some members have already refused to side with Macron on this issue. Macron will most likely get support from the populist National Rally on immigration, including measures to make it harder to be naturalized or obtain long-term residence permits, and measures making it easier to expel migrants whose asylum applications have been refused. France will remain hawkish on immigration, but Macron will be able to rein in the populists. On energy and the environment, Macron may be able to cooperate with the Left on climate measures, but ultimately any cooperation will be constrained by the fact that Mélenchon opposes nuclear power. The Republicans and the National Rally will support Macron’s bid to shore up France’s nuclear energy sector. Popular opinion will hold up for France’s energy security in the face of Russian weaponization of natural gas. Macron and Mélenchon will clash on domestic security. Police violence has emerged as a major source of controversy since the Yellow Vest protests. Macron and the Right will protect the police establishment while the Left will favor reforms, notably the concept of “proximity police,” which would entail police officers patrolling in a small area to create stronger, more personal links between the police and the population; officers being under the control of the mayor and prefect; and ultimately most officers not carrying lethal weapons, and the ban of physically dangerous arrest techniques. Grievances over the police as well as racial inequality will likely erupt into significant social unrest in the coming years. As a second-term president without a single-party majority, Macron will increasingly focus on foreign policy. He will aim to become the premier European leader on the world stage. He will seek to revive France’s historic role as a leading diplomatic power and arbiter of Europe. He will strengthen France’s position in the EU and NATO, keep selling arms to the Middle East, and maintain a French military presence in the Sahel. Macron will favor Ukraine’s membership in the EU but also a ceasefire with Russia. He will face a difficult decision on whether to join Israeli and American military action against Iran should the latter reach nuclear breakout capacity and pursue weaponization. Bottom Line: The outperformance of French equities is stretched relative to EMU counterparts. But France will not underperform until the EU’s natural gas crisis begins to subside and a new equilibrium is established with Russia. Italy GeoRisk Indicator Italy is perhaps the weakest link in Europe both economically and strategically (Chart 5). Elections are due by June 2023 but could come earlier as the ruling coalition is showing strains. A change of government would likely compromise the EU’s attempt to maintain a unified front against Russia over the war in Ukraine. Chart 5Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Before the war Italy received 40% of its natural gas from Russia and maintained pragmatic relations with the Putin administration. Now Russia is reducing flows to Italy by 50%, forcing the country into an energy crisis at a time when expected GDP growth had already been downgraded to 2.3% this year and 1.7% in 2023. Meanwhile Italian sovereign bond spreads over German bunds have risen by 64 basis points YTD as a result of the global inflation. The national unity coalition under Prime Minister Mario Draghi came together for two purposes. First, to distribute the EU’s pandemic recovery funds across the country, which amounted to 191.5 billion euros in grants and cheap loans for Italy, 27% of the EU’s total recovery fund and 12% of Italy’s GDP. Second, to elect an establishment politician in the Italian presidency to constrain future populist governments (i.e. re-electing President Sergio Mattarella). Now about 13% of the recovery funds have been distributed in 2021, the economy is slowing, Russia is cutting off energy, and elections are looming. The coalition is no longer stable. Coalition members will jockey for better positioning and pursue their separate interests. The anti-establishment Five Star Movement has already split, with leader Luigi di Maio walking out. Five Star’s popular support has fallen to 12%. The most popular party in the country is now the right-wing, anti-establishment Brothers of Italy, who receive 23% support in polling. Matteo Salvini, leader of the League, another right-wing populist party, has seen its public support fall to 15% and will be looking for opportunities. On the whole, far-right parties command 38% of popular voting intentions, while far-left parties command 17% and centrist parties command 39%. Italy’s elections will favor anti-incumbent parties, especially if the country falls into recession. These parties will be more pragmatic toward Russia and less inclined to expand the EU’s stringent sanctions regime. Implementing a ban on Russian natural gas by 2027 will become more difficult if Italy switches. Italy will be more inclined to push for a ceasefire. A substantial move toward ceasefire will improve investor sentiment, although, again, a durable new strategic equilibrium cannot be established until the US and Russia come to an understanding regarding Finland, Sweden, and NATO enlargement. Bottom Line: Investors should steer clear of Italian government debt and equities until after the next election. Spain GeoRisk Indicator Infighting and power struggles within the People’s Party (PP) have provided temporary relief for the ruling Socialist Worker’s Party (PSOE) and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez. However, with Alberto Nunez Feijoo elected as the new leader of PP on April 2, the People’s Party quickly recovered from its setback. It not only retook the first place in the general election polling, but also scored a landslide victory in the Andalusia regional election. Andalusia is the most populous autonomous community in Spain, contributing 17% of the seats in the lower house. The Andalusian regional election was a test run for the parties before next year’s general election. Historically, Andalusia was PSOE’s biggest stronghold, but it was ousted by the center-right People’s Party-Citizens coalition in 2018. Since then, the People’s party has consolidated their presence and popularity in Andalusia. The snap election in June, weeks after Feijoo was elected as the new national party leader, expanded PP’s seats in the regional parliament. It now has an absolute majority in the regional parliament while the Socialists suffered its worst defeat. With the sweeping victory in Andalusia, the People’s Party is well positioned for next year’s general election. In addition, the ruling Socialist Worker’s Party continues to suffer from the stagflationary economic condition. In May, Spain recorded the second highest inflation figure in more than 30 years, slightly below its March number. Furthermore, the recent deadly Melilla incident which resulted in dozens of migrants’ death, also caused some minor setbacks within Sanchez’s ruling coalition. His far-left coalition partner joined the opposition parties in condemning Sanchez for being complacent toward the Moroccan police. The pressure is on the Socialists now, and political risk will rise in the coming months, till after the election (Chart 6). Chart 6Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Bottom Line: Domestic political risk will remain elevated in this polarized country, as elections are due by December 2023 and could come sooner. Populism may return if Europe suffers a recession. Russia aims to inflict a recession on the EU which is negative for cyclical markets like Spain, but Spain benefits from Europe’s turn to liquefied natural gas and has little to fear from Russia. Investors should favor Spanish stocks relative to Italian stocks. Turkey GeoRisk Indicator Turkey faces extreme political and economic instability between now and the general election due by June 2023 (Chart 7). Chart 7Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Almost any country would see the incumbent ruling party thrown from power under Turkey’s conditions. The ruling Justice and Development Party has been in charge since 2002, the country’s economy has suffered over that period, and today inflation is running at 73% while unemployment stands at 11%. However, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is doing everything he can with his recently expanded presidential powers to stay in office. He is making amends with the Gulf Arab states and seeking their economic support. He is also warming relations with Israel, as Turkey seeks to diversify away from Russian gas and Israel/Egypt are potential suppliers. He is doubling down on military distractions across the Middle East and North Africa. And he waged a high-stakes negotiation with the West over Finnish and Swedish accession to NATO. Russian aggression poses a threat to Turkish national interests. Turkey ultimately agreed to Finnish and Swedish membership after a show of Erdoğan strong hands in negotiating with the West over their membership, to show his domestic audience that he is one of the big boys ahead of the election. A risk to this view is that Erdoğan stages military operations against Greek-controlled Cyprus. This would initiate a crisis within NATO and put Finnish and Swedish accession on hold for a longer period. Bottom Line: Investors should not attempt to bottom-feed Turkish lira or stocks and should sell any rallies ahead of the election. A decisive election that removes Erdoğan from power is the best case for Turkish assets, while a decisive Erdoğan victory is second best. Worse scenarios include indecisive outcomes, a contested or stolen election, a constitutional breakdown, or a military coup. China GeoRisk Indicator China’s geopolitical risk is falling and relative equity performance is picking up now that the government has begun easing monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policy to try to secure the economic recovery (Chart 8). Chart 8China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
Easing regulation on Big Tech has spurred a rebound in heavily sold Chinese tech shares, while the Politburo will likely signal a pro-growth turn in policy at its July economic meeting. The worst news of the country’s draconian “Covid Zero” policy is largely priced, while positive news regarding domestic vaccines, vaccine imports, or anti-viral drugs could surprise the market. However, none of these policy signals are reliable until Xi Jinping consolidates power at the twentieth national party congress sometime between September and November (likely October). Chinese stimulus could fail to pick up as much as the market hopes and policy signals could reverse or could continue to contradict themselves. After the party congress, we expect the Xi administration to intensify its efforts to stabilize the economy. The economic work conference in December will release a pro-growth communique. The March legislative session will provide more government support for the economy if needed. However, short-term measures to stabilize growth should not be mistaken for a major reacceleration, as China will continue to struggle with debt-deflation as households and corporations deleverage and the economic model transitions to a post-manufacturing model. Bottom Line: A Santa Claus rally in the fourth quarter, and/or a 2023 rally, is likely, both for offshore and onshore equities. But long-term investors, especially westerners, should steer clear of Chinese assets. China’s reversion to autocracy and confrontation with the United States will ultimately result in tariffs and sanctions and geopolitical crises and will keep risk premiums high. Taiwan GeoRisk Indicator Taiwan’s geopolitical risk has spiked as expected due to confrontation with China. Tensions will remain high through the Taiwanese midterm election on November 26, the Chinese party congress, and the US midterm (Chart 9). But China is not ready to stage a full-scale military conflict over Taiwan yet – that risk will grow over in the later 2020s and 2030s, depending on whether the US and China provide each other with adequate security assurances. Chart 9Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Still, Taiwan is the epicenter of global geopolitical risk. China insists that it will be unified with the mainland eventually, by force if not persuasion. China’s potential growth is weakening so it is losing the ability to absorb Taiwan through economic attraction over time. Meanwhile the Taiwanese people do not want to be absorbed – they have developed their own identity and prefer the status quo (or independence) over unification. Taiwan does not have a mutual defense treaty with the United States and yet the US and Taiwan are trying to strengthen their economic and military bonds. This situation is both threatening to China and yet not threatening enough to force China to forswear the military option. At some point China could believe it must assert control over Taiwan before the US increases its military commitment. Meanwhile China, the US, Japan, South Korea, and Europe are all adopting policies to promote semiconductor manufacturing at home, and/or outside Taiwan, so that their industries are not over-reliant on Taiwan. That means Taiwan will lose its comparative advantage over time. Bottom Line: Structurally remain underweight Taiwanese equities. Korea GeoRisk Indicator The newly elected President Yoon reaffirmed the strong military tie between Korea and the US, when he hosted President Biden in Seoul in May. Both Presidents expressed interests in expanding cooperation into new areas like semiconductors, economic security, and stability in the Indo-Pacific region. The new administration is also finding ways to improve relations with Japan, which soured in the past few years over the issue of forced labor during the Japanese occupation of Korea. A way forward is yet to be found, but a new public-private council will be launched on July 4 to seek potential solutions before the supreme court ruling in August which could further damage bilateral ties. President Yoon’s various statements throughout the NATO summit in Madrid on wanting a better relationship with Japan and to resolve historical issues showed this administration’s willingness towards a warming of the relations between the two countries, a departure from the previous administration. On the sideline of the NATO summit, Yoon also engaged with European leaders, dealing Korean defense products, semiconductors, and nuclear technologies, with a receptive European audience eager to bolster their defense, secure supply chain, and diversify energy source. North Korea ramped up its missile tests this year as it tends to do during periods of political transitions in South Korea. It is also rumored to be preparing for another nuclear test. Provocations will continue as the North is responding to the hawkish orientation of the Yoon administration. Investors should expect a rise in geopolitical risk in the peninsular, but on a relative basis, due to its strong alliance network, Korean risk will be lower compared to Taiwan (Chart 10). Korea will benefit from a rebound in China in the near term, but in the long-term, it is a secure source of semiconductors and high-tech exports, as Greater China will be mired in long-term geopolitical instability. Chart 10Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Bottom Line: Overweight South Korean equities relative to emerging markets as a play on Chinese stimulus. Overweight Korea versus Taiwan. Australia GeoRisk Indicator Australia’s Labor Party ultimately obtained a one-seat majority in the House of Representatives following the general election in May (77 seats where 76 are needed). It does not have a majority in the Senate, where it falls 13 seats short of the 39 it needs. It will rely on the Green Party (12 seats) and a few stragglers to piece together ad hoc coalitions to pass legislation. Hence Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s domestic agenda will be heavily constrained. Pragmatic policies to boost the economy are likely but major tax hikes and energy sector overhauls are unlikely (Chart 11). Chart 11Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Fortunately for Albanese, his government is taking power in the wake of the pandemic, inflation, and Chinese slowdown, so that there is a prospect for the macroeconomic context to improve over his term in office. This could give him a tailwind. But for now he is limited. Like President Biden in the US, Albanese can attempt to reduce tensions with China after Xi Jinping consolidates power. But also like Biden, he will not have a basis for broad and durable re-engagement, since China’s regional ambitions threaten Australian national security over the long run. Global commodity supply constraints give Australia leverage over China. Bottom Line: Stay neutral on Australian currency and equities until global and Chinese growth stabilize. Brazil GeoRisk Indicator It would take a bolt of lightning to prevent former President Lula da Silva from winning re-election in Brazil’s October 2 first round election. Lula is more in line with the median voter than sitting President Jair Bolsonaro. Bolsonaro’s term has been marred with external shocks, following on a decade of recession and malaise. Polls may tighten ahead of the election but Lula is heavily favored. While ideologically to the left, Lula is a known quantity to global investors (Chart 12). However, Bolsonaro may attempt to cling to power, straining the constitutional system and various institutions. A military coup is unlikely but incidents of insubordination cannot be ruled out. Once Lula is inaugurated, a market riot may be necessary to discipline his new administration and ensure that his policies do not stray too far into left-wing populism. Chart 12Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil’s macroeconomic context is less favorable than it was when Lula first ruled. During the 2000s he rode the wave of Chinese industrialization and a global commodity boom. Today China is slipping into a balance sheet recession and the next wave of industrialization has not yet taken off. Brazil’s public debt dynamics discourage a structural overweight on Brazil within emerging markets. At least Brazil is geopolitically secure – far separated from the conflicts marring Russia, East Europe, China, and East Asia. It also has a decade of bad news behind it that is already priced. Bottom Line: Stay neutral Brazilian assets until global and Chinese growth stabilize and the crisis-prone election season is over. South Africa GeoRisk Indicator South Africa’s economy continues to face major headwinds amid persistent structural issues that have yet to be adequately addressed and resolved by policy makers. The latest bout of severe energy supply cuts by the state-run energy producer, Eskom, serve as a reminder to investors that South Africa’s economy is still dealing with a major issue of generating an uninterrupted supply of electricity. Each day that electricity supply is cut to businesses and households, the local economy stalls. Among other macroeconomic issues such as high unemployment and rising inflation, low-income households which are too the median voter, are facing increasing hardships. The political backdrop is geared toward further increases in political risk going forward (Chart 13). Chart 13South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
Fiscal reform and austerity are underway but won’t last long enough to make a material difference in government finances. The 2024 election is not that far out and the ruling political party, the ANC, will look to quell growing economic pressures to shore up voter support and reinforce its voter base. Fiscal austerity will unwind. Meanwhile, the bull market in global metal prices stands to moderate on weakening global growth, which reduces a tailwind for the rand, South African equities relative to other emerging markets, and government coffers, reducing our reasons for slight optimism on South Africa until global growth stabilizes. Bottom Line: Shift to a neutral stance on South Africa until global and Chinese growth stabilize. Canada GeoRisk Indicator Canadian political risk has spiked since the pandemic (Chart 14). Populist politics can grow over time in Canada, especially if the property sector goes bust. However, the country is geopolitically secure and benefits from proximity to the US economy. Chart 14Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Global commodity supply constraints create opportunities for Canada as governments around the world pursue fiscal programs directed at energy security, national defense, and supply chain resilience. Bottom Line: Stay neutral Canadian currency and equities. While Canada benefits from the high oil price and robust US economy, rising interest rates pose a threat to its high-debt model, while US growth faces disappointments due to Europe’s and China’s troubles. Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Yushu Ma Research Analyst yushu.ma@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri Associate Editor jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com Guy Russell Senior Analyst GuyR@bcaresearch.com Alice Brocheux Research Associate alice.brocheux@bcaresearch.com Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
Executive Summary Long-Term Contracts Needed To Increase LNG Supply
EU Will Reverse Course On Fossil Fuels
EU Will Reverse Course On Fossil Fuels
The EU will have to reverse course and execute long-term contracts with natural gas producers, LNG shippers and pipeline operators to incentivize production of supplies needed to contain energy prices. Long-term contracting will offer the EU an opportunity to address political and economic fragmentation risks via joint taxation policies. This would transform state-level risks via-a-vis energy and military security into joint-and-several obligations. The G7’s plan to cap Russian oil prices will be DOA. The most oil import-dependent EM economies – China and India – will find deeply discounted crude irresistible. Hydrocarbon producers and refiners will increase investments in carbon-capture and storage technology, to maintain their new-found advantage as secure energy sources. Additional subsidies and funding for this technology will be forthcoming. Bottom Line: The hard realities of military conflict and a lack of investment in production and refining will force governments to incentivize substantial investments in hydrocarbons – particularly natural gas and LNG infrastructure – to address global energy scarcity during a time of war. We remain long oil and gas exposures via the COMT ETF, and long equity refining and services exposures via the CRAK and IEZ ETFs. We will re-establish our producer-oriented XOP ETF position if prompt Brent futures trade down to $105/bbl in the front month. We also remain tactically long Brent and eurozone natgas futures and options. Feature The G7 last opined on liquified natural gas (LNG) supply in May, and as was the case this week, it left even casual observers uncertain as to what it is seeking to achieve: It advocated for a halt to further investments in fossil-fuel projects and, at the same time, called for higher LNG supplies to be provided for the EU states.1 The EU faces daunting energy security and supply constraints.2 A deepening energy scarcity will, we expect, push the EU into recession later this year, as natural-gas rationing is invoked to ensure there are sufficient supplies to meet human needs this winter. Natgas scarcity will force the EU to reverse course on its renewable-energy transition in the medium term and prioritize fossil-fuel investments, in our view. Long-term contracting with LNG suppliers will be required to incentivize needed investment in production and transportation to replace Russian gas imports. Such contracting is a necessity for hydrocarbon producers, given governments’ continued calls for no additional fossil-fuel investment. Quicksilver shifts in policy are a continuing source of uncertainty for investors and energy-supply firms. Over time, the EU will have to replace close to 7 Tcf/yr of Russian gas imports (Chart 1, middle panel). This will propel the EU into the ranks of the world’s largest LNG importers (Chart 2). Chart 1EU Needs To Replace ~ 7 Tcf/yr Of LNG
EU Will Reverse Course On Fossil Fuels
EU Will Reverse Course On Fossil Fuels
Chart 2EU Will Become A World-Class LNG Importer
EU Will Become A World-Class LNG Importer
EU Will Become A World-Class LNG Importer
Chart 3Long-Term Contracts Needed To Increase LNG Supply
EU Will Reverse Course On Fossil Fuels
EU Will Reverse Course On Fossil Fuels
Given the length of contracts typically executed with LNG exporters – in excess of 20-plus years – EU governments will be compelled to allow firms and member states to sign long-term contracts for these supplies. EU governments also will be required to begin planning for and developing LNG importing infrastructure, as these supplies become available over the next 3-5 years. In the meantime, LNG prices will remain under pressure as competition heats up globally ahead of the coming winter (Chart 3). G7 Price-Cap Scheme Will Be DOA The G7’s scheme to impose a price cap on Russian oil exports will be DOA as soon as details are presented. This is because the world’s largest oil import-dependent economies – China and India – not only have long trading histories with Russia, but they also operate their own oil-transport fleets that can circumvent insurance-related obstacles imposed by the US and the UK. China and India already find discounted Russian oil irresistible, and are unlikely to acquiesce to US demands for a price cap. China imports 75% of its 15.5mm b/d of oil consumption, while India imports ~ 85% of the 5mm b/d of oil it consumes. Even if oil importers taking Russia's exports going to the EU were to sign on to a price-cap scheme, Russia could always unilaterally cut its oil and condensate production by 20-30% and force Brent prices sharply higher for remaining contract holders. This would almost surely lead to higher prices – above $140/bbl, based on our earlier estimates – and raise Russia’s net export proceeds in the process, since the G7 does not want all of Russia's oil taken off the market.3 Government Interventions Exacerbate Scarcity Governments of states with contestable elections increasingly are intervening – or attempting to do so – in global energy markets and imposing often-contradictory policies that nominally favor consumers at the expense of energy producers. This almost always is counter-productive: Price caps intended to soften the blow of higher-cost electricity and hydrocarbons discourages the necessary conservation of scarce resources. So-called windfall profits taxes discourage the investment required to address supply scarcity. Higher demand and lower supply does not lead to lower prices. Even grander schemes – e.g., the monopsony cartels floated by G7 member states like the US and EU, along with China – almost surely would reduce the profitability of developing and marketing new energy supplies, which also would exacerbate scarcity of supply by discouraging investment. These quick ad hoc fixes work at cross purposes in solving the problem of global energy scarcity. While they are in keeping with a penchant of governments to demonstrate they are addressing voters’ concerns, such policies mistake a quick response for long-term solutions. Investment Implications The EU will, in our opinion, be forced to reverse course and sign long-term LNG supply contracts to replace Russian natural gas imports. This will not derail its renewable-energy transition strategy, but it will significantly delay it. We remain long oil and gas exposures via the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, and long equity refining and services exposures via the CRAK and IEZ ETFs. We will re-establish our producer-focused XOP ETF position if Brent trades down to $105/bbl in the front month. We also remain tactically long Brent and eurozone natgas futures and options (see p. 7 below). Housekeeping Notes We were stopped out of our long S&P GSCI position with a gain of 64%. We are getting long again at the close. We also were stopped out of our long 4Q22 $120/bbl Brent calls with a 16% return. Separately, there will be no Commodity Round-Up in this week’s publication. We are broadcasting our Commodity Round-Up today at 9 a.m. EDT. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see The G7 wants to dump natural gas … but not yet published by politico.com 27 May 2022. The report notes, “The G7 called for an end to international investments in fossil fuels by the end of this year and slammed private finance for continuing to back dirty energy — but left a big out for EU countries desperate to replace Russian gas. ‘We acknowledge that investment in [the liquefied natural gas] sector is necessary in response to the current crisis, in a manner consistent with our climate objectives and without creating lock-in effects,’ the ministers said.” 2 Please see One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy, published 26 May 2022. This report delves into the EU’s post-Cold War foreign policy. For three decades, EU foreign policy largely was set by Germany, the organization's most powerful economy. Successive generations of German politicians championed the idea that the West could bring the former Soviet Union – and later Russia – into the modern world of global trade through Ostpolitik, which had, at its core, a belief in the power of trade to effect political and economic change. This policy is kaput. 3 Please see Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead, which we published 2 June 2022. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trades Closed in 2022
Executive Summary Russia Squeezes EU Natural Gas
Russia Squeezes EU Natural Gas
Russia Squeezes EU Natural Gas
Major geopolitical shocks tend to coincide with bear markets, so the market is getting closer to pricing this year’s bad news. But investors are not out of the woods yet. Russia is cutting off Europe’s natural gas supply ahead of this winter in retaliation to Europe’s oil embargo. Europe is sliding toward recession. China is reverting to autocratic rule and suffering a cyclical and structural downshift in growth rates. Only after Xi Jinping consolidates power will the ruling party focus exclusively on economic stabilization. The US can afford to take risks with Russia, opening up the possibility of a direct confrontation between the two giants before the US midterm election. A new strategic equilibrium is not yet at hand. Tactical Recommendation Inception Date Return LONG GLOBAL DEFENSIVES / CYCLICALS EQUITIES 2022-01-20 18.3% Bottom Line: Maintain a defensive posture in the third quarter but look for opportunities to buy oversold assets with long-term macro and policy tailwinds. Feature 2022 is a year of geopolitics and supply shocks. Global investors should remain defensive at least until the Chinese national party congress and US midterm election have passed. More fundamentally, an equilibrium must be established between Russia and NATO and between the US and Iran. Until then supply shocks will destroy demand. Checking Up On Our Three Key Views For 2022 Our three key views for the year are broadly on track: 1. China’s Reversion To Autocracy: For ten years now, the fall in Chinese potential economic growth has coincided with a rise in neo-Maoist autocracy and foreign policy assertiveness, leading to capital flight, international tensions, and depressed animal spirits (Chart 1). Related Report Geopolitical StrategyWill China Let 100 Flowers Bloom? Only Briefly. Rising incomes provided legitimacy for the Communist Party over the past four decades. Less rapidly rising incomes – and extreme disparities in standards of living – undermine the party and force it to find other sources of public support. Fighting pollution and expanding the social safety net are positives for political stability and potentially for economic productivity. But converting the political system from single-party rule to single-person rule is negative for productivity. Mercantilist trade policy and nationalist security policy are also negative. China’s political crackdown, struggle with Covid-19, waning exports, and deflating property market have led to an abrupt slowdown this year. The government is responding by easing monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policy, though so far with limited effect (Chart 2). Economic policy will not be decisive in the third quarter unless a crash forces the administration to stimulate aggressively. Chart 1China's Slowdown Leads To Maoism, Nationalism
China's Slowdown Leads To Maoism, Nationalism
China's Slowdown Leads To Maoism, Nationalism
Chart 2Chinese Policy Easing: Limited Effect So Far
Chinese Policy Easing: Limited Effect So Far
Chinese Policy Easing: Limited Effect So Far
Chart 3Nascent Rally In Chinese Shares Will Be Dashed
Nascent Rally In Chinese Shares Will Be Dashed
Nascent Rally In Chinese Shares Will Be Dashed
Once General Secretary Xi Jinping secures another five-to-ten years in power at the twentieth national party congress this fall, he will be able to “let 100 flowers bloom,” i.e. ease policy further and focus exclusively on securing the economic recovery in 2023. But policy uncertainty will remain high until then. The party may have to crack down anew to ensure Xi’s power consolidation goes according to plan. China is highly vulnerable to social unrest for both structural and cyclical reasons. The US would jump to slap sanctions on China for human rights abuses. Hence the nascent recovery in Chinese domestic and offshore equities can easily be interrupted until the political reshuffle is over (Chart 3). If China’s economy stabilizes and a recession is avoided, investors will pile into the rally, but over the long run they will still be vulnerable to stranded capital due to Chinese autocracy and US-China cold war. If the Politburo and Politburo Standing Committee are stacked with members of Xi’s faction, as one should expect, then the reduction in policy uncertainty will only be temporary. Autocracy will lead to unpredictable and draconian policy measures – and it cannot solve the problem of a shrinking and overly indebted population. If the Communist Party changes course and stacks the Politburo with Xi’s factional rivals, to prevent China from going down the Maoist, Stalinist, and Putinist route, then global financial markets will cheer. But that outcome is unlikely. Hawkish foreign policy means that China will continue to increase its military threats against Taiwan, while not yet invading outright. Beijing has tightened its grip over Tibet, Xinjiang, and Hong Kong since 2008; Taiwan and the South China Sea are the only critical buffer areas that remain to be subjugated. Taiwan’s midterm elections, US midterms, and China’s party congress will keep uncertainty elevated. Taiwan has underperformed global and emerging market equities as the semiconductor boom and shortage has declined (Chart 4). Hong Kong is vulnerable to another outbreak of social unrest and government repression. Quality of life has deteriorated for the native population. Democracy activists are disaffected and prone to radicalization. Singapore will continue to benefit at Hong Kong’s expense (Chart 5). Chart 4Taiwan Equity Relative Performance Peaked
Taiwan Equity Relative Performance Peaked
Taiwan Equity Relative Performance Peaked
Chart 5Hong Kong Faces More Troubles
Hong Kong Faces More Troubles
Hong Kong Faces More Troubles
Chart 6Japan Undercuts China
Japan Undercuts China
Japan Undercuts China
China and Japan are likely to engage in clashes in the East China Sea. Beijing’s military modernization, nuclear weapons expansion, and technological development pose a threat to Japanese security. The gradual encirclement of Taiwan jeopardizes Japan’s vital sea lines of communication. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is well positioned to lead the Liberal Democratic Party into the upper house election on July 10 – he does not need to trigger a diplomatic showdown but he would not suffer from it. Meanwhile China is hungry for foreign distractions and unhappy that Japan is reviving its military and depreciating its currency (Chart 6). A Sino-Japanese crisis cannot be ruled out, especially if the Biden administration looks as if it will lose its nerve in containing China. Financial markets would react negatively, depending on the magnitude of the crisis. North Korea is going back to testing ballistic missiles and likely nuclear weapons. It is expanding its doctrine for the use of such weapons. It could take advantage of China’s and America’s domestic politics to stage aggressive provocations. South Korea, which has a hawkish new president who lacks parliamentary support, is strengthening its deterrence with the United States. These efforts could provoke a negative response from the North. Financial markets will only temporarily react to North Korean provocations unless they are serious enough to elicit military threats from Japan or the United States. China would be happy to offer negotiations to distract the Biden administration from Xi’s power grab. South Korean equities will benefit on a relative basis as China adds more stimulus. 2. America’s Policy Insularity: President Biden’s net approval rating, at -15%, is now worse than President Trump’s in 2018, when the Republicans suffered a beating in midterm elections (Chart 7). Biden is now fighting inflation to try to salvage the elections for his party. That means US foreign policy will be domestically focused and erratic in the third quarter. Aside from “letting” the Federal Reserve hike rates, Biden’s executive options are limited. Pausing the federal gasoline tax requires congressional approval, and yet if he unilaterally orders tax collectors to stand down, the result will be a $10 billion tax cut – a drop in the bucket. Biden is considering waiving some of former President Trump’s tariffs on China, which he can do on his own. But doing so will hurt his standing in Rust Belt swing states without reducing inflation enough to get a payoff at the voting booth – after all, import prices are growing slower from China than elsewhere (Chart 8). He would also give Xi Jinping a last-minute victory over America that would silence Xi’s critics and cement his dictatorship at the critical hour. Chart 7Democrats Face Shellacking In Midterm Elections
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Chart 8Paring Trump Tariffs Won't Reduce Inflation Much
Paring Trump Tariffs Won't Reduce Inflation Much
Paring Trump Tariffs Won't Reduce Inflation Much
Chart 9Only OPEC Can Help Biden - And Help May Come Late
Only OPEC Can Help Biden - And Help May Come Late
Only OPEC Can Help Biden - And Help May Come Late
Biden is offering to lift sanctions on Iran, which would free up 1.3 million barrels of oil per day. But Iran is not being forced to freeze its nuclear program by weak oil prices or Russian and Chinese pressure – quite the opposite. If Biden eases sanctions anyway, prices at the pump may not fall enough to win votes. Hence Biden is traveling to Saudi Arabia to make amends with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. OPEC’s interest lies in producing enough oil to prevent a global recession, not in flooding the market on Biden’s whims to rescue the Democratic Party. Saudi and Emirati production may come but it may not come early in the third quarter. Lifting sanctions on Venezuela is a joke and Libya recently collapsed again (Chart 9). Even in dealing with Russia the Biden administration will exhibit an insular perspective. The US is not immediately threatened, like Europe, so it can afford to take risks, such as selling Ukraine advanced and long-range weapons and providing intelligence used to sink Russian ships. If Russia reacts negatively, a direct US-Russia confrontation will generate a rally around the flag that would help the Democrats, as it did under President John F. Kennedy in 1962 – one of the rare years in which the ruling party minimized its midterm election losses (Chart 10). The Cuban Missile Crisis counted more with voters than the earlier stock market slide. 3. Petro-States’ Geopolitical Leverage: Oil-producing states have immense geopolitical leverage this year thanks to the commodity cycle. Russia will not be forced to conclude its assault on Ukraine until global energy prices collapse, as occurred in 2014. In fact Russia’s leverage over Europe will be greatly reduced in the coming years since Europe is diversifying away from Russian energy exports. Hence Moscow is cutting natural gas flows to Europe today while it still can (Chart 11). Chart 10Biden Can Afford To Take Risks With Russia
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Chart 11Russia Squeezes EU's Natural Gas
Russia Squeezes EU's Natural Gas
Russia Squeezes EU's Natural Gas
Chart 12EU/China Slowdown Will Weigh On World
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Russia’s objective is to inflict a recession and cause changes in either policy or government in Europe. This will make it easier to conclude a favorable ceasefire in Ukraine. More importantly it will increase the odds that the EU’s 27 members, having suffered the cost of their coal and oil embargo, will fail to agree to a natural gas embargo by 2027 as they intend. Italy, for example, faces an election by June 2023, which could come earlier. The national unity coalition was formed to distribute the EU’s pandemic recovery funds. Now those funds are drying up, the economy is sliding toward recession, and the coalition is cracking. The most popular party is an anti-establishment right-wing party, the Brothers of Italy, which is waiting in the wings and can ally with the populist League, which has some sympathies with Russia. A recession could very easily produce a change in government and a more pragmatic approach to Moscow. The Italian economy is getting squeezed by energy prices and rising interest rates at the same time and cannot withstand the combination very long. A European recession or near-recession will cause further downgrades to global growth, especially when considering the knock-on effects in China, where the slowdown is more pronounced than is likely reported. The US economy is more robust but it will have to be very robust indeed to withstand a recession in Europe and growth recession in China (Chart 12). Russia does not have to retaliate against Finland and Sweden joining NATO until Turkey clears the path for them to join, which may not be until just before the Turkish general election due in June 2023. But imposing a recession on Europe is already retaliation – maybe a government change will produce a new veto against NATO enlargement. Russian retaliation against Lithuania for blocking 50% of its shipments to the Kaliningrad exclave is also forthcoming – unless Lithuania effectively stops enforcing the EU’s sanctions on Russian resources. Russia cannot wage a full-scale attack on the Baltic states without triggering direct hostilities with NATO since they are members of NATO. But it can retaliate in other ways. In a negative scenario Moscow could stage a small “accidental” attack against Lithuania to test NATO. But that would force Biden to uphold his pledge to defend “every inch” of NATO territory. Biden would probably do so by staging a proportionate military response or coordinating with an ally to do it. The target would be the Russian origin of attack or comparable assets in the Baltic Sea, the Black Sea, Ukraine, Belarus, or elsewhere. The result would be a dangerous escalation. Russia could also opt for cyber-attacks or economic warfare – such as squeezing Europe’s natural gas supply further. Ultimately Russia can afford to take greater risks than the US over Kaliningrad, other territories, and its periphery more broadly. That is the difference between Kennedy and Biden – the confrontation is not over Cuba. Russia is also likely to take a page out of Josef Stalin’s playbook and open a new front – not so much in Nicaragua as in the Middle East and North Africa. The US betrayal of the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran opens the opportunity for Russia to strengthen cooperation with Iran, stir up the Iranians’ courage, sell them weapons, and generate a security crisis in the Middle East. The US military would be distracted keeping peace in the Persian Gulf while the Europeans would lose their long-term energy alternative to Russia – and energy prices would rise. The Iranians – who also have leverage during a time of high oil prices – are not inclined to freeze their nuclear program. That would be to trade their long-term regime survival for economic benefits that the next American president can revoke unilaterally. Bottom Line: Xi Jinping is converting China back into an autocracy, the Biden administration lacks options and is willing to have a showdown with Russia, and the Putin administration is trying to inflict a European recession and political upheaval. Stay defensive. Checking Up On Our Strategic Themes For The 2020s As for our long-term themes, the following points are relevant after what we have learned in the second quarter: 1. Great Power Rivalry: The war in Ukraine has reminded investors of the primacy of national security. In an anarchic international system, if a single great nation pursues power to the neglect of its neighbors’ interests, then its neighbors need to pursue power to defend themselves. Before long every nation is out for itself. At least until a new equilibrium is established. For example, Russia’s decision to neutralize Ukraine by force is driving Germany to abandon its formerly liberal policy of energy cooperation in order to reduce Russia’s energy revenues and avoid feeding its military ambitions. Russia in turn is reducing natural gas exports to weaken Europe’s economy this winter. Germany will re-arm, Finland and Sweden will eventually join NATO, and Russia will underscore its red line against NATO bases or forces in Finland and Sweden. If this red line is violated then a larger war could ensue. Chart 13China Will Shift To Russian Energy
China Will Shift To Russian Energy
China Will Shift To Russian Energy
Until Russia and NATO come to a new understanding, neither Europe nor Russia can be secure. Meanwhile China cannot reject Russia’s turn to the east. China believes it may need to use force to prevent Taiwan independence at some point, so it must prepare for the US and its allies to treat it the same way that they have treated Russia. It must secure energy supply from Russia, Central Asia, and the Middle East via land routes that the US navy cannot blockade (Chart 13). Beijing must also diversify away from the US dollar, lest the Treasury Department freeze its foreign exchange reserves like it did Russia’s. Global investors will see diversification as a sign of China’s exit from the international order and preparation for conflict, which is negative for its economic future. However, the Russo-Chinese alliance presents a historic threat to the US’s security, coming close to the geopolitical nightmare of a unified Eurasia. The US is bound to oppose this development, whether coherently or not, and whether alone or in concert with its allies. After all, the US cannot offer credible security guarantees to negotiate a détente with China or Iran because its domestic divisions are so extreme that its foreign policy can change overnight. Other powers cannot be sure that the US will not suffer a radical domestic policy change or revolution that leads to belligerent foreign policy. Insecurity will drive the US and China apart rather than bringing them together. For example, Russia’s difficulties in Ukraine will encourage Chinese strategists to go back to the drawing board to adjust their plans for military contingencies in Taiwan. But the American lesson from Ukraine is to increase deterrence in Taiwan. That will provoke China and encourage the belief that China cannot wait forever to resolve the Taiwan problem. Until there is a strategic understanding between Russia and NATO, and the US and China, the world will remain in a painful and dangerous transitional phase – a multipolar disequilibrium. Chart 14Hypo-Globalization: Globalizing Less Than Potential
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
2. Hypo-Globalization: If national security rises to the fore, then economics becomes a tool of state power. Mercantilism becomes the basis of globalization rather than free market liberalism. Hypo-globalization is the result. The term is fitting because the trade intensity of global growth is not yet in a total free fall (i.e. de-globalization) but merely dropping off from its peaks during the phase of “hyper-globalization” in the 1990s and early 2000s (Chart 14). Hypo-globalization is probably a structural rather than cyclical phenomenon. The EU cannot re-engage with Russia and ease sanctions without rehabilitating Russia’s economy and hence its military capacity – which could enable Russia to attack Europe again. The US and China can try to re-engage but they will fail. Russo-Chinese alliance ensures that the US would be enriching not one but both of its greatest strategic rivals if it reopened its doors to Chinese technology acquisition and intellectual property theft. Iran will see its security in alliance with Russia and China. China has an incentive to develop Iran’s economy so as not to depend solely on Russia and Central Asia. Russia has an incentive to develop Iran’s military capacity so as to deprive Europe of an energy alternative. Both Russia and China wish to deprive the US of strategic hegemony in the Middle East. By contrast the US and EU cannot offer ironclad security guarantees to Iran because of its nuclear ambitions and America’s occasional belligerence. Thus the world can see expanding Russian and Chinese economic integration with Eurasia, and expanding American and European integration with various regions, but it cannot see further European integration with Russia or American integration with China. And ultimately Europe and China will be forced to sever links (Chart 15). Globalization will not cease – it is a multi-millennial trend – but it will slow down. It will be subordinated to national security and mercantilist economic theory. 3. Populism/Nationalism: In theory, domestic instability can cause introversion or extroversion. But in practice we are seeing extroversion, which is dangerous for global stability (Chart 16). Chart 15Global Economic Disintegration
Global Economic Disintegration
Global Economic Disintegration
Chart 16Internal Sources Of Nationalism
Internal Sources Of Nationalism
Internal Sources Of Nationalism
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine derived from domestic Russian instability – and instability across the former Soviet space, including Belarus, which the Kremlin feared could suffer a color revolution after the rigged election and mass protests of 2020-21. The reason the northern European countries are rapidly revising their national defense and foreign policies to counter Russia is because they perceive that the threat to their security is driven by factors within the former Soviet sphere that they cannot easily remove. These factors will get worse as a result of the Ukraine war. Russian aggression still poses the risk of spilling out of Ukraine’s borders. China’s Maoist nostalgia and return to autocratic government is also about nationalism. The end of the rapid growth phase of industrialization is giving way to the Asian scourge: debt-deflation. The Communist Party is trying to orchestrate a great leap forward into the next phase of development. But in case that leap fails like the last one, Beijing is promoting “the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation” and blaming the rest of the world for excluding and containing China. Taiwan, unfortunately, is the last relic of China’s past humiliation at the hands of western imperialists. China will also seek to control the strategic approach to Taiwan, i.e. the South China Sea. China’s claim that the Taiwan Strait is sovereign sea, not international waters, will force the American navy to assert freedom of passage. American efforts to upgrade Taiwan relations and increase deterrence will be perceived as neo-imperialism. The United States, for its part, could also see nationalism convert into international aggression. The US is veering on the brink of a miniature civil war as nationalist forces in the interior of the country struggle with the political establishment in the coastal states. Polarization has abated since 2020, as stagflation has discredited the Democrats. But it is now likely to rebound, making congressional gridlock all but inevitable. A Republican-controlled House will find a reason to impeach President Biden in 2023-24, in hopes of undermining his party and reclaiming the presidency. Another hotly contested election is possible, or worse, a full-blown constitutional crisis. American institutions proved impervious to the attempt of former President Trump and his followers to disrupt the certification of the Electoral College vote. However, security forces will be much more aggressive against rebellions of whatever stripe in future, which could lead to episodes in which social unrest is aggravated by police repression. If the GOP retakes the White House – especially if it is a second-term Trump presidency with a vendetta against political enemies and nothing to lose – then the US will return to aggressive foreign policy, whether directed at China or Iran or both. In short, polarization has contaminated foreign policy such that the most powerful country in the world cannot lead with a steady hand. Over the long run polarization will decline in the face of common foreign enemies but for now the trend vitiates global stability. Chart 17Germany And Japan Rearming
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
Third Quarter Geopolitical Outlook: Thunder And Lightning
It goes without saying that nationalism is also an active force in Iran, where 83-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei is attempting to ensure the survival of his regime in the face of youthful social unrest and an unclear succession process. If Khamenei takes advantage of the commodity cycle, and American and Israeli disarray, he can make a mad dash for the bomb and try to achieve regime security. But if he does so then nationalism will betray him, since Israel and/or the US are willing to conduct air strikes to uphold the red line against nuclear weaponization. If any more proof of global nationalism is needed, look no further than Germany and Japan, the principal aggressors of World War II. Their pacifist foreign policies have served as the linchpins of the post-war international order. Now they are both pursuing rearmament and a more proactive foreign policy (Chart 17). Nationalism may be very nascent in Germany but it has clearly made a comeback in Japan, which exacerbates China’s fears of containment. The rise of nationalism in India is widely known and reinforces the trend. Bottom Line: Great power rivalry is intensifying because of Russia’s conflict with the West and China’s inability to reject Russia. Hypo-globalization is the result since EU-Russia and US-China economic integration cannot easily be mended in the context of great power struggle. Domestic instability in Russia, China, and the US is leading to nationalism and aggressive foreign policy, as leaders find themselves unwilling or unable to stabilize domestic politics through productive economic pursuits. Investment Takeaways BCA has shifted its House View to a neutral asset allocation stance on equities relative to bonds (Chart 18). Chart 18BCA House View: Neutral Stocks Versus Bonds
BCA House View: Neutral Stocks Versus Bonds
BCA House View: Neutral Stocks Versus Bonds
Geopolitical Strategy remains defensively positioned, favoring defensive markets and sectors, albeit with some exceptions that reflect our long-term views. Tactically stay long US 10-year Treasuries, large caps versus small caps, and defensives versus cyclicals. Stay long Mexico and short the UAE (Chart 19). Strategically stay long gold, US equities relative to global, and aerospace/defense sectors (Chart 20). Among currencies favor the USD, EUR, JPY, and GBP. Chart 19Stay Defensive In Q3 2022
Stay Defensive In Q3 2022
Stay Defensive In Q3 2022
Chart 20Stick To Long-Term Geopolitical Trades
Stick To Long-Term Geopolitical Trades
Stick To Long-Term Geopolitical Trades
Chart 21Favor Semiconductors But Not Taiwan
Favor Semiconductors But Not Taiwan
Favor Semiconductors But Not Taiwan
Chart 22Indian Tech Will Rebound Amid China's Geopolitical Risks
Indian Tech Will Rebound Amid China's Geopolitical Risks
Indian Tech Will Rebound Amid China's Geopolitical Risks
Chart 23Overweight ASEAN
Overweight ASEAN
Overweight ASEAN
Go long US semiconductors and semi equipment versus Taiwan broad market (Chart 21). While we correctly called the peak in Taiwanese stocks relative to global and EM equities, our long Korea / short Taiwan trade was the wrong way to articulate this view and remains deeply in the red. Similarly our attempt to double down on Indian tech versus Chinese tech was ill-timed. China eased tech regulations sooner than we expected. However, the long-term profile of the trade is still attractive and Chinese tech will still suffer from excessive government and foreign interference (Chart 22). Go long Singapore over Hong Kong, as Asian financial leadership continues to rotate (see Chart 5 above). Stay long ASEAN among emerging markets. We will also put Malaysia on upgrade watch, given recent Malaysian equity outperformance on the back of Chinese stimulus and growing western interest in alternatives to China (Chart 23). Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Higher Real Yields Have Weighed On Equity Valuations
Higher Real Yields Have Weighed On Equity Valuations
Higher Real Yields Have Weighed On Equity Valuations
I had the pleasure of visiting clients in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Abu Dhabi last week. In contrast to the rest of the world, the mood in the Middle East was very positive. While high oil prices are helping, there is also a lot of optimism about ongoing structural reforms. Petrodollar flows are increasingly being steered towards private and public equities. EM assets stand to benefit the most. Producers in the region are trying to offset lost Russian output, but realistically, they will not be able to completely fill the gap in the near term. Today’s high energy prices have largely baked in this reality, as reflected in strongly backwardated futures curves. There was no consensus about how high oil prices would need to rise to trigger a global recession, although the number $150 per barrel got bandied about a lot. Given that most Middle Eastern currencies are pegged to the dollar, there was a heavy focus on Fed policy. Market estimates of the neutral rate in the US have increased rapidly towards our highly out-of-consensus view. Nevertheless, we continue to see modest upside for bond yields over a multi-year horizon. Over a shorter-term 6-to-12-month horizon, the direction of bond yields will be guided by the evolution of inflation. While US CPI inflation rose much more than expected in May, the details of the report were somewhat less worrying, as they continue to show significant supply-side distortions. Bottom Line: Inflation should come down during the remainder of the year, allowing the Fed to breathe a sigh of relief and stocks to recover some of their losses. A further spike in oil prices is a major risk to this view. Dear Client, Instead of our regular report next week, we will be sending you a Special Report written by Chester Ntonifor, BCA Research’s Chief Foreign Exchange Strategist, discussing the outlook for gold. We will be back the following week with the GIS Quarterly Strategy Outlook, where we will explore the major trends that are set to drive financial markets in the rest of 2022 and beyond. As always, I will hold a webcast discussing the outlook the following week, on Thursday, July 7th. Best regards, Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Peter in Arabia I had the pleasure of visiting clients in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Abu Dhabi last week. This note summarizes my impressions and provides some commentary about recent market turmoil. The Mood in the Region is Very Positive In contrast to the rest of the world, the mood in the Middle East was upbeat. Obviously, high oil prices are a major contributor (Chart 1). Across the region, stock markets are still up for the year (Chart 2). Chart 1Oil Prices Have Shot Up
Oil Prices Have Shot Up
Oil Prices Have Shot Up
Chart 2Middle Eastern Stock Markets Are Doing Relatively Well This Year
Middle Eastern Stock Markets Are Doing Relatively Well This Year
Middle Eastern Stock Markets Are Doing Relatively Well This Year
That said, I also felt that investors were encouraged by ongoing structural reforms, especially in Saudi Arabia where the Vision 2030 program is being rolled out. The program seeks to diversify the Saudi economy away from its historic reliance on petroleum exports. A number of people I spoke with cited the Saudi sovereign wealth fund’s acquisition of a majority stake in Lucid, a California-based EV startup, as the sort of bold move that would have been unthinkable a few years ago. I first visited Riyadh in May 2011 where I controversially delivered a speech entitled “The Coming Commodity Bust” (oil was $120/bbl then and copper prices were near an all-time high). The city has changed immensely since then. The number of restaurants and entertainment venues has increased exponentially. The ban on women drivers was lifted only four years ago. In that short time, it has become a common-day occurrence. Capital Flows Into and Out of the Region are Reflecting a New Geopolitical Reality In addition to high oil prices and structural reforms, geopolitical considerations are propelling significant capital inflows into the region. The freezing of Russia’s foreign exchange reserves sent a shockwave across much of the world, with a number of other EM countries wondering if “they are next.” Ironically, the Middle East has emerged as a neutral player of sorts in this multipolar world, and hence a safer destination for capital flows. On the flipside, the region’s oil exporters appear to be acting more strategically in how they allocate their petrodollar earnings. Rather than simply parking the proceeds of oil sales in overseas US dollar bank accounts, they are investing them in ways that further their economic and political goals. One clear trend is that equity allocations to both overseas public and private markets are rising. Other emerging markets stand to benefit the most from this development, especially EMs who have assets that Middle Eastern countries deem important – assets tied to food security being a prime example. Assuming that the current level of oil prices is maintained, we estimate that non-US oil exports will rise to $2.5 trillion in 2022, up from $1.5 trillion in 2021 (Chart 3). About 40% of this windfall will flow to the Middle East. That is a big slug of cash, enough to influence the direction of equity markets. Chart 3Oil Exporters Reaping The Benefits Of High Oil Prices
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
Middle Eastern Energy Producers Will Boost Output, But Don’t Expect Any Miracles in the Short Term Russian oil production will likely fall by about 2 million bpd relative to pre-war levels over the next 12 months. To help offset the impact, OPEC has already raised production by 200,000 barrels and will almost certainly bump it up again following President Biden’s visit to the region in July (Chart 4). The decision to raise production to stave off a super spike in oil prices is not entirely altruistic. The region’s oil exporters know that excessively high oil prices could tip the global economy into recession, an outcome that would surely lead to much lower oil prices down the road. There was not much clarity on what that tipping point is, but the number $150 per barrel got bandied around a lot. Politics is also a factor. A further rise in oil prices could compel the US to make a deal with Iran, something the Saudis do not want to see happen. Still, there is a practical limit to how much more oil the Saudis and other Middle Eastern producers can bring to market in the near term. Today’s high energy prices have largely baked in this reality, as reflected in strongly backwardated futures curves (Chart 5). Chart 4Output Trends In The Major Oil Producers
Output Trends In The Major Oil Producers
Output Trends In The Major Oil Producers
Chart 5Energy Prices On Both Sides Of The Atlantic
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
Data on Saudi’s excess capacity is notoriously opaque, but I got the feeling that an extra 1-to-1.5 million bpd was the most that the Kingdom could deliver. The same constraints apply to natural gas. Qatar is investing nearly $30 billion to expand its giant North Field, which should allow gas production to rise by as much as 60%. However, it will take four years to complete the project. The share of Qatari liquefied natural gas (LNG) going to Europe has actually declined this year. About 80% of Qatar’s LNG is sold to Asian buyers under long-term contracts that cannot be easily adjusted. And even if those contracts could be rewritten, this would only bring limited benefits to Europe. For example, Germany has no terminals to accept LNG imports, although it is planning to build two. While there was plenty of sympathy to Europe’s plight in the region, there was also a sense that European governments had been cruising for a bruising by doubling down on strident anti-fossil fuel rhetoric over the past decade without doing much to end their dependence on Russian oil and gas. In that context, few in the region seemed willing to bend over backwards to help Europe. In the meantime, the US remains Europe’s best hope. US LNG shipments to Europe have tripled since last year. The US is now sending nearly three quarters of its liquefied gas to Europe. This has pushed up US natural gas prices, although they still remain a fraction of what they are in Europe. Huge Focus on the Fed Chart 6Most Of The Increase In Bond Yields Has Been In The Real Component
Most Of The Increase In Bond Yields Has Been In The Real Component
Most Of The Increase In Bond Yields Has Been In The Real Component
Most Middle Eastern currencies are pegged to the dollar, and hence the region effectively imports its monetary policy from the US. Not surprisingly, clients were very focused on the Federal Reserve. Many expressed concern about the abrupt pace of rate hikes. One of our high-conviction views is that the neutral rate of interest in the US has risen as the household deleveraging cycle has ended, fiscal policy has become structurally looser, and a growing number of baby boomers have transitioned from working (and saving) to retirement (and dissaving). The markets have rapidly priced in this view over the course of 2022. The 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield – a proxy for the neutral rate – has increased from 1.90% at the start of the year to 3.21% at present. Most of this increase in the market’s estimate of the neutral rate has occurred in the real component. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS yield has climbed from -0.49% to 0.84%; in contrast, the implied TIPS breakeven inflation rate has risen from only 2.24% to 2.37% (Chart 6). Implications of Higher Bond Yields on Equity Prices and the Economy Chart 7Higher Real Yields Have Weighed On Equity Valuations
Higher Real Yields Have Weighed On Equity Valuations
Higher Real Yields Have Weighed On Equity Valuations
As both theory and practice suggest, there is a strong negative correlation between real bond yields and equity valuations. Chart 7 shows that the S&P 500 forward P/E ratio has been moving broadly in line with the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS yield. The bad news is that there is still scope for bond yields to rise over the long haul. Our fair value estimate of 3.5%-to-4% for the neutral rate is about 25-to-75 basis points above current pricing. The good news is that a high neutral rate helps insulate the economy from a near-term recession. Recessions typically occur only when monetary policy turns restrictive. A few clients cited the negative Q1 GDP reading and the near-zero Q2 growth estimate in the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model as evidence that a US recession is either close at hand or has already begun (Chart 8). Chart 8Underlying US Growth Is Expected To Be Solid In Q2
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
We would push back against such an interpretation. In contrast to the -1.5% real GDP print, real Gross Domestic Income (GDI) rose by 2.1% in Q1. Conceptually, GDP and GDI should be equal, but since the two numbers are compiled in different ways, there can often be major statistical discrepancies. A simple average of the two suggests the US economy still grew in the first quarter. More importantly, real final sales to private domestic purchasers rose by 3.9% in Q1. This measure of economic activity – which strips out the often-noisy contributions from inventories, government expenditures, and net exports – is the best predictor of future GDP growth of any item in the national accounts (Table 1). Table 1A Good Sign: Real Final Sales To Private Domestic Purchasers Rose By 3.9% In Q1
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
As far as Q2 is concerned, real final sales to private domestic purchasers are tracking at 2.0% according to the Atlanta Fed model – a clear deceleration from earlier this year, but still consistent with a generally healthy economy. Growth will probably slow in the third quarter, reflecting the impact of higher gasoline prices, rising interest rates, and lower asset prices. Nevertheless, the fundamental underpinnings for the economy – low household debt, $2.2 trillion in excess savings, a dire need to boost corporate capex and homebuilding, and a strong labor market – remain in place. The odds of a recession in the next 12 months are quite low. Gauging Near-Term Inflation Dynamics A higher-than-expected neutral rate of interest implies that bond yields will probably rise from current levels over the long run. Over a shorter-term 6-to-12-month horizon, however, the direction of yields will be guided by the evolution of inflation. While the core CPI surprised on the upside in May, the details of the report were somewhat less worrying, as they continue to show significant supply-side distortions. Excluding vehicles, core goods prices rose 0.3% in May, down from a Q1 average of 0.7% (Chart 9). Recent commentary from companies such as Target suggest that goods inflation will ease further. Chart 9Goods Inflation Is Moderating, While Service Price Growth Is Elevated
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
Stripping out energy-related services, services inflation slowed slightly to 0.6% in May from 0.7% in April. A deceleration in wage growth should help keep a lid on services inflation over the coming months (Chart 10). Chart 10A Deceleration In Wage Growth Should Help Keep Services Inflation Contained
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
During his press conference, Fed Chair Powell described the rise in inflation expectations in the University of Michigan survey as “quite eye-catching.” Although long-term inflation expectations remain a fraction of what they were in the early 1980s, they did rise to the highest level in 14 years in June (Chart 11). Powell also noted that the Fed’s Index of Common Inflation Expectations has been edging higher. The Fed’s focus on ensuring that inflation expectations remain well anchored is understandable. That said, there is a strong correlation between the level of gasoline prices and inflation expectations (Chart 12). If gasoline prices come down from record high levels over the coming months, inflation expectations should drop. Chart 11Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Keep Rising, But Are Still Not At Historically High Levels
Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Keep Rising, But Are Still Not At Historically High Levels
Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Keep Rising, But Are Still Not At Historically High Levels
Chart 12Lower Gasoline Prices Would Help Soothe Consumer Fears Over Inflation
Lower Gasoline Prices Would Help Soothe Consumer Fears Over Inflation
Lower Gasoline Prices Would Help Soothe Consumer Fears Over Inflation
The Fed expects core PCE inflation to fall to 4.3% on a year-over-year basis by the end of 2022. This would require month-over-month readings of about 0.35 percentage points, which is slightly above the average of the past three months (Chart 13). Our guess is that the Fed may be highballing its near-term inflation projections in order to give itself room to “underpromise and overdeliver” on the inflation front. If so, we could see inflation estimates trimmed later this year, which would provide a more soothing backdrop for risk assets. Chart 13AUS Inflation Will Fall By More Than The Fed Expects If The Monthly Change In Core PCE Is Less Than 0.35% (I)
US Inflation Will Fall By More Than The Fed Expects If The Monthly Change In Core PCE Is Less Than 0.35% (I)
US Inflation Will Fall By More Than The Fed Expects If The Monthly Change In Core PCE Is Less Than 0.35% (I)
Chart 13BUS Inflation Will Fall By More Than The Fed Expects If The Monthly Change In Core PCE Is Less Than 0.35% (II)
US Inflation Will Fall By More Than The Fed Expects If The Monthly Change In Core PCE Is Less Than 0.35% (II)
US Inflation Will Fall By More Than The Fed Expects If The Monthly Change In Core PCE Is Less Than 0.35% (II)
Concluding Thoughts on Investment Strategy According to Bank of America, fund managers cut their equity exposure to the lowest since May 2020. Optimism on global growth fell to a record low. Meanwhile, bears outnumbered bulls by 39 percentage points in this week’s AAII poll (Chart 14). If the stock market is about to crash, it will be the most anticipated crash in history. In my experience, markets rarely do what most people expect them to do. Chart 14Sentiment Towards Equities Is Pessimistic
Sentiment Towards Equities Is Pessimistic
Sentiment Towards Equities Is Pessimistic
Chart 15Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Chart 16US And European EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
US And European EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
US And European EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
US equities are trading at 16.3-times forward earnings, with non-US stocks sporting a forward P/E ratio of 12.1 (Chart 15). Despite the decline in share prices, earnings estimates in both the US and Europe have increased since the start of the year (Chart 16). The consensus is that those estimates will fall. However, if our expectation that a recession will be averted over the next 12 months pans out, that may not happen. A sensible strategy right now is to maintain a modest overweight to stocks while being prepared to significantly raise equity exposure once clear evidence emerges that inflation has peaked. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn Twitter View Matrix
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
An Oasis Of Optimism: Notes From The Middle East
Executive Summary Natural Gas Markets Eerily Quiet
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
An eerie calm in European natural gas markets belies the state of war in Ukraine that already is producing a cutoff of Russian natgas supplies in retaliation for the EU’s oil embargo. Such cutoffs will accelerate, and send natgas prices in Europe and Asia sharply higher if they occur sooner – as we expect – rather than later. The US will continue to send most of its LNG exports to Europe. These exports are expected to average 12 Bcf/d this year, up 22% from last year’s level. Planners in Europe and Asia will want to secure as much natgas supply as possible by the end of October to refill storage for the November-March withdrawal season, which is beginning to look like another La Niña winter. The US Climate Prediction Center makes the odds of such an event, which is associated with colder-than-normal winters in the Northern Hemisphere, just over 60%. Bottom Line: European governments are preparing their citizens for natgas rationing, in the event of a cutoff of Russian gas. This will occur sooner rather than later. In its wake, EU GDP will fall, and inflation will rise as knock-on effects constrict base metals, fertilizer and food supplies. At tonight’s close, we will be getting long 1Q23 TTF futures on the ICE, expecting prices to again exceed €225/MWh. Feature Related Report Commodity & Energy StrategyHigher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead Russia is at war with Ukraine. NATO military support for Ukraine – with the EU at the forefront – is being maintained at a high level, and Ukrainian forces are vigorously defending their homeland.1 The EU embargoed Russian oil imports to sharply reduce funding for Russia’s war machine. Russia will be compelled to follow through on its threat to cut off pipeline gas shipments to Europe, following the embargo.2 It is highly doubtful Russia will countenance the timetable envisioned in the EU embargo, which calls for a phase-out of oil imports by yearend that removes close to 3mm b/d, or 90% of Russia’s sales into its largest market (Chart 1). Equally doubtful is the notion the EU will countenance funding Russia’s war on Ukraine over the course of such a phase-out. Our colleague Matt Gertken, who runs BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy, demonstrated that while such a phase-out schedule may be optimal for both sides – i.e., it prolongs revenue flows to Russia and gas flows to the EU – it almost surely is not an equilibrium.3 An equilibrium in this prisoners’ dilemma obtains when both sides act immediately to end their vulnerability to the other unilaterally upsetting the optimal state – i.e., endure short-term pain for long-term gain (Diagram 1). For this reason, we believe Russia’s cutoff of natgas shipments to the EU will occur sooner rather than later, to inflict maximum pain on the EU going into the coming winter season. The EU knows this, and is preparing its citizens for rationing of natgas. Chart 1EU’s Russian Oil Embargo Cuts Sales By 90% By Year-end
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Diagram 1The EU, Russia Prisoners’ Dilemma
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Russian Natgas Cutoff To The EU Underway Russia already has begun reducing natural gas supplies to the EU (Chart 2). Russian gas flows to Finland, Poland, Bulgaria, Netherlands, and Denmark were embargoed after these states refused to pay for gas in rubles (Chart 3). Russia reduced gas shipments to Germany – albeit marginally – after Shell refused to pay for natgas supplied to Germany in rubles. While this only disrupted 1.3% of total natgas consumption in Germany, it showed Russia will quickly act against what it views as “unfriendly” customers.4 Ukraine was forced to shut a gas transit point through which 8% of total Russian gas flows reach Europe, after Russian occupying forces were found to be siphoning gas, according to Gas Transmission System Operator of Ukraine (GTSOU). As a result, gas flows from Russia have taken a further hit and have not recovered (Chart 4). EU member states whose supply of Russian gas has been disrupted will need to search for alternatives. Orsted, an energy company supplying natgas to Denmark, stated it will source gas from the EU market. Given supply constraints in Europe, an increase in the number of bids on the single EU market will raise the Dutch Title Transfer Facility (TTF), all else equal. Chart 2Russia Starts Cutting Gas Flows
Russia Starts Cutting Gas Flows
Russia Starts Cutting Gas Flows
Chart 3Russian Gas Flows To EU Falling Overall...
Russian Gas Flows To EU Falling Overall...
Russian Gas Flows To EU Falling Overall...
Chart 4...Particularly Via Ukraine
...Particularly Via Ukraine
...Particularly Via Ukraine
Higher TTF prices will direct gas flows from the US to Europe, reducing gas available for domestic consumption. LNG gas exports to Europe have maintained their upward trend since 2016 and were up by 87% (674 BCF) in 1Q22 vs the same period in 2019 (Chart 5). Chart 5US LNG Exports To Europe Surge
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Simultaneously, the US witnessed its largest inventory withdrawal this winter in the last four years (Chart 6). Warmer-than-normal temperatures and drought conditions in the US also are increasing domestic demand, as electricity companies are forced to substitute hydroelectric power with natgas-fired generation. Increased exports and weather phenomena have combined to push the Henry Hub contract above $9.50/MMBtu this week, the highest level since 2008. Chart 6US Natgas Inventories Slowly Filling
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
US LNG Exports To Europe Surge Higher European prices for US natgas have disincentivized shipments to Asia, where prices – measured by the Japan Korea Marker (JKM) – have been trading below the TTF so far this year on average (Chart 7). This has allowed European gas inventories to refill at a rapid pace. As of 4 June, the EU’s working gas inventories were ~49% full and are above last year’s level for this time of the year (Chart 8). Chart 7Natural Gas Markets Eerily Quiet
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Chart 8European Gas Storage Refill Off To A Good Start
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Shanghai’s reopening will propel Chinese economic activity and demand for natgas, making an already tight global natural gas market tighter. However, the risk of rolling lockdowns in China will keep Asia’s LNG demand in check.5 LNG vessel charter rates have increased sharply since the Russia-Ukraine war began, largely on the back of European demand (Chart 9). We expect this to be a regular feature of the international gas market going forward, as more LNG export capacity is added in the US – it will rise to 12.6 Bcf/d next year, e.g. – and global demand remains strong. Chart 9Surge in LNG Charter Rates
Surge in LNG Charter Rates
Surge in LNG Charter Rates
Europe Is Critically Short LNG Infrastructure Most of the EU’s existing 158 Bcm of annual regasification capacity is located around the Iberian Peninsula (Chart 10), which is not well-connected to the rest of Europe. As a result, to substitute Russian piped gas for LNG imports, investments for import terminals and regasification capacity will be required. In its REPowerEU program the European Commission expects to move closer to complete independence from Russian fossil fuels by importing an additional 50 Bcm of LNG per year, reducing demand, and ramping up renewable energy. Germany is aiming for independence from Russian gas flows by planning a shoreside LNG terminal and ordering four Floating Storage and Regasification Units (FSRUs). The FSRUs, which are expected to come online between year-end and the start of next year will have a combined capacity under 24 Bcm per year. Chart 10Europe Needs More Re-Gasification Capacity
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
These plans, however, are not aligned with the nation’s pathway to go carbon neutral by 2045. An environmental activist group has filed a lawsuit to halt the construction of the LNG terminal. The group also is opposed to Germany’s draft LNG acceleration bill, which will allow imports until two years before 2045.6 This reflects two problems all EU nations will face as they transition to LNG from pipeline Russian gas imports. Firstly, member states will need to invest billions of euros in new LNG capacity, and given current politics, likely will have to decide to scrap or repurpose this infrastructure in during the transition to green energy. Opposing this possibility is the high likelihood that EU states will need to enter long-term LNG contracts to ensure supply security and shield themselves from volatile natgas prices. For the immediate future, the EU likely will kick this can down the road for as long as possible. Investment Implications Back in March, Germany and Austria began preparing their citizens for natgas rationing.7 Now the IEA is warning all of Europe the likelihood of such action is increasing rapidly.8 State and local planners throughout Europe will spend the next five months or so lining up as much LNG and pipeline gas as possible going into the coming winter season. While the inventory-injection in Europe is off to a good start, planners most likely hope to exceed their minimum target for filling 80% of storage in time for the November-March withdrawal season. In addition to the risk of a Russian cutoff of supplies, planners have to account for a higher likelihood of a colder-than-normal winter, given the odds of another La Niña winter, which is associated with colder-than-normal winters in the Northern Hemisphere. The US Climate Prediction Center makes the odds of such an event – the third such event in as many years – just over 60%. If European states are forced to implement rationing of natgas, knock-on effects resulting from prioritizing human needs over industrial concerns will, once again, restrict base metals, fertilizer and food supplies. We remain long energy, metals and grains exposure via the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF as the natural-gas drama in Europe plays out. In addition, we remain long the XOP, XME, PICK, and CRAK ETFs to maintain our equity exposure to industrial commodities. At tonight’s close, we will be getting tactically long 1Q22 futures on the ICE, expecting prices to again exceed €225/MWh. This will complement our existing tactical commodity exposures in 4Q22 TTF futures. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish US refined product demand rose just under 4% for the week ended 3 June 2022, led by a surge in jet-fuel demand of 26.5% yoy – finishing at 1.6mm b/d vs. 1.26mm b/d the year earlier, according to the US EIA. This provides further evidence consumer pent-up demand for travel is being released, after the long shut-downs in travel caused by COVID-19 beginning in 1Q20. The surge in jet-fuel demand was enough to offset yoy declines in gasoline and distillates such as diesel fuel and heating oil of 0.9% and 2.8%, respectively. Gasoline inventories were down 800k barrels yoy, which put them 10% below their five-year average level at the end of the reporting week. Distillate inventories rose 2.6mm barrels, but this still left them 23% below their five-year average. Crude oil inventories in the US including those in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), which is being drawn down to provide charging stock to refiners, drew 7.3mm barrels, and stood at 519mm barrels. Versus year-ago levels, crude inventories including the SPR are down 17%. Base Metals: Bullish Copper production in Chile fell 9.8% yoy in April as state-owned copper giant Codelco’s monthly supply fell 6.1% yoy to 116,000 tons. In Peru, protests against mines by displaced communities have seen suspensions in copper mine production, including that of MMG-owned Las Bambas. Although the International Copper Study Group (ICSG) expects a physical surplus for refined copper markets next year, falling production in Chile and civil unrest in Peru continue to plague the rebuilding of stocks (Chart 11). Globally, a risk matrix we reproduced in a report last year showed that approximately 570 million Metric Tons of copper faced a significant ESG risk.9 This increases the risk of new copper projects being stymied by activist groups, and further curtailing future copper production. Precious Metals: Bullish According to data from World Gold Council, gold ETFs faced net outflows in May as the USD and interest rates strengthened, following the Fed rate hikes (Chart 12). In his speech, Fed Governor Christopher Waller explained that by increasing interest rates, the Fed aims to match labor demand to supply and reduce wage growth, which in turn will lower inflation.10 This, however, does not deal with high inflation via the mechanism of elevated food and fuel prices, which will remain high as long as supply disruptions continue in these markets. Chart 11
LME Copper Stocks Going Down
LME Copper Stocks Going Down
Chart 12
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Natgas Markets: The Eye Of The Storm
Footnotes 1 Please see The Institute For The Study Of War for daily updates of the Russia-Ukraine war. 2 Please see Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead, which we published last week, for further discussion of the EU’s embargo of Russian oil imports. The EU embargo initially will be on Russian seaborne oil imports, which will tighten global crude oil and refined-product markets further. Pipeline imports are due to phase out by year-end. Cumulatively, this will translate to a 90% decrease in Russian crude and product exports to the EU, representing ~ 3mm b/d of lost sales. Our report is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update), published by BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy on June 1, 2022. It is available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 According to a recent report from Gemeinshcafts Diagnose institution prepared on behalf of Germany’s Federal Ministry of Economics and Climate Protection, if Russia embargos oil and gas to Germany immediately the German economy will fall into a sharp recession. The cumulative loss to macroeconomic output in 2022 and 2023 will amount to 220 billion euros, or more than 6.5% of annual economic output. 5 For more on the risk of rolling lockdowns in China, please see Not The Time To Be A Contrarian, published by BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy on May 19, 2022. 6 Please see Germany’s Cabinet Moves to Head Off Lawsuits Against LNG Terminals, published by The Maritime Executive on May 11, 2022 7 Please see Germany Closer To Rationing Natgas, which we published on March 31, 2022. 8 Please see Europe at risk of winter energy rationing, energy watchdog warns, published by ft.com on June 8, 2022. 9 Please see Renewables ESG Risk Grows With Demand, which we published on April 29, 2022 10 For the speech, please see Responding to High Inflation with Some Thoughts on a Soft Landing. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trades Closed in 2022
Executive Summary Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
The EU embargo on Russian seaborne oil imports will tighten global crude oil and refined-product markets further. Pipeline imports are due to phase out by year-end. This will translate to a 90% decrease in Russian crude and product exports to the EU, representing ~ 3mm b/d of lost sales. Russian crude oil production will fall to 7-8mm b/d by year-end 2023, unless the state pre-emptively cuts output before that. This would push crude oil above $140/bbl. We expect Russia to reduce natural gas exports to the EU in the wake of the oil embargo. Refined-product markets will remain tight, given refining capacity losses, tight crude oil markets and still-strong gasoline and diesel demand. OPEC 2.0 is expected to maintain its policy to nominally increase oil supply by 432k b/d at its meeting this week. Actual oil output returned to the market by the coalition is ~ 1.5mm – 1.7mm b/d below nominal levels. Bottom Line: Oil markets will continue to tighten in the wake of the EU’s embargo on Russian imports this week. Refined-product markets will remain well bid, with prices of gasoline, jet and diesel fuel close to or above record levels. We remain long oil producers and refiners via the XOP and CRAK ETFs, along with the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, to retain exposure to higher commodity prices and backwardation. Feature Global refined-product markets are tight and getting tighter. Related Report Commodity & Energy StrategyOil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge As the Northern Hemisphere driving season gets underway, gasoline and diesel prices in the US are at record levels – up 56.55% and 70.17% respectively yoy. So are jet-fuel prices, which are up 107.97% yoy in the US. Prices are similarly robust ex-US and trading at or close to record levels. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the US permanently lost ~ 5% of total refining capacity. Currently, three of the largest refineries in the US are working on replenishing less than half of that loss by end-2023, which will take total US refining capacity to under 18.5mm b/d. US gasoline stocks are low for this time of the year. Markets expect higher demand this driving season, which unofficially ends in early September with the Labor Day weekend in the US. The US went into the Memorial Day Weekend – the start of the summer driving season – with record high motor gas prices (Chart 1). Gasoline stocks normally build in the off-season winter months. However, this year inventories are depleted (Chart 2) because of relatively high distillate “crack spreads” – gross refining margins – which incentivized refiners to produce more diesel, jet and marine fuels.1 This meant gasoline output was sacrificed in the process, which left markets tight going into the summer driving season.2 Chart 1High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season
High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season
High Gas Prices Bring In US Driving Season
US distillate crack spreads are at record highs, after stocks hit a 14-year low last month (Chart 3). Reduced oil refinery capacity will constrict future supply, keeping prices elevated, which will feed into inflation. Demand destruction will be required to balance markets and bring prices lower. Chart 2Depleted Stocks Due To Low Gasoline Margins
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 3Low Distillate Stocks Produce Record Cracks
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Tight Supply-Demand Fundamentals, High Prices US refined-product prices have been strengthening since 2021 due to high crude oil prices, rising demand and lower refinery capacity and utilization rates. This keeps the level of demand for refined products consistently above the level of supply, which forces refiners to pull down inventories or increase imports to cover the supply-demand gaps. Higher refined-product prices ensue as inventories fell. As a result, crack spreads were pushed higher to encourage higher output, which remains problematic because of supply-side pressure in global crude-oil markets (Chart 4). Crude oil prices account for 60% of gasoline and 49% of diesel costs, respectively.3 Last year OPEC 2.0’s production-management strategy kept the level of crude oil supply below demand, but this year additional forces are constraining output. Supply disruptions following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, lower OPEC 2.0 production, and non-OPEC capital discipline, particularly from US shale-oil producers, have combined to constrain crude-oil production. We expect continued production restraint by core OPEC 2.0 (Saudi Arabia and the UAE); lower output from the rest of the coalition; falling Russian supply due to sanctions and an EU embargo on Russian oil imports; and continued capital discipline by shale producers. These factors will offset weaker global oil demand resulting from slower GDP growth in the EU and China. Chart 4Supply Will Barely Rise Despite High Margins
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Volatile supply-demand dynamics will keep crude oil prices elevated this year and next (Chart 5).4 The EU’s embargo on Russian oil, in particular, will raise oil-price volatility, and leave prices upwardly biased. Lastly, we do not expect the US and Iran to renew the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which would allow ~ 1mm b/d of Iranian exports to return to the market. Chart 5Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Crude Oil Prices Will Remain High
Tighter Product Markets Will Persist Refined-product stocks in the US and the rest of the world were low prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, owing to strong demand growth and weak crude-oil supply growth last year, along with lower global refining capacity. US refinery utilization rates last year and earlier this year fell as refiners undertook heavier-than-usual maintenance, which was deferred during the pandemic (Chart 6). Refiners also closed ~ 1mm b/d in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in ~ 5% of US refining capacity being shut-in at the start of 2021.5 Global refining capacity has fallen by more than 2mm b/d since the COVID-19 pandemic.6 As midterm elections approach, the Biden administration has been urging refiners to restart idle capacity to little or no avail, and has threatened to re-introduce export restrictions on crude oil in an attempt to hold down gasoline and diesel prices. Chart 6US Refiners Were Shut-In For Maintenance
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Gasoline markets are going into their first summer without COVID-19 restrictions since 2020. While US data for the first 3 months of 2022 suggest Americans’ gasoline consumption was more price-inelastic than in the past (Chart 7), a series of record-breaking gasoline prices recently may have been enough to start curbing US gasoline demand (Chart 8). All the same, US consumers appear to be willing to pay up for holiday breaks and get-aways, which will keep pressure on inventories during the summer driving season. Chart 7US Gasoline Demand Price Inelastic In Q1…
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 8…But Record Breaking Prices May Change That
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Jet, Diesel Remain Tight, Especially In Europe The approval of an embargo on Russian oil imports into the EU earlier this week means member states on the continent that rely heavily on Russian distillate exports will remain exposed to higher refined-product prices (Chart 9).7 This will keep European diesel prices and crack spreads elevated this year and next (Chart 10). Chart 9EU Dependent On Russia For Diesel
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 10Europe Refining Margins Will Remain Elevated
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Shipping markets also will continue to feel the pressure of higher prices, particularly for marine diesel fuel. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine forced insurance rates higher, which propelled shipping-rates higher in Europe and Russia (Chart 11). The EU is now slapping sanctions on insurers. In addition, the Ukraine war forced a re-routing of ships and port congestion, which led to massive supply-chain disruptions due to closures and blockades.8 High refined-product prices partly is the result of European refineries either permanently shutting in production or switching to renewable energy production when faced with low Covid-19-induced demand in 2020. In the first half of 2021, as product demand started to rise, the parabolic increase in prices of natgas – used as a fuel by refiners – was an additional headwind to refining margins. Chart 11Cost Of Shipping Crude, Products Surges
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
As of last December, more than 800 kb/d – or 5% of the continent’s refining capacity – was permanently taken offline during the pandemic.9 As a result, OECD Europe’s refining capacity for 2022 will be 11.4 mmb/d, ~ 0.8 mmb/d below pre-pandemic levels.10 Europe will need to look elsewhere for distillates. Attempting to substitute refined products in such tight energy markets will not be cheap. Sourcing imports from other states will tighten exporters’ domestic refined product markets and dislocate distillate supply to their traditional importers, which will tighten those states’ domestic markets as well. This could lead to something similar to what we are currently witnessing in LNG markets between Europe and Asia. The US, despite having its own tight refined products market, likely will step up as an alternate supplier to fill the Russian distillate supply void for states reliant on Russian diesel, jet and marine fuels. This can be seen in the 32-month high in Gulf Coast diesel exports from the US, which are the result of stronger imports by Europe and LatAm.11 Investment Implications The EU embargo on Russian oil imports will tighten global refined-product markets. If Russia retaliates by pre-emptively cutting crude oil production by 20-30%, prices would significantly exceed our forecast of $113/bbl this year and $122/bbl next year – reaching or surpassing $140/bbl. Refined-product markets will remain well bid, with prices of gasoline, jet and diesel fuel close to or above record levels. We remain long oil producers and refiners via the XOP and CRAK ETFs, along with the S&P GSCI and COMT ETF, to retain exposure to higher commodity prices and backwardation. Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish We continue to expect Russia to cut off natural gas exports to the EU in retaliation for the embargo on EU oil imports from Russia agreed this week. The timing of this cut-off is uncertain, however. As our colleague Matt Gertken notes in this week’s Geopolitical Strategy, Russia and the EU both would benefit if exports were maintained as long as possible and phased down slowly. This would provide Russia with revenues to wage war in Ukraine, while allowing Europe to avoid recession as it phases out Russian gas. This is not an equilibrium, however, as it leaves both sides exposed to a sudden reversal of the tacit understanding. In equilibrium – i.e., the strategies that guarantee the EU and Russia lose the least – both states reduce their energy trade immediately. Russia needs to show strength in the face of the EU’s embargo, and Europe needs to cut the revenues fueling Russia’s war in Ukraine, which also will deter similar aggression against member states in the future. As soon as the EU weans itself off Russian natgas, Russia’s leverage disappears. If Europe does not diversify immediately, Russia can punish it severely by cutting off energy before it is prepared. (Chart 12). In the meantime, the EU is moving heaven and earth to fill its natgas storage as quickly as possible (Chart 13). According to the GIE AGSI, the percent-full level was 46.68% as of May 30, 2022. Precious Metals: Bullish Gold prices pared losses last Wednesday after the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) minutes of the May meeting indicated the Fed will not raise rates by more than the half percentage points markets had priced in for June and July. Recent weakness in gold prices despite heightened geopolitical uncertainty can be attributed to the Fed’s tightening cycle. Rate hikes will increase real interest rates, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion and strengthen the USD, which competes directly with gold for safe-haven demand, and will also raise the price of gold in local currencies. Base Metals: Bullish Chile’s National Institute of Statistics reported the country’s Mining Production Index fell 10.6% year-over-year (y-o-y) in April, dragging the country’s overall Industrial Production Index lower by 3.6% y-o-y. The drop in mining was due to a 9.8% fall in copper production y-o-y. The contraction in mined copper output this month follows y-o-y contractions of 15%, 7% and 7.2% in January, February and March respectively this year. Chart 12
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Chart 13
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Higher Gasoline, Diesel Prices Ahead
Footnotes 1 The “crack spread” (or “cracks”) is an industry term for gross margins. It derives its name from the literal cracking of the bonds holding the hydrocarbon molecules of crude oil together under intense heat and pressure, and reforming them into refined products like gasoline and diesel fuel and other liquids and gases. The crack spread is the difference between the price of a refined product and crude oil in USD/bbl. 2 In this report, we focus on diesel fuel and gasoline. Low stocks, high prices and high crack spreads are a feature of jet-fuel markets as well. 3 Please see the US EIA’s May 2022 Gasoline and Fuel Update. 4 Please see Oil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge published on May 19, 2022 for our latest balances and price forecasts. 5 Please see the U.S. EIA’s 30 June, 2021 edition of This Week In Petroleum. 6 Please see White House Eyes Restarting Idle Refineries, published by ttnews.com on May 26, 2022. 7 Please see Breakingviews: Oil embargo will hurt Putin more than EU, published by reuters.com on May 31, 2022. 8 For more on this, please refer to High Food Prices Drive EM Inflation, which we published on May 12, 2022. 9 Please see Viewpoint: European refiners cautious on cusp of 2022, published by Argus Media on December 30, 2021. 10 Please see the IEA’s January 2022 Oil Market Report. 11 Please see to PADD 3 diesel exports reach 32 month high as the competition for the non-Russian molecule begins, published by Vortexa on May 4, 2022. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Trades Closed in 2022
The Russian ruble has been the strongest currency in the world versus the US dollar since early March, following the invasion of Ukraine. Yet, the ruble’s performance is not a sign of economic strength. Rather, the reason for the currency’s appreciation is…
Executive Summary EU Embargoes Russian Oil
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
The EU imposed an embargo on 90% of Russian oil imports, which will provoke retaliation. Russia will squeeze Europe’s economy ahead of critical negotiations over the coming 6-12 months. Russian gains on the battlefield in Ukraine point to a ceasefire later, but not yet – and Russia will need to retaliate against NATO enlargement. The Middle East and North Africa face instability and oil disruptions due to US-Iran tensions and Russian interference. China’s autocratic shift is occurring amid an economic slowdown and pandemic. Social unrest and internal tensions will flare. China will export uncertainty and stagflation. Inflation is causing disparate effects in South Asia – instability in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and fiscal populism in India. Asset Initiation Date Return Long Brazilian Financials / Indian Equities (Closed) Feb 10/22 22.5% Bottom Line: Markets still face three geopolitical hurdles: Russian retaliation; Middle Eastern instability; Chinese uncertainty. Feature Global equities bounced back 6.1% from their trough on May 12 as investors cheered hints of weakening inflation and questioned the bearish consensus. BCA’s Global Investment Strategy correctly called the equity bounce. However, as BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy service, we see several sources of additional bad news. Throughout the Ukraine conflict we have highlighted two fundamental factors to ascertain regarding the ongoing macroeconomic impact: Will the war cut off the Russia-EU energy trade? Will the war broaden beyond Ukraine? Chart 1Russian-Exposed Assets Will Suffer More
Russian-Exposed Assets Will Suffer More
Russian-Exposed Assets Will Suffer More
In this report we update our views on these two critical questions. The takeaway is that the geopolitical outlook is still flashing red. The US dollar will remain strong and currencies exposed to Russia and geopolitical risk will remain weak (Chart 1). In addition, China’s politics will continue to produce uncertainty and negative surprises this year. Taken together, investors should remain defensive for now but be ready to turn positive when the market clears the hurdles we identify. The fate of the business cycle hangs in the balance. Energy Ties Eroding … Russia Will Retaliate Over Oil Embargo Chart 2AEU Embargoes Russian Oil
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Europe is diversifying from Russian oil and natural gas. The European Union adopted a partial oil embargo on Russia that will cut oil imports by 90% by the end of 2022. It also removed Sberbank from the SWIFT banking communications network and slapped sanctions on companies that insure shipments of Russian crude. The sanctions will cut off all of Europe’s seaborne oil imports from Russia as well as major pipeline imports, except the Southern Druzhba pipeline. The EU made an exception for landlocked eastern European countries heavily dependent on Russian pipeline imports – namely Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, and Bulgaria (Chart 2A). Focus on the big picture. Germany changed its national policy to reduce Russian energy dependency for the sake of national security. From Chancellors Willy Brandt to Angela Merkel, Germany pursued energy cooperation and economic engagement as a means of lowering the risk of war with Russia. Ostpolitik worked in the Cold War, so when Russia seized Crimea in 2014, Merkel built the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. But Merkel’s policy failed to persuade Russia that economic cooperation is better than military confrontation – rather it emboldened President Putin, who viewed Europe as divided and corruptible. Chart 2BRussia Squeezes EU’s Natural Gas
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Russia’s regime is insecure and feels threatened by the US and NATO. Russia believed that if it invaded Ukraine, the Europeans would maintain energy relations for the sake of preserving overall strategic stability. Instead Germany and other European states began to view Russia as irrational and aggressive and hence a threat to their long-term security. They imposed a coal ban, now an oil ban the end of this year, and a natural gas ban by the end of 2027, all formalized under the recently announced RePowerEU program. Russia retaliated by declaring it would reduce natural gas exports to the Netherlands and probably Denmark, after having already cut off Finland, Poland, and Bulgaria (Chart 2B). As a pretext Russia points to its arbitrary March demand that states pay for gas in rubles rather than in currencies written in contracts. This ruble payment scheme is being enforced on a country-by-country basis against those Russia deems “unfriendly,” i.e. those that join NATO, adopt new sanctions, provide massive assistance to Ukraine, or are otherwise adverse. Chart 3Russia Actively Cutting Gas Flows
Russia Actively Cutting Gas Flows
Russia Actively Cutting Gas Flows
Russia and Ukraine are already reducing natural gas exports through the Ukraine and Turkstream pipelines while the Yamal pipeline has been empty since May – and it is only a matter of time before flows begin to fall in the Nord Stream 1 pipeline to Germany (Chart 3). German government and industry are preparing to ration natural gas (to prioritize household needs) and revive 15 coal plants if necessary. Europe is attempting to rebuild stockpiles for the coming winter, when Russian willingness and capability to squeeze natural gas flows will reach a peak. The big picture is demonstrated by game theory in Diagram 1. The optimal situation for both Russia and the EU is to maintain energy exports for as long as possible, so that Russia has revenues to wage its war and Europe avoids a recession while transitioning away from Russian supplies (bottom right quadrant, each side receives four points). The problem is that this solution is not an equilibrium because either side can suffer a sudden shock if the other side betrays the tacit agreement and stops buying or selling (bottom left and top right quadrants). Diagram 1EU-Russia Standoff: What Does Game Theory Say?
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
The equilibrium – the decision sets in which both Russia and the EU are guaranteed to lose the least – is a situation in which both states reduce energy trade immediately. Europe needs to cut off the revenues that fuel the Russian war machine while Russia needs to punish and deter Europe now while it still has massive energy leverage (top left quadrant, circled). Once Europe diversifies away, Russia loses its leverage. If Europe does not diversify immediately, Russia can punish it severely by cutting off energy before it is prepared. Russian energy weaponization is especially useful ahead of any ceasefire talks in Ukraine. Russia aims for Ukrainian military neutrality and a permanently weakened Ukrainian state. To that end it is seizing territory for the Luhansk and Donetsk People’s Republics, seizing the southern coastline and strategic buffer around Crimea, and controlling the mouth of the Dnieper river so that Ukraine is forever hobbled (Map 1). Once it achieves these aims it will want to settle a ceasefire that legitimizes its conquests. But Ukraine will wish to continue the fight. Map 1Russian Invasion Of Ukraine, 2022
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Russia will need leverage over Europe to convince the EU to lean on Ukraine to agree to a ceasefire. Something similar occurred in 2014-15 when Russia collaborated with Germany and France to foist the Minsk Protocols onto Ukraine. If Russia keeps energy flowing to EU, the EU not only gets a smooth energy transition away from Russia but also gets to keep assisting Ukraine’s military effort. Whereas if Russia imposes pain on the EU ahead of ceasefire talks, the EU has greater interest in settling a ceasefire. Finally, given Russia’s difficulties on the battlefield, its loss of European patronage, and potential NATO enlargement on its borders, Moscow is highly likely to open a “new front” in its conflict with the West. Josef Stalin, for example, encouraged Kim Il Sung to invade South Korea in 1950. Today Russia’s options lie in the Middle East and North Africa – the regions where Europe turns for energy alternatives. Not only Libya and Algeria – which are both inherently fertile ground for Russia to sow instability – but also Iran and the broader Middle East, where a tenuous geopolitical balance is already eroding due to a lack of strategic understanding between the US and Iran. Russia’s capabilities are limited but it likely retains enough influence to ignite existing powder kegs in these areas. Bottom Line: Investors still face a few hurdles from the Ukraine war. First, the EU’s expanding energy embargo and Russian retaliation. Second, instability in the Middle East and North Africa. Hence energy price pressures will remain elevated in the short term and kill more demand, thus pushing the EU and the rest of the world toward stagflation or even recession. War Contained To Ukraine So Far … But Russia To Retaliate Over NATO Enlargement At present Russia is waging a full-scale assault on eastern and southern Ukraine, where about half of Donetsk awaits a decision (Map 2). If Russia emerges victorious over Donetsk in the summer or fall then it can declare victory and start negotiating a ceasefire. This timeline assumes that its economic circumstances are sufficiently straitened to prevent a campaign to the Moldovan border.1 Map 2Russia May Declare Victory If It Conquers The Rest Of Donetsk
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
There are still ways for the Ukraine war to spill over into neighboring areas. For example, the Black Sea is effectively a Russian lake at the moment, which prevents Ukrainian grain from reaching global markets where food prices are soaring. Eventually the western maritime powers will need to attempt to restore freedom of navigation. However, Russia is imposing a blockade on Ukraine, has more at stake there than other powers, and can take greater risks. The US and its allies will continue to provide Ukraine with targeting information against Russian ships but this assistance could eventually provoke a larger naval conflict. Separately, the US has agreed to provide Ukraine with the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), which could lead to attacks on Russian territory that would prompt a ferocious Russian reaction. Even assuming that the Ukraine war remains contained, Russia’s strategic conflict with the US and the West will remain unresolved and Moscow will be eager to save face. Russian retaliation will occur not only on account of European energy diversification but also on account of NATO enlargement. Finland and Sweden are attempting to join NATO and as such the West is directly repudiating the Putin regime’s chief strategic demand for 22 years. Finland shares an 830 mile border with Russia, adding insult to injury. The result will be another round of larger military tensions that go beyond Ukraine and prolong this year’s geopolitical risk and uncertainty. Russia’s initial response to Finland’s and Sweden’s joint application to NATO was to dismiss the threat they pose while drawing a new red line. Rather than forbidding NATO enlargement, Russia now demands that no NATO forces be deployed to these two states. This demand, which Putin and other officials expressed, may or may not amount to a genuine Russian policy change. Russia’s initial responses should be taken with a grain of salt because Turkey is temporarily blocking Finland’s and Sweden’s applications, so Russia has no need to respond to NATO enlargement yet. But the true test will come when and if the West satisfies Turkey’s grievances and Turkey moves to admit the new members. If enlargement becomes inevitable, Russia will respond. Russia will feel that its national security is fundamentally jeopardized by Sweden overturning two centuries of neutrality and Finland reversing the policy of “Finlandization” that went so far in preventing conflict during the Cold War. Chart 4Military Balances Stacking Up Against Russia
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Russia’s military options are limited. Russia has little ability to expand the war and fight on multiple fronts judging by the army’s recent performance in Ukraine and the Red Army’s performance in the Winter War of 1939. This point can be illustrated by taking the military balance of Russia and its most immediate adversaries, which add up to about half of Russian military strength even apart from NATO (Chart 4). Russian armed forces already demonstrated some pragmatism in April by withdrawing from Kyiv and focusing on more achievable war aims. Unless President Putin turns utterly reckless and the Russian state fails to restrain him, Russia will opt for defensive measures and strategic deterrence rather than a military offensive in the Baltics. Hence Russia’s military response will come in the form of threats rather than outright belligerence. However, these threats will probably include military and nuclear actions that will raise alarm bells across Europe and the United States. President Dmitri Medvedev has already warned of the permanent deployment of nuclear missiles in the Kaliningrad exclave.2 This statement points to only the most symbolic option of a range of options that will increase deterrence and elevate the fear of war. Otherwise Russia’s retaliation will consist of squeezing global energy supply, as discussed above, including by opening a new front in the Middle East and North Africa. Instability should be expected as a way of constraining Europe and distracting America. Higher energy prices may or may not convince the EU to negotiate better terms with Russia but they will sow divisions within and among the allies. Ultimately Russia is highly unlikely to sacrifice its credibility by failing to retaliate for the combination of energy embargo and NATO enlargement on its borders. Since its military options are becoming constrained (at least its rational ones), its economic and asymmetrical options will grow in importance. The result will be additional energy supply constraints. Bottom Line: Even assuming that the war does not spread beyond Ukraine – likely but not certain – global financial markets face at least one more period of military escalation with Russia. This will likely include significant energy cutoffs and saber-rattling – even nuclear threats – over NATO enlargement. China’s Political Situation Has Not Normalized China continues to suffer from a historic confluence of internal and external political risk that will cause negative surprises for investors. Temporary improvements in government policy or investor sentiment – centered on a relaxation of “Zero Covid” lockdowns in major cities and a more dovish regulatory tone against the tech giants – will likely be frustrated, at least until after a more dovish government stance can be confirmed in the wake of the twentieth national party congress in October or November this year. At that event, Chinese President Xi Jinping is likely to clinch another ten years in power and complete the transformation of China’s governance from single-party rule to single-person rule. This reversion to autocracy will generate additional market-negative developments this year. It has already embedded a permanently higher risk premium in Chinese financial assets because it increases the odds of policy mistakes, international aggression, and ultimately succession crisis. The most successful Asian states chose to democratize and expand free markets and capitalism when they reached a similar point of economic development and faced the associated sociopolitical challenges. But China is choosing the opposite path for the sake of national security. Investors have seen the decay of Russia’s economy under Putin’s autocracy and would be remiss not to upgrade the odds of similarly negative outcomes in China over the long run as a result of Xi’s autocracy, despite the many differences between the two countries. China’s situation is more difficult than that of the democratic Asian states because of its reviving strategic rivalry with the United States. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken recently unveiled President Biden’s comprehensive China policy. He affirmed that the administration views China as the US’s top strategic competitor over the long run, despite the heightened confrontation with Russia.3 The Biden administration has not eased the Trump administration’s tariffs or punitive measures on China. It is unlikely to do so during a midterm election year when protectionist dynamics prevail – especially given that the Xi administration will be in the process of reestablishing autocracy, and possibly repressing social unrest, at the very moment Americans go to the polls. Re-engagement with China is also prohibited because China is strengthening its strategic bonds with Russia. President Biden has repeatedly implied that the US would defend Taiwan in any conflict with China. These statements are presented as gaffes or mistakes but they are in fact in keeping with historical US military actions threatening counter-attack during the three historic Taiwan Strait crises. The White House quickly walks back these comments to reassure China that the US does not support Taiwanese independence or intend to trigger a war with China. The result is that the US is using Biden’s gaffe-prone personality to reemphasize the hard edge (rather than the soft edge) of the US’s policy of “strategic ambiguity” on Taiwan. US policy is still ambiguous but ambiguity includes the possibility that a president might order military action to defend Taiwan. US attempts to increase deterrence and avoid a Ukraine scenario are threatening for China, which will view the US as altering the status quo and penalizing China for Russia’s actions. Beijing resumed overflights of Taiwan’s air defense identification zone in the wake of Biden’s remarks as well as the decision of the US to send Senator Tammy Duckworth to Taiwan to discuss deeper economic and defense ties. Consider the positioning of US aircraft carrier strike groups as an indicator of the high level of strategic tensions. On January 18, 2022, as Russia amassed military forces on the Ukrainian border – and the US and NATO rejected its strategic demands – the US had only one publicly acknowledged aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean (the USS Harry Truman) whereas it had at least five US carriers in East Asia. On February 24, the day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the US had at least four of these carriers in Asia. Even today the US has at least four carriers in the Pacific compared to at least two in Europe – one of which, notably, is in the Baltics to deter Russia from attacking Finland and Sweden (Map 3). The US is warning China not to take advantage of the Ukraine war by staging a surprise attack on Taiwan. Map 3Amid Ukraine War, US Deters China From Attacking Taiwan
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Of course, strategic tensions are perennial, whereas what investors are most concerned about is whether China can secure its economic recovery. The latest data are still disappointing. Credit growth continues to falter as the private sector struggles with a deteriorating demographic and macroeconomic outlook (Chart 5). The credit impulse has entered positive territory, when local government bonds are included, reflecting government stimulus efforts. But it is still negative when excluding local governments. And even the positive measure is unimpressive, having ticked back down in April (Chart 6). Chart 5Credit Growth Falters Amid Economic Transition
Credit Growth Falters Amid Economic Transition
Credit Growth Falters Amid Economic Transition
Chart 6Silver Lining: Credit Impulse Less Negative
Silver Lining: Credit Impulse Less Negative
Silver Lining: Credit Impulse Less Negative
Bottom Line: Further monetary and fiscal easing will come in China, a source of good news for global investors next year if coupled with a broader policy shift in favor of business, but the effects will be mixed this year due to Covid policy and domestic politics. Taken together with a European energy crunch and Middle Eastern oil supply disruptions, China’s stimulus is not a catalyst for a sustainable global equity market rally this year. South Asia: Inflation Hammers Sri Lanka And Pakistan Since 2020 we have argued that the global pandemic would result in a new wave of supply pressures and global social unrest. High inflation is blazing a trail of destruction in emerging markets, notably in South Asia, where per capita incomes are low and political institutions often fragile. Chart 7South Asia: Surging Inflation
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Energy Cutoff Continues (GeoRisk Update)
Sri Lanka has been worst affected (Chart 7). Inflation surged to an eye-watering 34% in April and is expected to rise further. Surging inflation has affected Sri Lanka disproportionately because its macroeconomic and political fundamentals were weak to begin with. The tourism-dependent Sri Lankan economy suffered a body blow from terrorist attacks in 2019 and the pandemic in 2020-21. Then 2022 saw a power struggle between Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and members of the national assembly including Prime Minister (PM) Mahinda Rajapaksa. The crisis hit a crescendo when the country defaulted on external debt obligations last month. These events weigh on Sri Lanka’s ability to transition from a long civil war (1983-2009) to a path of sustained economic development. While the political crisis has seemingly stabilized following the appointment of new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, we remain bearish on a strategic time horizon. This is mainly because the new PM is unlikely to bring about structural solutions for Sri Lanka’s broken economy. Moreover, Sri Lanka holds more than $50 billion of foreign debt, or 62% of GDP. Another country that has been dealing with political instability alongside high inflation in South Asia is Pakistan, where inflation hit a three-year high in April (see Chart 7 above). The latest twist in Pakistan’s never-ending cycle of political uncertainty comes from the ousted Prime Minister Imran Khan. The former PM, who commands an unusual popular support group due to his fame as a cricketer prior to entering politics, is demanding fresh elections and otherwise threatening to hold mass protests. Pakistan’s new coalition government and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, who came to power amid parliamentary intrigues, are refusing elections and ultimatums. From a structural perspective Pakistan is characterized by a weak economy and an unusually influential military. Now it faces high inflation and rising food prices – indeed it is one of the countries that is most dangerously exposed to the Russia-Ukraine war as it depends on these two for over 70% of its grain imports. Bottom Line: MSCI Sri Lanka has underperformed the MSCI EM index by 58.3% this year to date. Pakistan has underperformed the same index by 41.6% over the same period. Against this backdrop, we remain strategic sellers of both bourses. Instability in these countries is also one of the factors behind our strategic assessment of India as a country with a growing domestic policy consensus. South Asia: India’s Fiscal Populism And Geopolitics Inflation is less rampant in India, although still troublesome. Consumer prices nearly jumped to an 8-year high in April (see Chart 7). With a loaded state election calendar due over the next 12-18 months, the jump in inflation naturally triggered a series of mitigating policy responses. Ban On Wheat Exports: India produces 14% of the world’s wheat and 11% of grains, and exports 5% and 7%, respectively. India’s exports could make a large profit in the context of global shortages. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi is entering into the political end of the business cycle, with key state elections due that will have an impact on the ruling party’s political standing two years before the next federal election. He fears political vulnerability if exports continue amid price pressures at home. The emphasis on food security is typical but also bespeaks a lack of commitment to economic reform. Chart 8India's Real Interest Rates Fall
India's Real Interest Rates Fall
India's Real Interest Rates Fall
Surprise Rate Hikes: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) increased the policy repo rate by 40 basis points at an unscheduled meeting on May 4, thereby implementing its first rate hike since August 2018. With real rates in India lower than those in China or Brazil (Chart 8), the RBI will be forced to expedite its planned rate hikes through 2022. Tax Cuts On Fuel: India’s central government also announced steep cuts in excise duty on fuel. This is another populist measure that reduces political pressures but fails to encourage the private sector to adjust. These measures will help rein in inflation but the rate hikes will weigh on economic growth while the tax cuts will add to India’s fiscal deficit. Indeed, India is resorting to fiscal populism with key state elections looming. Geopolitical risk is less of a concern for India – indeed the Ukraine war has strengthened its bargaining position. In the short run, India benefits from the ability to buy arms and especially cheap oil from Russia while the EU imposes an embargo. But over the long run its economy and security can be strengthened by greater interest from the US and its allies, recently highlighted by the fourth meeting of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) and the launch of the US’s Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF). These initiatives are modest but they highlight the US’s need to replace China with India and ASEAN over time, a trend that no US administration can reverse now because of the emerging Russo-Chinese strategic alliance. At the same time, the Quad underscores India’s maritime interests and hence the security benefits India can gain from aligning its economy and navy with the other democracies. Bottom Line: Fiscal populism in the context of high commodity prices is negative for Indian equities. However, our views on Russia, the Middle East, and China all point to a sharper short-term spike in commodity prices that ultimately drives the world economy deeper into stagflation or recession. Therefore we are booking a 22.5% profit on our tactical decision to go long Brazilian financials relative to Indian equities. Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Ritika Mankar, CFA Editor/Strategist ritika.mankar@bcaresearch.com Chart 9Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Russia: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 10Other Measures Of Russian Geopolitical Risk
Other Measures Of Russian Geopolitical Risk
Other Measures Of Russian Geopolitical Risk
Chart 11China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
China: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 12United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
United Kingdom: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 13Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Germany: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 14France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
France: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 15Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Italy: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 16Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Canada: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 17Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Spain: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 18Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Australia: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 19Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Taiwan: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 20Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Korea: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 21Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Turkey: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 22South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
South Africa: GeoRisk Indicator
Chart 23Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Brazil: GeoRisk Indicator
Footnotes 1 Recent diplomatic flaps between core European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reflect Ukraine’s fear that Europe will negotiate a “separate peace” with Russia, i.e. accept Russian territorial conquests in exchange for economic relief. 2 Dmitri Medvedev explicitly states ‘there can be no more talk of any nuclear-free status for the Baltic - the balance must be restored’ in warning Finland and Sweden joining NATO. Medvedev is suggesting that nuclear weapons will be placed in this area where Russia has its Kaliningrad exclave sandwiched between Poland and Lithuania. Guy Faulconbridge, ‘Russia warns of nuclear, hypersonic deployment if Sweden and Finland join NATO’, April 14, 2022, Reuters. 3 See Antony J Blinken, Secretary of State, ‘The Administration’s Approach to the People’s Republic of China’, The George Washington University, Washington D.C., May 26, 2022, state.gov. Additionally, see President Joe Biden’s remarks on China and getting involved military to defend Taiwan in a joint press conference with Japan’s Prime Minister Kishida Fumio. ‘Remarks by President Biden and Prime Minister Kishida Fumio of Japan in Joint Press Conference’, Akasaka Palace, Tokyo, Japan, May 23, 2022, whitehouse.gov. Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix Section III: Geopolitical Calendar
Executive Summary EU Surprises Carbon Market With Increased CO2 Emission Allowance Supply
EU Surprises Carbon Market With Increased CO2 Emission Allowance Supply
EU Surprises Carbon Market With Increased CO2 Emission Allowance Supply
The EU's failed foreign policy – premised on ever-deeper engagement with the Soviet Union and, after it collapsed, Russia – will drive its hot mess of an energy policy for years. In the short term, the EU's REPowerEU scheme proposed last week to fund the decoupling from Russia will lift its green-house gas (GHG) emissions, if the sale of €20 billion of EU Emission Trading System (ETS) allowances goes forward. Markets traded lower over the week, to make room for the higher ETS pollution-permit supply. This could increase the volume of allowances sales needed to reach the €20 billion target. Another €10 billion investment in natgas pipelines also will be funded. Longer-term, the acceleration of the EU's renewable-power build-out via so-called Projects of Common Interest (PCI) will get an €800 billion boost, with another round of funding to be proposed for early next year. EU funding will lift base metals and steel prices – raising the cost of the renewables build-out – and keep fossil-fuels well bid. Bottom Line: The REPowerEU scheme will increase volatility in the EU's ETS market, and add significant new demand to base metals and fossil-fuel markets. The propensity of EU policymakers to interfere in its ETS market makes it unattractive. We remain long the S&P GSCI index, and the COMT, XOP, XME and PICK ETFs expecting higher base metals, oil and gas prices. Tactically, we are getting long 4Q22 Brent calls struck at $120/bbl, anticipating an EU embargo of Russian oil imports. Feature Over the past three decades, foreign policy for the EU largely was set by Germany, the organization's most powerful economy. Successive generations of German politicians championed the idea that the West could bring the former Soviet Union – and later Russia – into the modern world of global trade through Ostpolitik, which had, at its core, a belief in the power of trade to effect political and economic change.1 This change-through-trade policy survived the Cold War, the collapse of the Soviet Union and rise of Russia from its ashes. It also survived Russia's first invasion of Ukraine in 2014. Indeed, following that invasion, Russia marked the completion of its Nord Stream 2 (NS2) natural gas pipeline – running parallel to NS1 – in September of last year. If NS2 were up and running now, it would have increased Russian gas flows into the EU and its revenue flows.2 As our Geopolitical Strategists noted, Germany even got the Biden administration to agree in summer 2021 to set aside any sanctions so that Germany could operate NS2 with Russia. Related Report Commodity & Energy StrategyDie Cast By EU: Inflation, Recession Risks Rise Yet Russia did not share the German commitment to economic engagement within a US-led liberal international order. Russia's second invasion of Ukraine in February was a bridge too far, and catalyzed the EU's response, again led by Germany, to de-couple from Russia in the energy sector. The EU's reversal of a failed foreign policy, which produced its dependence on Russian energy, leaves it with a hot mess of an energy policy that is evolving rapidly. In its wake, volatility in the EU carbon-trading market has ensued, along with the promise of an accelerated doubling-down on renewable-energy generation. Higher Emissions, Lower Emissions Prices Last week, the EU proposed its REPowerEU scheme, which is meant to enable the decoupling of the EU from Russian energy dependence by funding hundreds-of-billions-of-euros in new energy investments over coming years.3 Chart 1EU Surprises Carbon Market With Increased CO2 Emission Allowance Supply
EU Surprises Carbon Market With Increased CO2 Emission Allowance Supply
EU Surprises Carbon Market With Increased CO2 Emission Allowance Supply
In a history heavily laden with paradox, this new scheme will lift the EU's green-house gas (GHG) emissions – including CO2 – if the sale of €20 billion of EU Emission Trading System (ETS) allowances goes forward.4 So, in the breach, the EU is willing to significantly relax its environmental goals – the E in ESG – to begin undoing its failed foreign policy. Markets already are making room for this increased ETS pollution-permit supply, which, as allowances prices weaken, will require additional supplies to reach the €20 billion target (Chart 1). This will lead to higher coal and fossil fuel usage during Germany's hot-mess de-coupling with Russia. In addition to raising funds by selling pollution permits, the EU will invest another €10 billion in natgas pipelines. This will help counter the likely loss of Russian gas when it embargoes Russian oil imports, but will take time (a few years) to actually put in the ground.5 The additional pipe would address one of the EU's weakest energy links: the lack of pipeline capacity to transport liquified natural gas (LNG) inland once it arrives in Europe. Europe pushed hard to re-load natgas inventories ahead of the coming winter season, and appears to have made progress in this regard (Chart 2). Europe was a strong bid for LNG in the first four months of this year, according to Refinitiv reporting.6 LNG imports were up 58% over the first four months of this year, totaling 45.3mm MT. This kept European natgas prices elevated vs. Asia (Chart 3). Chart 2Europe Re-Loads Storage
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
Chart 3Europe Outbids Asia For LNG
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
The back-and-forth between the Asian and European markets will continue for the rest of this year, particularly going into the Northern Hemisphere's summer, when demand for natgas in Asia, in particular, will remain strong. REPowerEU Will Boost Base Metals Demand Longer term, the EU's REPowerEU proposal, if approved, will accelerate the EU's renewable-power build-out via so-called Projects of Common Interest (PCI). The proposal contains €800 billion to support new renewable-energy proposals, with another round of funding proposed for early next year. The doubling down by the EU on renewables will lift base metals and steel prices as soon as the REPowerEU program starts funding investments in renewable technology and short-term projects like pipeline buildouts (maybe sooner as hedges are placed). Given the tightness already apparent in the base metals markets, this will raise the price of critical materials – copper, aluminum, steel – and will, in the process, keep fossil-fuels well bid: large capital projects do not get done without a lot of diesel and gasoline being consumed.7 The EU is not alone in its desire to accelerate renewables investment: The US is funding a similar build-out, as is China, which will be accelerating its infrastructure and renewables investments. The constraint on all of these programs to build out renewables is low capex in base metals (Chart 4), and oil and gas (Chart 5). This has kept the level of supply from quickly responding to increased demand, which keeps these markets in sharp backwardations. Market tightness in metals and energy will be compounded by stronger bids from the three largest economic centers in the world – the EU, US and China.Chart 4Weak Capex Holds Base Metals Supply Growth Down …
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
Investment Implications Chart 5… And Oil + Gas Supply Growth
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
One Hot Mess: EU Energy Policy
The EU's REPowerEU scheme is not a done deal, but we give it high odds of being adopted. It will increase volatility in the EU's ETS market, and add significant new demand to base metals and fossil-fuel markets. In terms of where to take risk, now that this proposal has been floated, we would avoid getting long carbon permits traded on the EU's ETS carbon market, given the propensity of policymakers to meddle excessively, which, in and of itself, is a risk that is difficult – if not impossible – to forecast. However, we do continue to favor being long the S&P GSCI index, and the COMT, XOP, XME and PICK ETFs expecting higher base metals, oil and gas prices. On a tactical basis, we are getting long 4Q22 Brent calls struck at $120/bbl at tonight's close, anticipating an EU embargo of Russian oil imports. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Paula Struk Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy paula.struk@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish US officials involved in negotiations to restore the Iran nuclear deal appear to be signaling US interests could be served by agreeing such a deal.8 Allowing Iran back into the market as a bona fide oil exporter would return ~ 1mm b/d or more to global crude markets by year-end. This would partly reverse the higher prices we expect in the wake of an EU to embargo Russian oil imports this week. Presently, oil markets are rallying as the necessity for Russia to shut in oil production post-embargo is discounted (Chart 6).9 That said, a deal to allow Iran back into export markets would dampen the move we expect in the wake of an EU embargo. The market will remain tight after a US-Iran deal, but this might be attractive to the Biden administration as mid-terms approach, and to the EU, as it also would reduce the funds available for Russia to wage war on Ukraine. On a tactical basis, we are getting long 4Q22 Brent calls struck at $120/bbl at tonight's close, anticipating the EU embargo. We will close this position out if the US and Iran reinstate the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which would allow Iran to resume oil exports. Precious Metals: Bullish The World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC) projects a 2022 surplus of 627 koz, slightly lower than the previous forecast of 657k oz for this period. This year, strong automotive demand is expected to be offset by reductions in jewellery and industrial demand. Car manufacturers’ switch from Russian palladium to platinum – as they self-sanction – will bullish for platinum. Russia accounts for ~40% of global palladium mined output. The organization predicts lower mine supply caused primarily by supply-chain bottlenecks and COVID-19 restrictions. Nornickel, one of the world’s largest platinum miners is expected to reduce mined output on the back of supply-chain disruptions due to Russian sanctions. Base Metals: Bullish Iron ore prices rose on the wider than anticipated cut in China’s benchmark interest rate for mortgages on May 20th (Chart 7). The upcoming easing of lockdowns in Shanghai will further boost iron ore prices, as markets expect Chinese economic activity to pick up. However, if China sticks to its zero-COVID policy, lockdowns will continue to occur in different cities and regions. BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy expects these ‘rolling lockdowns’ to last at least until the end of this year. This will affect manufacturing and steel production, primary iron ore demand drivers. Iron ore’s reliance on China’s economic health means price of the industrial metal will not meaningfully rise this year, barring a supply shortfall. Chart 6
Brent Prices Going Up
Brent Prices Going Up
Chart 7
BENCHMARK IRON ORE 62% FE, CFR CHINA (TSI) GOING DOWN
BENCHMARK IRON ORE 62% FE, CFR CHINA (TSI) GOING DOWN
Footnotes 1 Please see The Former Chancellor Who Became Putin’s Man in Germany, published by the New York Times 23 April 2022. This is an excellent precis of the history of German-Russian trade vis-à-vis the career of former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who held the office from 1998 – 2005. The deep energy relationship with Russia began in the late 1960s under the chancellorship of Willy Brandt. As much as 55% of Germany's gas needs were supplied by Russia prior to its invasion of Ukraine 24 February 2022. Now its Russian gas imports are closer to 20%; Germany and the EU are scrambling to eliminate any and all energy trade with Russia, beginning with reducing gas imports by two-thirds this year, and likely embargoing all oil imports by year-end. 2 Russia completes Nord Stream 2 construction, gas flows yet to start, published by reuters.com 10 September 2021. 3 Please see REPowerEU: A plan to rapidly reduce dependence on Russian fossil fuels and fast forward the green transition* published by the European Commission 18 May 2022. Energy accounted for 62% of the EU's Russian imports in 2021, just under €100 billion worth of gas (40%), oil (27%) and coal (46%), according to the European Commission's tally in In focus: Reducing the EU’s dependence on imported fossil fuels published 20 April 2022. In 2011, energy accounted for 77% of the EU's imports from Russia. 4 Please see Felix K. Chang's report Legacy of Ostpolitik: Germany's Russia Policy and Energy Security published by the Foreign Policy Research Institute in May 2014. This includes a summary of the paradoxical nature of Germany's Ostpolitik policy following Russia's first invasion of Ukraine. 5 Please see German economy minister expects EU embargo on Russian oil 'within days' -ZDF, published by reuters.com 23 May 2022. 6 Please see LNG momentum swinging back to Asia as Europe demand eases: Russell published by reuters.com on 24 May 2022. 7 Please see Tight Commodity Markets: Persistently High Inflation, which we published 24 March 2022. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Analysis: Subtle shift in U.S. rhetoric suggests new Iran approach published by reuters.com 24 May 2022, and German economy minister expects EU embargo on Russian oil 'within days' -ZDF, published by reuters.com 23 May 2022. 9 Please see Oil, Natgas Prices Set To Surge, which we published last week. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed in 2022 Summary of Closed Trades
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Global equities are nearing a bottom and will rally over the coming months as inflation declines and growth reaccelerates. While equity valuations are not at bombed-out levels, they have cheapened significantly. Global stocks trade at 15.3-times forward earnings. We are upgrading tech stocks from underweight to neutral. The NASDAQ Composite now trades at a forward P/E of 22.6, down from 32.9 at its peak last year. The 10-year Treasury yield should decline to 2.5% by the end of the year, which will help tech stocks at the margin. The US dollar has peaked. A weakening dollar will provide a tailwind to stocks, especially overseas bourses. US high-yield spreads are pricing in a default rate of 6.2% over the next 12 months, well above the trailing default rate of 1.2%. Favor high-yield credit over government bonds within a fixed-income portfolio. Bottom Line: The recent sell-off in stocks provides a good opportunity to increase equity allocations. We expect global stocks to rise 15%-to-20% over the next 12 months. Back to Bullish We wrote a report on April 22nd arguing that global equities were heading towards a “last hurrah” in the second half of the year as a Goldilocks environment of falling inflation and supply-side led growth emerges. Last week, we operationalized this view by tactically upgrading stocks to overweight after having downgraded them in late February. This highly out-of-consensus view change, coming at a time when surveys by the American Association of Individual Investors and other outfits show extreme levels of bearishness, has garnered a lot of attention. In this week’s report, we answer some of the most common questions from the perspective of a skeptical reader. Q: Inflation is at multi-decade highs, global growth is faltering, and central banks are about to hike rates faster than we have seen in years. Isn’t it too early to turn bullish? A: We need to focus on how the world will look like in six months, not how it looks like now. Inflation has likely peaked and many of the forces that have slowed growth, such as China’s Covid lockdown and the war in Ukraine, could abate. Q: What is the evidence that inflation has peaked? And may I remind you, even if inflation does decline later this year, this is something that most investors and central banks are already banking on. Inflation would need to fall by more than expected for your bullish scenario to play out. A: That’s true, but there is good reason to think that this is precisely what will happen. Overall spending in the US is close to its pre-pandemic trend. However, spending on goods remains above trend while spending on services is below trend (Chart 1). Services prices tend to be stickier than goods prices. Thus, the shift in spending patterns caused goods inflation to rise markedly with little offsetting decline in services inflation. To cite one of many examples, fitness equipment prices rose dramatically, but gym membership fees barely fell (Chart 2). Chart 1Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed
Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed
Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed
Chart 2Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices
Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices
Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices
As goods demand normalizes, goods inflation will come down. Meanwhile, the supply of goods should increase as the pandemic winds down, and hopefully, a detente is reached in Ukraine. There are already indications that some supply-chain bottlenecks have eased (Chart 3). Q: Even if supply shocks abate, which seems like a BIG IF to me, wouldn’t the shift in spending towards services supercharge what has been only a modest acceleration in services inflation so far? A: Wages are the most important driver of services inflation. Although the evidence is still tentative, it does appear as though wage inflation is peaking. The 3-month annualized growth rate in average hourly earnings for production and nonsupervisory workers slowed from 7.2% in the second half of 2021 to 3.8% in April (Chart 4). Assuming productivity growth of 1.5%, this is consistent with unit labor cost inflation of only slightly more than 2%, which is broadly consistent with the Fed’s CPI inflation target.1
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Chart 4Wage Pressures May Be Starting To Ease
Wage Pressures May Be Starting To Ease
Wage Pressures May Be Starting To Ease
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Moreover, a smaller proportion of firms expect to raise wages over the next six months than was the case late last year according to a variety of regional Fed surveys (Chart 5). The same message is echoed by the NFIB small business survey (Chart 6). Consistent with all this, the US Citi Inflation Surprise Index has rolled over (Chart 7). Chart 6... Small Business Owners Included
... Small Business Owners Included
... Small Business Owners Included
Chart 7The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
The US Inflation Surprise Index Has Rolled Over
Q: What about the “too cold” risk to your Goldilocks scenario? The risks of recession seem to be rising. A: The market is certainly worried about this outcome, and that has been the main reason stocks have fallen of late. However, we do not think this fear is justified, certainly not in the US (Chart 8). US households are sitting on $2.3 trillion excess savings, equal to about 14% of annual consumption. The ratio of household debt-to-disposable income is down 36 percentage points from its highs in early 2008, giving households the wherewithal to spend more. Core capital goods orders, a good leading indicator for capex, have surged. The homeowner vacancy rate is at a record low, suggesting that homebuilding will be fairly resilient in the face of higher mortgage rates. Q: It seems like the Fed has a nearly impossible task on its hands: Increase labor market slack by enough to cool the economy but not so much as to trigger a recession. You yourself have pointed out that the Fed has never achieved this in its history. A: It is correct that the unemployment rate has never risen by more than one-third of a percentage point in the US without a recession occurring (Chart 9). That said, there are three reasons to think that a soft landing can be achieved this time.
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Chart 9When Unemployment Starts Rising, It Usually Keeps Rising
When Unemployment Starts Rising, It Usually Keeps Rising
When Unemployment Starts Rising, It Usually Keeps Rising
First, increasing labor market slack is easier if one can raise labor supply rather than reducing labor demand. Right now, the participation rate is nearly a percentage point below where it was in 2019, even if one adjusts for increased early retirement during the pandemic (Chart 10). Wages have risen relatively more at the bottom end of the income distribution. This should draw more low-wage workers into the labor force. Furthermore, according to the Federal Reserve, accumulated bank savings for the lowest-paid 20% of workers have been shrinking since last summer, which should incentivize job seeking (Chart 11). Chart 10Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover
Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover
Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover
Chart 11Depleted Savings Will Force More Lower-Wage Workers Into The Labor Market
Depleted Savings Will Force More Lower-Wage Workers Into The Labor Market
Depleted Savings Will Force More Lower-Wage Workers Into The Labor Market
Second, long-term inflation expectations remain well contained, which makes a soft landing more likely. Median expected inflation 5-to-10 years out in the University of Michigan survey stood at 3% in May, roughly where it was between 2005 and 2013 (Chart 12). Median expected earnings growth in the New York Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations was only slightly higher in April than it was prior to the pandemic (Chart 13). Chart 12Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain Relatively Low
Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain Relatively Low
Consumer Long-Term Inflation Expectations Have Risen But Remain Relatively Low
Chart 13US Consumers Do Not Expect Wages To Grow At A Much Higher Rate Than In The Pre-Pandemic Period
US Consumers Do Not Expect Wages To Grow At A Much Higher Rate Than In The Pre-Pandemic Period
US Consumers Do Not Expect Wages To Grow At A Much Higher Rate Than In The Pre-Pandemic Period
A third reason for thinking that a soft landing may be easier to achieve this time around is that the US private-sector financial balance – the difference between what the private sector earns and spends – is still in surplus (Chart 14). This stands in contrast to the lead-up to both the 2001 and 2008-09 recessions, when the private sector was living beyond its means. Q: You have spoken a lot about the US, but the situation seems dire elsewhere. Europe may already be in recession as we speak! A: The near-term outlook for Europe is indeed challenging. The euro area economy grew by only 0.8% annualized in the first quarter. Mathieu Savary, BCA’s Chief European Strategist, expects an outright decline in output in Q2. To no one’s surprise, the war in Ukraine is weighing on European growth. The Bundesbank estimates that a full embargo of Russian oil and gas would reduce German real GDP by an additional 5% on top of the damage already inflicted by the war (Chart 15). Chart 14The US Private-Sector Financial Balance Remains In Surplus
The US Private-Sector Financial Balance Remains In Surplus
The US Private-Sector Financial Balance Remains In Surplus
Chart 15Germany’s Economy Will Sink Without Russian Energy
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
While such a full embargo is possible, it is not our base case. In a remarkable about-face, Putin now says he has “no problems” with Finland and Sweden joining NATO, provided that they do not place military infrastructure in their countries. He had previous threatened a military response at the mere suggestion of NATO membership. In any case, there are few signs that Putin’s increasingly insular and dictatorial regime would respond to an oil embargo or other economic incentives. The wealthy oligarchs who were supposed to rein him in are cowering in fear. It is also not clear if Europe would gain any political leverage over Russia by adopting policies that push its own economy into a recession. It is worth noting that the price of the December 2022 European natural gas futures contract is down 39% from its peak at the start of the war (Chart 16). It is also noteworthy that European EPS estimates have been trending higher this year even as GDP growth estimates have been cut (Chart 17). This suggests that the analyst earnings projections were too conservative going into the year. Chart 16European Natural Gas Futures Are High But Below Their Peak
European Natural Gas Futures Are High But Below Their Peak
European Natural Gas Futures Are High But Below Their Peak
Chart 17European And US EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
European And US EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
European And US EPS Estimates Have Been Trending Higher This Year
Chart 18Chinese Property Sector: Signs Of Contraction
Chinese Property Sector: Signs Of Contraction
Chinese Property Sector: Signs Of Contraction
Q: What about China? The lockdowns are crippling growth and the property market is in shambles. A: There is truth to both those claims. The government has all but said that it will not abandon its zero-Covid policy anytime soon, even going as far as to withdraw from hosting the 2023 AFC Asian Cup. While the number of new cases has declined sharply in Shanghai, future outbreaks are probable. On the bright side, China is likely to ramp up domestic production of Pfizer’s Paxlovid drug. Increased availability of the drug will reduce the burden of the disease once social distancing restrictions are relaxed. As far as the property market is concerned, sales, starts, completions, as well as home prices are all contracting (Chart 18). BCA’s China Investment Strategy expects accelerated policy easing to put the housing sector on a recovery path in the second half of this year. Nevertheless, they expect the “three red lines” policy to remain in place, suggesting that the rebound in housing activity will be more muted than in past recoveries.2 Ironically, the slowdown in the Chinese housing market may not be such a bad thing for the rest of the world. Remember, the main problem these days is inflation. To the extent that a sluggish Chinese housing market curbs the demand for commodities, this could provide some relief on the inflation front. Q: So bad news is good news. Interesting take. Let’s turn to markets. You mentioned earlier that equity sentiment was very bearish. Fair enough, but I would note the very same American Association of Individual Investors survey that you cited also shows that investors’ allocation to stocks is near record highs (Chart 19). Shouldn’t we look at what investors are doing rather than what they’re saying? A: The discrepancy may not be as large as it seems. As Chart 20 illustrates, investors may not like stocks, but they like bonds even less. Chart 19Individual Investors Still Hold A Lot Of Stock
Individual Investors Still Hold A Lot Of Stock
Individual Investors Still Hold A Lot Of Stock
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Chart 20B... But They Like Bonds Even Less
... But They Like Bonds Even Less
... But They Like Bonds Even Less
Chart 21Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off
Global equities currently trade at 15.3-times forward earnings; a mere 12.5-times outside the US. The global forward earnings yield is 6.7 percentage points higher than the global real bond yield. In 2000, the spread between the earnings yield and the real bond yield was close to zero (Chart 21). It should also be mentioned that institutional data already show a sharp shift out of equities. The latest Bank of America survey revealed that fund managers cut equity allocations to a net 13% underweight in May from a 6% overweight in April and a net 55% overweight in January. Strikingly, fund managers were even more underweight bonds than stocks. Cash registered the biggest overweight in two decades. Q: Your bullish equity bias notwithstanding, you were negative on tech stocks last year, arguing that the NASDAQ would turn into the NASDOG. Given that the NASDAQ Composite is down 29% from its highs, is it time to increase exposure to some beaten down tech names? A: Both the cyclical and structural headwinds facing tech stocks that we discussed in These Three High-Flying Equity Sectors Could Come Crashing Back Down To Earth and The Disruptor Delusion remain in place. Nevertheless, with the NASDAQ Composite now trading at 22.6-times forward earnings, down from 32.9 at its peak last year, an underweight in tech is no longer appropriate (Chart 22). A neutral stance is now preferable. Chart 22Tech Stock Valuations Have Returned To Earth
Tech Stock Valuations Have Returned To Earth
Tech Stock Valuations Have Returned To Earth
Q: I guess if bond yields come down a bit more, that would help tech stocks? A: Yes. Tech stocks tend to be growth-oriented. Falling bond yields raise the present value of expected cash flows more for growth companies than for other firms. While we do expect global bond yields to eventually rise above current levels, yields are likely to decline modestly over the next 12 months as inflation temporarily falls. We expect the US 10-year yield to end the year at around 2.5%. Q: A decline in US bond yields would undermine the high-flying dollar, would it not? A: It depends on how bond yields abroad evolve. US Treasuries tend to be relatively high beta, implying that US yields usually fall more when global yields are declining (Chart 23). Thus, it would not surprise us if interest rate differentials moved against the dollar later this year. Chart 23US Treasuries Have A Higher Beta Than Most Other Government Bond Markets
US Treasuries Have A Higher Beta Than Most Other Government Bond Markets
US Treasuries Have A Higher Beta Than Most Other Government Bond Markets
It is also important to remember that the US dollar is a countercyclical currency (Chart 24). If global growth picks up as pandemic dislocations fade and the Ukraine war winds down, the dollar is likely to weaken. Chart 24The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency
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A wider trade deficit could also imperil the greenback. The US trade deficit has increased from US$45 billion in December 2019 to US$110 billion. Equity inflows have helped finance the trade deficit, but net flows have turned negative of late (Chart 25). Finally, the dollar is quite expensive – 27% overvalued based on Purchasing Power Parity exchange rates. Q: Let’s sum up. Please review your asset allocation recommendations both for the next 12 months and beyond. A: To summarize, global inflation has peaked. Growth should pick up later this year as supply-chain bottlenecks abate. The combination of falling inflation and supply-side led growth will provide a springboard for equities. We expect global stocks to rise 15%-to-20% over the next 12 months. Historically, non-US stocks have outperformed their US peers when the dollar has been weakening (Chart 26). EM stocks, in particular, have done well in a weak dollar environment Chart 26Non-US Stocks Will Benefit From A Weaker US Dollar
Non-US Stocks Will Benefit From A Weaker US Dollar
Non-US Stocks Will Benefit From A Weaker US Dollar
Chart 27The Market Is Too Pessimistic On Default Risk
The Market Is Too Pessimistic On Default Risk
The Market Is Too Pessimistic On Default Risk
Within fixed-income portfolios, we recommend a modest long duration stance over the next 12 months. We favor high-yield credit over safer government bonds. US high-yield spreads imply a default rate of 6.2% over the next 12 months compared to a trailing 12-month default rate of only 1.2% (Chart 27). Chart 28Falling Inflation Will Buoy Consumer Sentiment
Falling Inflation Will Buoy Consumer Sentiment
Falling Inflation Will Buoy Consumer Sentiment
Our guess is that this Goldilocks environment will end towards the end of next year. As inflation comes down, real wage growth will turn positive. Consumer confidence, which is now quite depressed, will improve (Chart 28). Stronger demand will cause inflation to reaccelerate in 2024, setting the stage for another round of central bank rate hikes. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Follow me on LinkedIn Twitter Footnotes 1 The Federal Reserve targets an average inflation rate of 2% for the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index. Due to compositional differences between the two indices, CPI inflation has historically averaged 30-to-50 basis points higher than PCE inflation. This is why the Fed effectively targets a CPI inflation rate of 2.3%-to-2.5%. 2 The People’s Bank of China and the housing ministry issued a deleveraging framework for property developers in August 2020, consisting of a 70% ceiling on liabilities-to-assets, a net debt-to-equity ratio capped at 100%, and a limit on short-term borrowing that cannot exceed cash reserves. Developers breaching these “red lines” run the risk of being cut off from access to new loans from banks, while those who respect them can only increase their interest-bearing borrowing by 15% at most. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
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Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A
Goldilocks: A Skeptical Q&A