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Highlights BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy team would like to wish our clients a healthy, happy and prosperous New Year. Portfolio Strategy The growth vs. value style bias is due for a bounce, but beyond the near run, the outlook has become more balanced. Stick with a small vs. large cap bias for the time being, but get ready to book profits if domestic wage inflation continues to accelerate. Buy into the health care facilities sell-off. Value is surfacing as profit margin pressures subside. Recent Changes S&P 1500 Health Care Facilities - Boost to overweight today. Downgrade Alert Growth vs. Value - Downgrade alert. Table 1Sector Performance Returns (%) Contrarian Alert: Reflation Is Reversing Contrarian Alert: Reflation Is Reversing Feature Stocks look poised to maintain their momentum-fueled march higher into yearend, seemingly impervious to potential profit backlash from tightening monetary conditions, a more hawkish Fed and/or overheating sentiment. Sellers are holding back in anticipation of lower tax rates next year. In fact, our Composite Sentiment Gauge has surged to extremely bullish levels (Chart 1). This gauge comprises surveys of traders, individuals and investment professional sentiment. Overtly bullish readings have been a reliable contrary indication of building tactical risks, although not foolproof. The broad market has returned nearly 80%, excluding dividends, since the beginning of 2012, and over 5% since election night in November. Lately, earnings expectations have increased their contribution to the market's return, but the vast majority of the gains over the last five years can be explained by multiple expansion. Soaring median industry price/sales ratios are consistent with lopsidedly optimistic sentiment (Chart 1). Now that the Fed has signaled its intention to steadily raise interest rates in 2017, a critical question is whether profits can take over the reins from liquidity as the main market driver, at least partially validating the valuation increase? On this front, our confidence level is low. Profit margins are steadily narrowing. Our profit margin proxy is not signaling any imminent relief (Chart 2). With labor costs rising, faster sales are needed to halt the squeeze. But U.S. dollar appreciation is a significant headwind to top-line performance, given that 45% of sales come from abroad. As hedges fall off, the impact on 2017 revenue will become increasingly meaningful. Corporate debt levels are disturbingly high, in absolute terms and as a share of GDP (Chart 2, bottom panel). If borrowing costs continue to climb, then it will be hard for companies to turn expansionist, potentially offsetting any benefit from a reduced tax rate. Against this backdrop, it is difficult to envision a robust rebound in corporate profits. Our confidence level would be higher if monetary conditions were still reflationary. Instead, our Reflation Gauge (RG), a combination of oil prices, Treasury yields and the U.S. dollar, has plummeted at its fastest rate ever (Chart 3)! The speed and ferociousness of the plunge underscores the economic need for a massive and imminent fiscal offset. Chart 1Sentiment Is Overheating Sentiment Is Overheating Sentiment Is Overheating Chart 2Stiff Headwinds For The Corporate Sector Stiff Headwinds For The Corporate Sector Stiff Headwinds For The Corporate Sector Chart 3Reflation Is Dead Reflation Is Dead Reflation Is Dead The RG leads both equity sentiment and the U.S. Economic Surprise Index (ESI, Chart 3). If economic activity begins to disappoint in the coming months, i.e. before any meaningful fiscal stimulus arrives, there is a window of risk for the equity market because valuations will narrow as optimism fades, especially in those sectors that have gone vertical since the U.S. election. Keep in mind, last week we showed that typical Fed tightening cycles augur well for non-cyclical sector relative performance on a 12 and 24 month horizon. Surprisingly, financials and utilities have also managed to at least keep pace with the broad market, with cyclical sectors lagging behind overall market returns. The bottom line is that a number of objective indicators are signaling that the post-election rally will hit turbulence, perhaps in the first quarter of the New Year. Investors would be well served from a cyclical perspective to take advantage of value creation in defensive sectors while reaping any windfalls received in deep cyclical sectors. Will Growth Vs. Value Recover? The sudden surge in the financials and industrials sector has caused a sharp correction in the growth vs. value (G/V) share price ratio. The scope of the move has been both powerful and unnerving, catching many off guard, including us. Is this the start of a value renaissance after nearly eight years of growth stock dominance? History shows that sustained rotations into the value complex require validation from strengthening global economic growth. We have shown in previous research that G/V share price momentum is negatively correlated with the growth in durable goods orders, house prices and profits, i.e. when these variables accelerate, growth underperforms value. By virtue of the improvement in our global PMI composite (Chart 4), it would be easy to conclude that value stocks are coming back in vogue. Financials, energy and industrials account for over 50% of the value composite. These sectors only comprise roughly 15% of the growth benchmark. In addition, the technology sector weighs in at one third of the growth index, while representing only 8% of the value cohort. In addition, consumer discretionary and health care also represent about the same weight as technology in the growth composite, but only contribute about half that in the value index. It is no wonder that rising bond yields and hopes for a fiscal stimulus bonanza have triggered such a violent G/V reaction. While we are sympathetic to this view, extrapolating the last six weeks to continue over the next six months is dangerous. Much of the Treasury yield advance has been driven by inflation expectations. Global real yields are up, but not by as much as share prices have discounted (Chart 5). That is not surprising, as the soaring U.S. dollar is a deflationary force, and heralds a sharp rebound in the G/V ratio (Chart 5, top panel). Chart 4A Vicious Correction... A Vicious Correction... A Vicious Correction... Chart 5... That May Soon Reverse ... That May Soon Reverse ... That May Soon Reverse U.S. currency strength will make it difficult for developing economies to service large foreign debt obligations and could drain domestic liquidity if they are forced to sell foreign exchange reserves to defend their currencies. It is notable that EM capital spending is virtually nil in real terms, and their share prices are underperforming the global benchmark by a wide margin (Chart 5). Our Global Economic Diffusion Index has crested (Chart 5, shown inverted), perhaps picking up emerging market sluggishness. Unless the U.S. dollar begins to weaken, it is premature to forecast robust economic growth in the coming quarters, thereby raising some skepticism about the durability of the value stock rebound. The objective message from our Cyclical Macro Indicators for the growth vs. value style is slowly shifting from bullish to neutral, and the pricing power advantage no longer exists (Chart 6). However, the latter is an unwinding of the rate of change shock in the commodity complex rather than renewed demand-driven pricing power gains in the deep cyclical space. From a longer-term perspective, growth stocks should stay well supported by the increase in long-term earnings growth expectations (Chart 7). When the latter are rising, growth stocks tend to enjoy multiple expansion relative to value shares. Moreover, if equity volatility perks up on uncertainty over the path and pace of future fiscal policy and a more hawkish Fed, then growth stocks should receive another source of natural support. The VIX and G/V indices tend to correlate positively over time (Chart 7). Chart 6Mixed Signals Mixed Signals Mixed Signals Chart 7Structural Supports Structural Supports Structural Supports In sum, choosing value over growth is not a slam dunk, nor is forecasting a recovery to new highs in the G/V ratio given the large sector weightings discrepancies. Rather, a reflex rally in the G/V ratio is probable as post-election financials/industrials sector enthusiasm wanes, with a lateral move thereafter. Bottom Line: We will likely recommend moving to a neutral style bias over the coming weeks/months from our current growth vs. value stance, but expect to do so from a position of strength. A Revival In Small Business Animal Spirits? A broad-based and powerful rotation into small caps has occurred, as all the major small cap sectors have surged relative to their large cap counterparts (Chart 8), flattering our current stance. Small caps fit nicely into one of our overriding longer-term themes, namely favoring domestic over global industries. Small companies are typically domestically-geared regardless of geography, underscoring that if anti-globalization trends pick up steam, this theme could gain traction around the world. The potential for U.S. corporate tax cuts has provided another source of domestic company enthusiasm, because multinationals already have low effective tax rates. However, these developments are not assured, details remain scant, and chasing small cap relative performance on that basis alone could be a mistake from a tactical perspective. We have noted that we would recommend profit taking if evidence of a reversal in the small vs. large cap profit outlook materialized. Recent labor market and pricing power data are slightly worrying. The NFIB survey of the small business sector showed that planned labor compensation is still diverging markedly from the overall employment cost index (Chart 9, second panel). While reported price changes have also nudged higher, the discrepancy in labor cost gauges may be signaling that the massive profit margin gap between small and large companies will not be quick to close (Chart 9, bottom panel). Still, the overall NFIB survey was strong, and suggests that animal spirits in the small business sector may finally be reawakening (Chart 10, second panel). The latter may reflect an easing in worries about government red tape, excessive bureaucracy and health care costs. Chart 8Broad-based Small Cap Outperformance Broad-based Small Cap Outperformance Broad-based Small Cap Outperformance Chart 9Yellow Flag For Margins Yellow Flag For Margins Yellow Flag For Margins Chart 10Overbought, But Not Overvalued Overbought, But Not Overvalued Overbought, But Not Overvalued These sentiment shifts may allow extremely overbought technical conditions for the relative share price ratio to persist for a while longer (Chart 10, middle panel), particularly if the Trump honeymoon phase for the overall market lasts until early in the New Year. Importantly, there is no meaningful valuation roadblock at the moment (Chart 10). From a longer-term perspective, however, it is notable that the share price ratio is trading well above one standard deviation from its mean. Such a stretched technical level warns against getting too comfortable with small caps. In fact, the share price ratio is tracing out a pattern similar to the early-1980s (Chart 11), when it enjoyed a brief run to new highs in 1983 on the back of similar aspirations of meaningful fiscal thrust and as the U.S. dollar sprang higher. However, that surge was short-lived and in hindsight, was a blow-off top that marked the beginning of a massive underperformance phase. Chart 11The Big Picture The Big Picture The Big Picture Bottom Line: Stick with a small/large cap bias for now, but get ready to take profits if the relative profit margin outlook does not soon improve. Buy Into Health Care Facilities Weakness Rapid sub-surface market gyrations are creating attractive value in a number of areas, particularly in the defensive health care sector. In particular, we downshifted our view on the S&P health care facilities index at mid-year, because consumer spending on health care was decelerating, which favored moving into equities that paid for medical services (managed care) vs. those that provided them. While that trend remains intact, health care facilities stocks appear to be discounting an extreme scenario. The current concern is that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) will be repealed, leaving hospitals to foot the bill for uninsured patients. While such a scenario would potentially reverse the decline in the provision for doubtful accounts (PDA, Chart 12), a major profit margin support, the ACA is more likely to be reworked than repealed especially in the absence of a replacement plan. Importantly, there are other offsets. PDA follows the unemployment rate, which is signaling that the former will decline further. Hospital cost inflation is beginning to recede, led by drug costs (Chart 12). Physician services costs and inflation in other medical supplies is also subsiding. Health care facilities have also reduced capital spending in a bid to protect profit margins. Construction data show that hospitals have eased back on the throttle significantly (Chart 13). A shift to a profit margin preservation mentality is confirmed by the sharp reduction in headcount growth and decline in total wage inflation (Chart 13). Labor cost control provides another positive profit margin support, over and above the fillip from the reacceleration in hospital pricing power (Chart 13). Consumers are allocating an increasing portion of their spending to hospitals, which provides confidence that pricing power gains will stick. It would take massive earnings downgrades to validate the pessimism embedded in current valuations (Chart 14). Technical conditions argue that the sell-off is overshooting. The share price ratio has made new lows, but cyclical momentum is diverging positively. Given that this group is traditionally a strong U.S. dollar winner (Chart 14, top panel), there is scope for a playable relative performance rally in the coming six months. Chart 12Hospital Costs Are Easing... Hospital Costs Are Easing... Hospital Costs Are Easing... Chart 13... While Sales Improve ... While Sales Improve ... While Sales Improve Chart 14Dirt Cheap Dirt Cheap Dirt Cheap Bottom Line: Augment the S&P 1500 health care facilities index (BLBG: S15HCFA - HCA, UHS, WOOF, HLS, LPNT, SEM, SCAI, THC, ENSG, USPH, KND, CYH, QHC) to overweight. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Recommendation Allocation Quarterly - December 2016 Quarterly - December 2016 Highlights Growth was picking up before the election of President Trump. His election merely accelerates the rotation from monetary to fiscal policy. This is likely to cause yields to rise, the Fed to tighten and the dollar to strengthen further. That will be negative for bonds, commodities and emerging market assets, and equivocal for equities. Short term, markets have overshot and a correction is likely. But the 12-month picture (higher growth and inflation) suggests risk assets such as equities will outperform. Our recommendations mostly have cyclical tilts. We are overweight credit versus government bonds, underweight duration and, in equity sectors, overweight energy, industrials and IT (and healthcare for structural reasons). Among alts, we prefer real estate and private equity over hedge funds and structured products. We limit beta through overweights (in common currency terms) on U.S. equities versus Europe and emerging markets. We also have a (currency-hedged) overweight on Japanese stocks. Feature Overview A Shift To Reflation The next 12 months are likely to see stronger economic growth, particularly in the U.S., and higher inflation. That will probably lead to higher long-term interest rates, the Fed hiking two or three times in 2017, and further dollar strength. The consequences should be bad for bonds, but mixed for equities - which would benefit from a better earnings outlook, but might see multiples fall because of a higher discount rate. The election of Donald Trump merely accelerates the rotation from monetary policy to fiscal policy that had been emerging globally since the summer. Trump's fiscal plans are still somewhat vague,1 but the OECD estimates they will add 0.4 percentage points to U.S. GDP growth in 2017 and 0.8 points in 2018, and 0.1 and 0.3 points to global growth. Growth was already accelerating before the U.S. presidential election. Global leading indicators have picked up noticeably (Chart 1), and the Q3 U.S. earnings season surprised significantly on the upside, with EPS growth of 3% (versus a pre-results expectation of -2%) - the first YoY growth in 18 months (Chart 2). Chart 1Global Growth Picking Up bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c1 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c1 Chart 2U.S. Earnings Growing Again bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c2 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c2 The problem with the shift to fiscal, then, is that it comes at a time when slack in U.S. economy has already largely disappeared. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the output gap is now only -1.5%, which means it is likely to turn positive in 2017 (Chart 3). Unemployment, at 4.6%, is below NAIRU2 (Chart 4). Historically, the output gap turning positive has sown the seeds of the next recession a couple of years later, as the Fed tightens policy to choke off inflation. Chart 3Output Gap Will Close In 2017 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c3 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c3 Chart 4Will This Trigger Inflation Pressures? bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c4 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c4 As the Fed signaled at its meeting on December 14, it is likely to raise rates two or three times more in 2017. But we don't see it getting any more hawkish than that. Janet Yellen has made it clear that she will not preempt Trump's fiscal stimulus but rather wait to see it passed by Congress. The market is probably about right in pricing in an 80% probability of two rate hikes in 2017, and a 50% probability of three. With the Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker rising 3.9% YoY and commodity prices (especially energy) starting to add to headline inflation, the Fed clearly wants to head off inflation before it sets in. We do not agree with the argument that the Fed will deliberately allow a "high-pressure economy." The result is likely to be higher long-term rates. The 10-year U.S. yield has already moved a long way (up 100 BP since July), and our model suggests fair value currently is around 2.3% (Chart 5). Short term, then, a correction is quite possible (and would be accompanied by moves in other assets that have overshot since November 9). But stronger global growth and an appreciating dollar over the next 12 months could easily push fair value up to 3% or beyond. The relationship between nominal GDP growth (which is likely to be 4.5-5% in 2017, compared to 2.7% in 1H 2016) and long-term rates implies a rise to a similar level (Chart 6). Accordingly, we recommend investors to be underweight duration and prefer TIPs over nominal bonds. Chart 5U.S. 10-Year At Fair Value U.S. 10-Year At Fair Value U.S. 10-Year At Fair Value Chart 6Rise In Nominal GDP Could Push It Up To 3% Rise In Nominal GDP Could Push It Up To 3% Rise In Nominal GDP Could Push It Up To 3% Global equities, on a risk-adjusted basis, performed roughly in line with sovereign bonds in 2016 - producing a total return of 9.2%, compared to 3.3% for bonds (though global high yield did even better, up 15.1%). If our analysis above is correct, the return on global sovereign bonds over the next 12 months is likely to be close to zero. Chart 7Will Investors Reverse The Move##br## from Equities To Bonds? Will Investors Reverse The Move from Equities To Bonds? Will Investors Reverse The Move from Equities To Bonds? The outlook for equities is not unclouded. Higher rates could dampen growth (note, for example, that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages in the U.S. have risen over the past two months from 3.4% to 4.2%, close to the 10-year average of 4.6%). The U.S. earnings recovery will be capped by the stronger dollar.3 And a series of Fed hikes may lower the PE multiple, already quite elevated by historical standards. Erratic behavior by President Trump and the more market-unfriendly of his policies could raise the risk premium. But we think it likely that equities will produce a decent positive return in this environment. Portfolio rebalancing should help. Since the Global Financial Crisis investors have steadily shifted allocations from equities into bonds (Chart 7). They are likely to reverse that over the coming quarters if bond yields continue to trend up. Accordingly, we moved overweight equities versus bonds in our last Monthly Portfolio Update.4 Our recommended portfolio has mostly pro-cyclical tilts: we are overweight credit versus government bonds, overweight most cyclical equity sectors, and have a preference for risk alternative assets such as real estate and private equity. But our portfolio approach is to pick the best spots for taking risk in order to make a required return. We, therefore, balance this pro-cyclicality by some lower beta stances: we prefer investment grade debt over high yield, and U.S. and Japanese equities over Europe and emerging markets. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com What Our Clients Are Asking What Will Trump Do? Trump made several speeches in September with details of his tax plan. He promised to (1) simplify personal income tax, cutting seven brackets to three, with 12%, 25% and 33% tax rates; (2) cut the headline corporate tax rate to 15% (from 35%); and (3) levy a 10% tax on the $3 trillion of corporate retained earnings held offshore. He was less specific on infrastructure spending, but Wilbur Ross, the incoming Commerce Secretary, mentioned $550 billion, principally financed through public-private partnerships. The Tax Policy Center estimates the total cost of the tax plan at $6 trillion (with three-quarters from the business tax cut). But it is not clear how much will be offset by reduced deductions. Incoming Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, for example, said that upper class taxpayers will get no absolute tax cut. TPC estimates the tax plan alone will increase federal debt to GDP by 25 percentage points over the next 10 years (Chart 8). The OECD, assuming stimulus of 0.75% of GDP in 2017 and 1.75% in 2018, estimates that this will raise U.S. GDP growth by 0.4 percentage points next year and by 0.8 points in 2018, with positive knock-on effects on the rest of the world (Chart 9). While there are questions on the timing (and how far Trump will go with trade and immigration measures), BCA's geopolitical strategists sees few constraints on getting these plans passed.5 Republications in Congress like tax cuts (and will compromise on the public spending element) and it is wrong to assume that Republican administrations reduce the fiscal deficit - historically the opposite is true (Chart 10). Chart 8Massive Increase In Debt Quarterly - December 2016 Quarterly - December 2016 Chart 9GDP Impact Of U.S. Fiscal Stimulus Quarterly - December 2016 Quarterly - December 2016 Chart 10A Lot of Stimulus, And Extra Debt bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c10 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c10 Implications for markets? Short term positive for growth and inflation; longer-term a worry because of crowding out from the increased government debt. How Will The Strong USD Impact Global Earnings? We have a strong U.S. dollar view and also favor U.S. equities over the euro area and emerging markets. Some clients question our logic because conceptually a strong USD should benefit earnings growth in the non-U.S. markets, and therefore non-U.S. equities should outperform. Chart 11USD Impact On Global Earnings bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c11 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c11 Currency is just one of the factors that we consider when we make country allocation decisions, and our weights are expressed in USD terms unhedged. We will hedge a currency only when we have very high conviction, such as our current Japan overweight with a yen hedge, which is based on our belief that the BOJ will pursue more unconventional policies to stimulate the economy. This is undoubtedly yen bearish but positive for Japanese stocks. As shown in Chart 11, a stronger USD has tended to weaken U.S. earnings growth (panel 1). However, what matters to country allocation is relative earnings growth. Panels 3 and 5 show that in local currency terms, earnings growth in emerging markets and the euro area did not always outpace that in the U.S. when their currencies depreciated against the USD. In fact, when their currencies appreciated, earnings growth in USD terms tended to outpace that in the U.S. (panels 2 and 4), suggesting that the translation impact plays a very important role. This is consistent with what we have found for relative equity market returns (see Global Equity section on page 13). Currency affects revenues and costs in different proportions. If both revenues and costs are in same currency, then only net profit is affected by the currency. But, since many companies manage their forex exposure, at the aggregate level the currency impact will always be "weaker than it should be". What Is The Outlook For Brexit And The Pound? The U.K. shocked the world on 24 June 2016 with its vote to leave the European Union. However, the process and terms of exit are yet to be finalized pending the Supreme Court's decision on the role of parliament in invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty. Depending on this decision, there is a spectrum of possible outcomes for the U.K./EU relationship. At the two ends of the spectrum are: 1) a hard Brexit - complete separation from the EU, in which case the pound will plunge further; 2) a soft Brexit - with a few features of the current relationship retained, in which case the pound will rally. Chart 12What's Up Brexit? What's Up Brexit? What's Up Brexit? The fall in the nominal effective exchange rate to a 200-year low (Chart 12) is a clear indication of the potential serious long-term damage. With the nation's dependence on foreign direct investment (FDI) to finance its large current account deficit (close to 6% of GDP), more populist policies and increased regulation will hurt corporate profitability, making local assets less profitable to foreigners. The pound is currently caught up in a vicious circle of more depreciation, leading to higher inflation expectations and depressed real rates, which adds further selling pressure. This is the likely path of the pound in the case of a hard Brexit. For U.K. equities, under a hard Brexit that adds downward pressure to the pound, investors should favor firms with global revenues (FTSE 100) and underweight firms exposed more to domestic business and a potential recession (FTSE 250). The opposite holds true in the case of a soft Brexit. Investors should also underweight U.K. REITs because of cyclical and structural factors that will affect commercial real estate. In the case of a hard Brexit, structural long-term impacts to the British economy include: 1) a decline in the financial sector - the EU will introduce regulations that will force euro-denominated transactions out of London; 2) a slowdown in FDI - the U.K. will cease to be a platform for global companies to access the EU, triggering a long-term decline in foreign inflows; 3) weaker growth - with EU immigration into the U.K. expected to fall by 90,000 to 150,000 per year, estimates.6 point to a 3.4% to 5.4% drop in per capita GDP by the year 2030. What Industry Group Tilts Do You Recommend? In October 2015, we advocated that, because long-term returns for major asset classes would fall short of ingrained expectations, investors should increase alpha by diving down into the Industry Group level.7 How have these trades fared, and which would we still recommend? Long Household And Personal Products / Short Energy. We closed the trade for a profit of 12.2% in Q12016. This has proven to be quite timely as oil prices, and Energy stocks along with it, have rallied substantially since. Long Insurance / Short Banks. The early gains from this trade reversed in Q2 as long yields have risen rapidly, leading to yield curve steepening. However, our cyclical view is still intact. Relative performance is still holding its relationship with the yield curve (Chart 13). Historically, Fed tightening has almost always led to bear flattening. We expect the same in this cycle, which should lead to Insurance outperformance. Long Health Care Equipment / Short Materials. This trade generated early returns but has since underperformed as Materials bounced back sharply. Nevertheless, we remain bearish on commodities and EM-related plays, viewing this rise in Materials stocks as more of a technical bounce from oversold valuations (Chart 14). Commodities remain in a secular bear market. On health care, we maintain our structural bullish outlook given aging demographics, increased spending on health care and attractive valuations. Short Retail / Global Broad. We initiated trade in January after the Fed initiated liftoff. Consumer Discretionary stocks collapsed after, and this trade has provided a gain of 2.01%. We maintain this view as the recent hike and 2017 hikes will continue to dampen Retail performance (Chart 15). Additionally, Retail has only declined slightly while other Consumer Discretionary stocks have falling drastically, suggesting downside potential from convergence. Chart 13Flatter Yield Curve Is Bullish bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c13 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c13 Chart 14An Oversold Bounce bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c14 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c14 Chart 15Policy Tightening = Underperformance bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c15 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c15 Global Economy Overview: The macro picture looks fairly healthy, with growth picking up in developed economies and China, though not in most emerging markets. The weak patch from late 2015 through the first half of 2016, with global industrial and profits recessions, appears to be over. The biggest threat to growth now is excessive dollar strength, which would slow U.S. exports and harm emerging markets. U.S.: U.S. growth was surprising on the upside (Chart 16) even before the election. Q2 real GDP growth came in at 3.2% and the Fed's Nowcasting models indicate 2.6-2.7% in Q4. After rogue weak ISMs in August, the manufacturing indicator has recovered to 53.2 and the non-manufacturing ISM to 57.2. However, growth continues to be driven mainly by consumption, with capex as yet showing few signs of recovery. A key question is whether a Trump stimulus will be enough to reignite "animal spirits" and push corporates to invest more. Euro Area: Eurozone growth has also been surprisingly robust. PMIs for manufacturing and services in November came in at 53.7 and 53.8 respectively; the manufacturing PMI has been accelerating all year. This is consistent with the ECB's forecasts for GDP growth of 1.7% for both this year and next. However, risk in the banking system could derail this growth. Credit growth, highly correlated with economic activity, has picked up to 1.8% YOY but could slow if banks turn cautious. Japan: Production data has reacted somewhat to Chinese stimulus, with IP growth positive (Chart 17) for the past three months and the Leading Economic Index inching higher since April. But the strength of the yen until recently and disappointing inflation performance (core CPI -0.4% YOY) have depressed exports and consumer sentiment. The effectiveness of the BoJ's 0% yield cap on 10-year government bonds, which has weakened the yen by 14% in two months, should trigger a mild acceleration of growth in coming quarters. Chart 16U.S. Economy Surprising ##br##On The Upside bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c16 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c16 Chart 17Growth Picks Up In##br## Most DMs And China bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c17 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c17 Emerging Markets: China has continued to see positive effects from its reflation of early 2016, with the manufacturing PMI close to a two-year high. The effects of the stimulus will last a few more months, but the authorities have reined back now and the currency is appreciating against its trade basket. The picture is less bright in other emerging markets, as central banks struggle with weak growth and depreciating currencies. Credit growth is slowing almost everywhere (most notably Turkey and Brazil) which threatens a further slowdown in growth in 2017. Interest rates: Inflation expectations have risen sharply in the U.S. following the election, but less so in the eurozone and Japan. They may rise further - pushing U.S. bond yields close to 3% - if the Trump administration implements a fiscal stimulus anywhere close to that hinted at. This could, in turn, push the Fed to raise rates at least twice more in 2017. The ECB has announced a reduction in its asset purchases starting in April 2017, too, but the Bank of Japan will allow inflation to overshoot before tightening. Chart 18Earnings Bottoming But##br## Valuation Stretched bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c18 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c18 Global Equities Cautiously Optimistic: Global markets have embraced the "hoped for" pro-growth and inflationary policies from the new U.S. administration since Trump's win on November 8. In the latest GAA Monthly Update published on November 30,8 we raised our recommendation for global equities relative to bonds to overweight from neutral on a 6-12 month investment horizon. However, the call was driven more by underweighting bonds than by overweighting equities, given the elevated equity valuations and declining profit margins.(Chart 18) The hoped-for U.S. pro-growth policies would, if well implemented, be positive for earnings growth, but the "perceived" earnings boost has not yet shown up in analysts' earnings revisions (panel 3). In fact, only three sectors (Financials, Technology and Energy) currently have positive earnings revisions, because analysts had already been raising forward earnings estimates since early 2016. According to I/B/E/S data as of November 2016, about 80% of sectors are forecast to have positive 12-month forward earnings growth, while only about 20% have positive 12-month trailing earnings growth (panel 3). Within global equities, we continue to favor developed markets over emerging market on the grounds that most EMs are at an early stage of a multi-year deleveraging.9 We also favor the U.S. over the euro area (see more details on the next page). The Japan overweight (currency hedged) is an overwrite of our quant model: we believe that the BoJ will pursue increasingly unconventional monetary policy measures over the coming 12 months. The quant model (in USD and unhedged) has suggested a large underweight in Japan but has gradually reduced the underweight over the past two months. Our global sector positioning is more pro-cyclical than our more defensively-oriented country allocations. In line with our asset class call, we upgrade Financials to neutral and downgrade Utilities to underweight, and continue to overweight Energy, Technology, Industrials, and Healthcare while underweighting Telecom, Consumer Discretionary and Consumer Staples. Country Allocation: Still Favor U.S. Over Euro Area GAA's portfolio approach is to take risk where it is likely to be best rewarded. Having taken risk at the asset class level (overweight equities vs. bonds), at the global equity sector level with a pro-cyclical tilt, and at the bond class level with credit and inflation tilts, we believe it's appropriate to maintain our more defensive equity tilt at the country level by being market weight in euro area equities on an unhedged USD basis while maintaining a large overweight in the U.S. Chart 19Uninspiring profit Outlook bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c19 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c19 It's true that the euro area PMI has been improving. Relative to the U.S., however, the euro area's cyclical improvement, driven by policy support, has lost momentum. It's hard to envision what would reverse this declining growth momentum, suggesting European earnings growth will remain at a disadvantage to the U.S. (Chart 19, panel 1) It's also true that the underperformance of eurozone equities versus the U.S. has reached an historical extreme in both local and common currency terms, and that euro equities are trading at significant discount to the U.S. But Europe has always traded at a discount, and the current discount is only slightly lower than its historical average. Our work has shown that valuation works well only when it is at extremes, which is not the case currently. Conceptually, a weak euro should boost euro area equity performance at least in local currency terms, yet empirical evidence does not strongly support such a claim: the severe underperformance since 2007 has been accompanied by a 43% drop in the euro versus the USD (Chart 19 panel 2). In fact, in USD terms, the euro area tended to outperform the U.S. when the euro was strong (panel 3), suggesting that currency translation plays a more dominant role in relative performance. Our currency house view is that the euro will depreciate further against the USD, given divergences in monetary and fiscal policy between the two regions. As such, we recommend clients to continue to favor U.S. equities versus the euro area, but not be underweight Europe given that it is technically extremely oversold. Sector Allocation: Upgrade Financials To Neutral Our sector quant model shifted global Financials to overweight in December from underweight, largely driven by the momentum factor. We agree with the direction of the quant model as the interest rate environment has changed (Chart 20, panel 1) and valuation remains very attractive (panels 2), but we are willing to upgrade the sector only to market weight due to our concern on banks in the euro area and emerging markets. Within the neutral stance in the sector, we still prefer U.S. and Japanese Financials to eurozone and emerging market ones. Despite the poor performance of the Financials sector relative to the global benchmark, U.S. and Japanese financials have consistently outperformed eurozone financials, driven by better relative earnings without any valuation expansion (panel 3). U.S. banks have largely repaired their balance sheets since the Great Recession, and the "promised" deregulation by the new U.S. administration will probably help U.S. banks. In the euro area, however, banks, especially in Italy, are still plagued with bad loans (panel 4). We will watch banking stress in the region very closely for signs of contagion (panel 5) The upgrade of financials is mainly financed by downgrading the bond proxy Utilities to underweight from neutral, in line with our asset class view underweighting fixed income. Chart 20Global Financials: Regional Divergence bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c20 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c20 Chart 21Global Equities: No Style Bet bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c21 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c21 Smart Beta Update: No Style Bet In a Special Report on Smart Beta published on July 8 2016,10 we showed that it is very hard to time style shifts and that an equal-weighted composite of the five most enduring factors (size, value, quality, minimum volatility and momentum) outperforms the broad market consistently on a risk-adjusted basis. Year-to-date, the composite has performed in line with the broad market, but over the past three months there have been sharp reversals in the performance of the different factors, with Min Vol, Quality and Momentum sharply underperforming Value and Size (Chart 21 panel 1). We showed that historically the Value/Growth tilt has been coincident with the Cyclical/Defensive sector tilt (panel 3). Panel 2 also demonstrates that the Min Vol strategy's relative performance can also be well explained by the Defensives/Cyclicals sector tilt. Sector composition matters. Compared to Growth, Value is now overweight Financials by 25.6%, Utilities by 13.2%, Energy by 8.3% and Materials by 2.5%, while underweight Tech by 23%, Healthcare by 12.7%, and Consumer Discretionary by 10%. REITs is in pure Growth, while Utilities and Telecom are in pure Value, and Energy has very little representation in Growth. In our global sector allocation, we favor Tech, REITs, Energy, and Healthcare, while underweight Utilities, Consumer Discretionary and Telecoms, and neutral on Financials and Materials. As such, maintaining a neutral stance on Value vs. Growth is consistent with our sector positioning. Government Bonds Maintain slight underweight duration. After 35 years, the secular bull market in government bonds is over. Even with Treasury yields skyrocketing since the Trump victory, the path of least resistance for yields is upward (Chart 22). Yields should grind higher slowly as inflation rises and growth indicators continue to improve. Bullish sentiment has dropped considerably, but there is further downside potential. Additionally, fiscal stimulus from Japan and further rate hikes from the Fed will provide considerable tailwinds. Overweight TIPS vs. Treasuries. Despite still being below the Fed's target, with headline and core CPI readings of 1.6% and 2.2% respectively, U.S. inflation has clearly bottomed for the cycle (Chart 23). This continued rise is a result of cost-push inflation driven by faster wage growth. Trump's increased spending and protectionist trade policies are both inflationary. As real GDP growth should remain around 2% annualized and the labor market continues to tighten, this effect will only intensify. Valuations have become less attractive but very gradual Fed hikes will not be enough to derail the upward momentum in consumer prices. Overweight JGBs. The BoJ has ramped up its commitment to exceeding 2% inflation by expanding its monetary base and locking in 10-year sovereign yields at zero percent. Additionally, the end of the structural decline in interest rates suggests global bonds will perform poorly going forward. During global bond bear markets, low-beta Japanese government debt has typically outperformed (Chart 24). This will likely hold true again as global growth improves and Japanese authorities increase fiscal stimulus while maintaining their cap on bond yields. Chart 22Maintain Slight Underweight Duration bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c22 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c22 Chart 23Inflation Uptrend Intact bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c23 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c23 Chart 24Overweight JGBs bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c24 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c24 Corporate Bonds The BCA Corporate Health Monitor remains deeply in "Deteriorating Health" territory, indicating weakness within corporate balance sheets (Chart 25). Over the last quarter, the rate of deterioration actually slowed, with all six ratios improving slightly. Nevertheless, the trend toward weaker corporate health has been firmly established over the past eleven quarters. This is consistent with the very late stages of past credit cycles. Maintain overweight to Investment Grade debt. In the absence of a recession, spread product will usually outperform. U.S. growth should accelerate in 2017, with consumer confidence being resilient, fiscal spending expected to increase, and the drag from inventories unwinding. Monetary conditions are still accommodative and the potential sell-off from the rate hike should be milder than it was in December 2015 (Chart 26). Additionally, credit has historically outperformed in the early stages of the Fed tightening cycle. However, there are two key risks to our view. The end of the structural decline in interest rates presents a substantial headwind to investment grade performance. Since 1973, median and average returns were slightly negative during months where long-term yields rose. During the blow-off in yields in the late 1970s, corporate debt performed very poorly. However, yields had reached very high levels. Secondly, valuations are unattractive, with OAS spreads at their lowest in about one and a half years (Chart 27). Chart 25Balance Sheets Deteriorating Balance Sheets Deteriorating Balance Sheets Deteriorating Chart 26Still Accommodative bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c26 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c26 Chart 27Expensive Valuations bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c27 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c27 Commodities Secular Perspective: Bearish We reiterate our negative long-term outlook on the commodity complex on the back of a structural downward shift in global demand led primarily by China's transition to a services-driven economy. With this slack in demand, global excess capacity has sent deflationary impulses across the globe, limiting upside in commodity prices.11 Chart 28OPEC To The Rescue bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c28 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c28 Cyclical Perspective: Neutral A divergent outlook for energy and base metals gives us a neutral view for aggregate commodities over the cyclical horizon (Chart 28). Last month's OPEC deal supports our long-standing argument of increasing cuts in oil supply, which will support energy prices. However, metal markets suffer from excess supply. A stronger U.S. dollar will continue to be a major headwind over the coming months. Energy: OPEC's agreement to cut production by 1.2 mb/d has spurred a rally in the crude oil price, as prospects for tighter market conditions next year become the base case. However, with the likelihood that the dollar will strengthen further in coming months, oil will need more favorable fundamentals to rise substantially in price from here. Base Metals: The U.S. dollar has much greater explanatory power12 than Chinese demand in price formation for base metals. The recent rally in base metals is overdone with metals prices decoupling from the dollar; we expect a correction in the near-term driven by further dollar strength. Metal markets remain oversupplied as seen by rising iron ore and copper inventories. We remain bearish on industrial and base metals. Precious Metals: Gold, after decoupling from forward inflation expectations in H1 2016 - rising while inflation expectations were weak - has converged back in line with the long-term inflation gauge. Our expectation of higher inflation, coupled with rising geopolitical uncertainties, remain the two key positives for the gold price. However, our forecast of U.S. dollar appreciation will limit upside potential for the precious metal. Currencies Key Themes: USD: Much of the post-Trump rally in the dollar can be explained by the sharp rally in U.S. bond yields (Chart 29). We expect more upside in U.S. real rates relative to non-U.S. rates, driven by the U.S.'s narrower output gap and the stronger position of its household sector. As labor market slack continues to lessen and wage pressures rise, the Fed will be careful not to fall behind the curve; this will add upward pressure to the dollar. Chart 29Dollar Continues It's Dominance bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c29 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c29 Euro: Since the euro area continues to have a wider output gap than the U.S., the euro will face additional downward pressure on the back of diverging monetary policy. As the slack diminishes, the ECB will respond appropriately - we believe the euro has less downside versus the dollar than does the yen. Yen: Although the Japanese economy is nearing fully employment, the Abe administration continues to talk about additional stimulus. As inflation expectations struggle to find a firm footing despite the stimulus, the BOJ is explicitly aiming to stay behind the curve. Additionally, with the BOJ pegging the 10-year government bond yield at 0% for the foreseeable future, we expect further downward pressure on the currency. EM: We expect more tumult for this group as rising real rates have been negative for EM assets in this cycle. EM spreads have widened in response to rising DM yields which has led to more restrictive local financial conditions. The recovery in commodity prices has been unable to provide any relief to EM currencies - a clear sign of continued weak fundamentals (rising debt, excess capacity and low productivity). Commodity currencies will face more downside driven by their tight correlation with EM equities (0.82) and with EM spreads. Alternatives Overweight private equity / underweight hedge funds. Global growth is fairly stable and has the potential to surprise on the upside. In the absence of a recession, private equity typically outperforms as the illiquidity premium should provide a considerable boost to returns. Hedge funds, on the other hand, have displayed a negative correlation with global growth. Historically, they have outperformed private equity only during recessions or periods of high credit market stress (Chart 30). Overweight direct real estate / underweight commodity futures. Commercial real estate (CRE) assets are in a "goldilocks" scenario: Growth is sufficient to generate sustainable tenant demand without triggering a new supply cycle. Favor Industrials for its income potential and Retail given resilient consumer spending. Overweight trophy markets, as demand remains robust given multiple macro risks. Commodities have bounced, but remain in a secular bear market caused by a supply glut and exacerbated by a market-share war (Chart 31). Overweight farmland & timberland / underweight structured products. The trajectory of Fed policy, the run-up in equity prices and the weak earnings backdrop have increased the importance of volatility reduction. Favor farmland & timberland. Substantial portfolio diversification benefits, resulting from low correlations with traditional assets, coupled with a positive skew, make these assets highly attractive. As the most bond-like alternative, structured products tend to outperform during recessions, which is not our base case (Chart 32). Chart 30PE: Tied To Real Growth bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c30 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c30 Chart 31Commodities: A Secular Bear Market bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c31 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c31 Chart 32Structured Products Outperform In Recessions bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c32 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c32 Risks To Our View Our main scenario is for stronger growth, higher inflation and an appreciating dollar in 2017, leading to equities outperforming bonds. Where could this go wrong? Growth stagnates. U.S. growth could fail to pick up as expected: the stronger dollar will hurt profits, which might lead to companies cutting back on hiring; higher interest rates could affect the housing market and consumer discretionary spending; companies may fail to increase capex, given their low capacity utilization ratio (Chart 33). In Europe, systemic banking problems could push down credit growth which is closely correlated to economic growth. Emerging markets might see credit events caused by the stronger dollar and weaker commodities prices. Political risks. An unconventional new U.S. President raises uncertainty. How much will Trump emphasize his more market-unfriendly policies, such as tougher immigration control, tariffs on Chinese and Mexican imports, and interference in companies' decisions on where to build plants? His more confrontational foreign policy stance risks geopolitical blow-ups. Elections in France, the Netherland and Germany in 2017 could produce populist government. The Policy Uncertainty Index currently is high and this historically has been bad for equities (Chart 34). Chart 33Maybe Companies Won't Increase Capex bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c33 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c33 Chart 34Policy Uncertainty Is High bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c34 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c34 Synchronized global growth. If the growth acceleration were not limited to the U.S. but were to spread, this might mean that the dollar would depreciate, particularly as it is already above fair value (Chart 35). In this environment, given their inverse correlation with the dollar (Chart 36), commodity prices and EM assets might rise, invalidating our underweight positions. Chart 35Dollar Already Above##br## Fair Value Dollar Already Above Fair Value Dollar Already Above Fair Value Chart 36How Would EM And Commodities Move##br## If USD Weakens? bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c36 bca.gaa_qpo_2016_12_15_c36 1 We discuss them in the "What Our Clients Are Asking," section of this Quarterly Portfolio Outlook. 2 Non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment - the level of unemployment below which inflation tends to rise. 3 Please see "How Will The Strong USD Impact Global Earnings," in the What Our Clients Are Asking section of this Quarterly Portfolio Outlook. 4 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Monthly Portfolio Update: The Meaning of Trump," dated November 30, 2016, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Constraints And Preferences Of The Trump Presidency", dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 According to National Institute of Economic Research.com. 7 Please see Global Asset Allocation Strategy Special Report, "Asset Allocation In A Low-Return World, Part IV: Industry Groups," dated October 25, 2015, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Global Asset Allocation,"Monthly Portfolio Update," dated November 30, 2016 available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report,"Refreshing Our Long-Term Themes," dated December 5, 2016 available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 10 Please see Global Asset Allocation Strategy Special Report, "Is Smart Beta A Useful Tool In Global Asset Allocation?," dated July 8, 2016, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 11,12 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Refreshing Our Long-Term Themes," dated December 5, 2016 available at gaa.bcaresearch.com Recommended Asset Allocation
The REIT index is oversold and undervalued on a cyclical basis, and fundamentals are improving, as shown in the previous Insight. Contrary to popular perception, relative performance is also depressed from a structural perspective. The chart shows that REIT relative performance is trading well below its long-term trend. In other words, the past few years of the search for yield did not trigger a stampede into the REIT sector, suggesting that a further rise in bond yields may not trigger additional REIT selling pressure. While Fed interest rate hikes may provide some pause for potential buyers, it is notable that relative performance has a decent track during Fed tightening cycles (see the shading), especially when the starting point for the share price ratio is below-trend. The implication is that the vicious correction in the S&P REIT sector is an excellent buying opportunity. Stay overweight. (Part II) Buy Into REIT Weakness (Part II) Buy Into REIT Weakness
The backup in global bond yields has provided investors with an excuse to sell any high yielding sector or group, regardless of valuation. For instance, the short-term relative performance of the S&P REIT index has been highly correlated (inversely) with 10-year Treasury yields. The sell-off has pushed our REIT valuation gauge to extremely undervalued levels, on a par with previous playable relative performance recoveries. We expect a replay, as REIT fundamentals are improving. The chart shows that our REIT Demand Indicator has popped back into positive territory, which bodes well for future rental income. The latter is also directionally correlated with commercial property prices, which are hitting new highs. Importantly, concerns about excess supply should start to wane, particularly in the residential space, given that multifamily housing starts are rapidly losing momentum compared with total housing starts. On a long-term basis, REITs are far from extended, please see the next Insight. bca.uses_in_2016_12_15_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_12_15_001_c1
Highlights The valuation discount on Italian banks still seems insufficient for the sector's excess NPLs. We expect a better long-term buying opportunity sometime next year. Stay underweight the MIB and IBEX versus the Eurostoxx600. Stay underweight the Eurostoxx600 versus the S&P500. Long Italian BTPs versus French OATs has quickly achieved its profit target. Now prefer long Spanish Bonos versus French OATs. Feature Assessing The Value In Italian Banks Investment reductionism says that the valuation of a bank distils down to three things: The expected size of the bank's assets. In the standard banking model, the dominant asset is the bank's loan book. The expected profitability of the bank's assets. In the standard banking model, the dominant driver of profitability is the net interest margin (the difference between the interest rate received on loans and the interest rate paid on deposits). The expected amount of equity capital required against the bank's assets. The equity capital must absorb the bank's loan losses but it also receives the profits. Increasing the amount of equity capital dilutes the profits over a larger number of shares, and thereby lowers the bank's share price. Chart of the WeekSpain And France have Raised €100bn Of Bank Equity Capital... Italy Has Not Spain And France have Raised €100bn Of Bank Equity Capital... Italy Has Not Spain And France have Raised €100bn Of Bank Equity Capital... Italy Has Not Today, the potential reward of owning Italian banks is that they trade at a large valuation discount. Admittedly, growth in assets and profit margins is likely to be anaemic. But Italian banks trade on a price to forward earnings multiple of less than 10. Not only does this seem cheap in absolute terms, it is a 25% discount to other European banks (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Italian Banks Trade At A Significant Discount bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c2 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c2 Chart I-3Italian Bank NPLs Have Increased Sharply bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c3 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c3 But the risk of owning Italian banks is that they still carry €170bn of un-provisioned non-performing loans (NPLs), which is likely to require a large - and dilutive - increase in equity capital. NPLs have increased much more sharply in Italy than in Spain or France (Chart I-3). But the more significant difference is that Italian banks have not yet raised equity capital as a cushion against their rising NPLs. Since 2009, Spanish banks and French banks have both increased their equity capital by more than €100bn. Over this same period, Italian banks have actually shrunk their equity capital (Chart of the Week). Given that Italian bank equity capital stands at €150bn, today's 25% valuation discount is pricing a dilutive increase in equity capital of around €50bn. Will this be a sufficient cushion? Chart I-4How Much Equity Capital Do Italian Banks Require? How Much Equity Capital Do Italian Banks Require? How Much Equity Capital Do Italian Banks Require? Our assessment is that it still might be insufficient. Our prudent benchmark is that the Italian banking sector lifts its equity capital to NPL multiple to the lowest coverage that the Spanish banking sector reached in recent years (Chart I-4). That would require Italy to emulate Spain and France and raise closer to €100bn of fresh bank equity capital. Also beware that if an undercapitalized bank cannot raise sufficient equity capital privately in the markets, there is a danger that its investors could suffer heavy losses. This is because the EU rules on state aid for banks changed at the start of 2016. The EU Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD) allows a government to step in with a 'precautionary' capital injection only after a first-loss 'bail-in' of the bank's equity and bond holders. Hence, Italian banks are a potential buy if you believe €50bn of extra equity capital will fully alleviate concerns about the large stock of un-provisioned NPLs... and if you believe that the sector's plan to raise equity capital in the market will avoid any major mishap. Given global banks' strong recent bounce, we expect a better long-term buying opportunity sometime next year. Value Doesn't Help Pick Equity Markets Chart I-5Italy's MIB Looks Cheap bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c5 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c5 The headline cheapness of Italian banks inevitably makes Italy's MIB look relatively cheap too (Chart I-5), especially given the Italian stock market's overweighting to banks. Some people suggest sector-adjusting stock market valuations to neutralize the dominating sector skews, thereby creating a truer picture of relative valuation. Adjusted for these sector skews, is a stock market cheap or expensive? This question may be of interest to academics, but it has very little practical relevance for stock market selection. Compared to France's CAC, Italy's MIB and Spain's IBEX are indeed cheaper mainly because of their large overweight to banks. But this cannot change the inescapable fact that this defining large overweight to banks is precisely what drives MIB and IBEX relative performance. Likewise, compared to the S&P500, the Eurostoxx600 is much cheaper mainly because of its overweight to banks combined with its large underweight to technology. But this cannot change the inescapable fact that this defining overweight to banks combined with large underweight to technology is precisely what drives Eurostoxx600 versus S&P500 relative performance. For the sceptics, the charts on page 5 should leave no doubt that everything else is largely irrelevant. The recent outperformance of banks is just a manifestation of the Trump reflation trade, nothing more, nothing less (Chart I-6). Indeed, most of the moves in financial markets over the past month reduce to the same trade in one guise or another. This reflation trade has gone too far too fast, and we would now lean against it. An underweight to banks necessarily means underweighting the MIB and IBEX (Charts I-7 and I-8). Chart I-6The Trump Reflation Trade Has Lifted Banks bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c6 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c6 Chart I-7Banks Drive The MIB Relative Performance bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c7 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c7 Chart I-8Banks Drive The IBEX Relative Performance bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c8 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c8 An underweight to banks and overweight to technology necessarily means underweighting the Eurostoxx600 versus the S&P500 (Charts I-9 and I-10). Chart I-9Banks Versus Technology... bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c9 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s1_c9 Chart I-10...Drive Eurostoxx600 Versus S&P500 ...Drive Eurostoxx600 Versus S&P500 ...Drive Eurostoxx600 Versus S&P500 Assessing The Value In French, Spanish And Italian Bonds Turning to bonds, the market has deemed that Italian BTPs and Spanish Bonos are more risky investments than French OATs. Therefore BTPs and Bonos require a yield premium over OATs. But what exactly is this yield premium for? In the unlikely event that a large euro area country like Italy or Spain defaulted on its sovereign euro-denominated debt, the monetary union as it stands would be unable to withstand the losses. The euro would likely break up, causing each country to redenominate its bonds into its own new currency, which would then rise or fall against the other new currencies. Today's yield premium on BTPs and Bonos over OATs is simply the expected value of the (annualised) loss that would be suffered in that eventuality. And this expected loss equals the product of two terms: the annual probability of euro break up and the expected depreciation of a new Italian lira (or new Spanish peseta) versus a new French franc after such a break up In turn, the expected depreciation of the lira or peseta versus the franc would broadly equal the respective economy's accumulated competitiveness shortfall versus France. Which leads to a powerful conclusion. Spain has rapidly eroded its competitiveness shortfall versus France, and is on course for full convergence within a couple of years (Chart I-11). If the second term of the above product becomes zero, so too must the product itself. Meaning the yield premium on Bonos over OATS must converge to zero - irrespective of whether the euro survives or not. Chart I-11Spainish Competitiveness Will Soon Reconverge With French Competitiveness Spainish Competitiveness Will Soon Reconverge With French Competitiveness Spainish Competitiveness Will Soon Reconverge With French Competitiveness Stay long Spanish Bonos versus French OATs. In the case of Italy, a substantial shortfall in competitiveness versus France (and now Spain) does exist, justifying a structural yield premium in BTPs. But recently, this premium widened further because of a larger first term in the above product - a perceived increase in the annual probability of euro break up after the no vote in Italy's referendum on constitutional reform, and Prime Minister Renzi's subsequent resignation. However, as we argued in Italy: Asking The Wrong Question,1 fears of the political repercussions of a no vote were overdone. As the market has come to realise this, the BTP yield premium has quickly retraced most of its recent widening. Our long Italian BTP versus French OATs bond pair trade has achieved its profit target in just 10 days, and we are now closing it (see section below). Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Published on December 1, 2016 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model* This week's recommended trade is to buy gold. Long Gold Long Gold Long Gold * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Long Italian Government Bonds / Short French Government Bonds Long Italian Government Bonds / Short French Government Bonds Long Italian Government Bonds / Short French Government Bonds The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c1 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c1 Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c2 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c2 Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c3 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c3 Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c4 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c4 Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch ##br## - Interest Rate Expectations bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c5 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c5 Chart II-6Indicators To Watch ##br## - Interest Rate Expectations bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c6 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c6 Chart II-7Indicators To Watch ##br## - Interest Rate Expectations bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c7 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c7 Chart II-8Indicators To Watch ##br## - Interest Rate Expectations bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c8 bca.eis_wr_2016_12_15_s2_c8
Feature At no time in recent history have China's foreign reserves been under such tight scrutiny by global investors as they are now. The country's multi-trillion-dollar official reserve assets, long viewed by both Chinese officials and the global investment community as an unproductive use of resources, have suddenly became a lifeline for China's exchange rate stability. The latest numbers released last week show China's official reserves currently stand at US$3.05 trillion, a massive drawdown from the US$3.99 trillion all-time peak reached in 2014. Over the years, we have been running a series of Special Reports tracking the composition of China's foreign asset holdings.1 This year's update has become all the more relevant. The monthly headline figures on China's official reserves have been eagerly anticipated for clues of domestic capital outflows and the RMB outlook. Meanwhile, as the largest foreign holder of American government paper, changes in China's official reserves are also being scrutinized to assess any impact on U.S. interest rates. Moreover, Chinese outward direct investment (ODI), which had already accelerated strongly in the past few years, has skyrocketed this year - partially driven by expectations of further RMB depreciation. The Chinese authorities have recently tightened scrutiny on large overseas investments by domestic firms, which will likely lead to a notable slowdown in Chinese ODI in the near term.2 This week we take a closer look at the U.S. Treasury International Capital (TIC) system data and various other sources to check the evolution of China's official reserves and foreign assets. There are some important caveats. First, Chinese holdings of U.S. assets reported by the TIC are not entirely held by the People's Bank of China in its official reserves. Some assets, particularly corporate bonds and equities, may be held by Chinese institutional investors. Meanwhile, it is well known that in recent years China has been using offshore custodians in some European countries, the usual suspects being Belgium, Luxembourg and the U.K., which disguises the true situation of the country's official reserve holdings. Finally, China's large conglomerates owned by the central government also hold vast amounts of foreign assets, or "shadow reserves" that could be utilized to support the RMB if needed. Recently these state-owned giants were reportedly required by the government to repatriate some of their foreign cash sitting idle overseas to counter capital outflows. All of this suggests the resources available to the government are larger than the official reserve figures. With these caveats, this week's update reveals some important developments in the past year: Chinese foreign reserves have dropped by around US$400 billion since the end of 2015 to US$3.05 trillion, a level last seen in 2005 when the RMB was de-pegged from the dollar followed by a multi-year ascendance (Chart 1). China still holds the largest amount of foreign reserves in the world, but its global share has dropped to about 40%, down from a peak of over 50% in 2014. TIC data show Chinese holdings of U.S. assets declined by a mere US$100 billion in the past year, leading to a sharp increase in U.S. assets as a share of the country's total foreign reserves (Table 1). This could be attributable to mark-to-market "paper losses" of Chinese holdings in non-dollar denominated foreign assets, due to the broad strength of the greenback. It is also possible that China may have intentionally increased its allocations to U.S. assets due to heightened risks in other countries, particularly in Europe. Chinese holdings of Japanese government bonds also increased significantly this past year. Table 1Chinese Foreign Exchange Reserves Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Chinese holdings of U.S. Treasurys have dropped by about US$100 billion in recent months, but holdings of some other countries suspected as China's overseas custodians have continued to rise (Chart 2). This could mean that Chinese holdings of U.S. assets could be larger than reflected in the TIC data. Chinese outward direct investments have continued to power ahead. Previously Chinese investments were heavily concentrated in commodities sectors and resource-rich countries. This year the U.S. has turned out to be the clear winner in attracting Chinese capital. Moreover, recent investment deals have been concentrated in consumer related sectors such as tourism, entertainment and technology industries. Chart 1Chinese Foreign Reserves##br## Have Continued To Decline bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c1 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c1 Chart 2U.S. Treasurys: How Much ##br##Does China Really Hold? bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c2 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c2 Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com Qingyun Xu, Senior Analyst qingyun@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Demystifying China's Foreign Assets", dated September 30, 2015, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “How Will China Manage The Impossible Trinity”, dated December 8, 2015, available at cis.bcaresearch.com China's official data shows that the country's total holdings of international assets have stayed flat at around US$6.2 trillion since 2014, including foreign exchange reserves, direct investment, overseas lending and holdings of bonds and equities. Official reserves have declined in recent years, but other holdings have jumped sharply. Reserves assets still account for over half of total foreign assets, but their share has continued to drop. In contrast, outward direct investment and overseas loans have gained significantly both in value terms and as a share of the country's total foreign assets. Chart 3 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c3 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c3 Chart 4 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c4 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c4 Despite the sharp decline, international investment positions by Chinese nationals, public and private combined, are still much more heavily concentrated in official reserve assets compared with other major economies. In other major creditor countries, outward direct investments and portfolio investments account for much larger shares than reserve assets. Official reserves in the U.S. are negligible. Chinese official reserves give the PBoC resources to maintain exchange rate stability, but they also lower the expected returns of the country's foreign assets. Encouraging domestic entities to acquire overseas assets directly has been a long-run policy. More recently, however, the authorities have been alarmed by the pace of Chinese nationals' overseas investment and have been taking restrictive measures. Chart 5 Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Our calculations shows that Chinese total holdings of U.S. assets reached US$1.74 trillion at the end of September 2016, including Treasurys, government agency bonds, corporate bonds, stocks and non-Treasury short-term custody liabilities of U.S. banks to Chinese official institutions, based on the TIC data (Table 1, on page 2). Treasurys still account for the majority of the country's total holdings of U.S. assets, while bonds and stocks are relatively insignificant. China's holdings of U.S. assets as a share of total reserves declined between the global financial crisis and 2014, since when the trend has reversed. The share of U.S. asset holdings currently accounts for 55% of Chinese official reserves, compared with a peak of over 70% in the early 2000s and a trough of 46% in 2014. This could also be attributable to the sharp appreciation of the U.S. dollar against other majors. The U.S. dollar carries a 42% weight in the SDR (Special Drawing Rights of the International Monetary Fund), and it accounts for about 60% of total foreign reserves managed by global central banks. These could be two relevant benchmarks to gauge China's desired level of holdings of U.S. dollar-denominated assets in its official reserves. Chart 6 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c6 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c6 Chart 7 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c7 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c7 In terms of duration, the major part of Chinese holdings of U.S. assets is long-term (with maturity more than one year), mainly in the form of government and agency bonds, corporate bonds and stocks. Chinese holdings of short-term U.S. assets were minimal in recent years but picked up notably in the past few months, while longer term assets declined. During the global financial crisis in 2008/09, China massively increased its holdings of short-term U.S. assets, amid a global drive of "flight to liquidity" at the height of the crisis. Chart 8 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c8 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c8 Chart 9 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c9 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c9 In terms of risk classification, the majority of Chinese holdings of U.S. assets are risk-free assets, including Treasurys and government agency bonds. China's holdings of these assets have plateaued in recent years. As a share of China's total reserves, U.S. risk-free assets currently account for about 45%, down from about 65% in 2003. Meanwhile, its accumulation of U.S. risky assets, including stocks and corporate bonds, has increased sharply in the past year. Chart 10 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c10 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c10 Chart 11 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c11 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c11 China currently holds US$1.16 trillion of Treasurys, which account for over 80% of total Chinese holdings of U.S. risk-free assets, or 37% of total Chinese foreign reserves. Notably, Treasurys as a share of Chinese foreign reserves have been relatively stable, ranging between 30% and 40% over the past decade. This may be the comfort zone for the Chinese authorities' asset allocation to the U.S. government paper. China's holdings of U.S. government agency bonds have picked up in the past year, but are still significantly lower than at its peak prior to the U.S. subprime debacle. Its share in Chinese foreign reserves has declined to 8% from a peak of close to 30% in 2008. Chart 12 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c12 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c12 Chart 13 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c13 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c13 Almost the entire Chinese holding of Treasurys is parked in long-term paper (with duration of more than one year). China's possession of short-term Treasurys has been negligible in recent years, but picked up notably of late. It is possible that the Chinese central bank may be increasing cash holdings to deal with capital outflows. Chart 14 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c14 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c14 Chart 15 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c15 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c15 Chinese holdings of risky U.S. assets - corporate bonds and equities - account for over 10% of China's total foreign reserves, up sharply since 2008 after China established its sovereign wealth fund. China's holdings of risky assets are predominately equities, currently standing at about USD 325 billion, little changed in recent years. Its possessions of corporate bonds are very low. Chart 16 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c16 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c16 Chart 17 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c17 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c17 China remains the largest foreign creditor to the U.S. government. Chinese holdings of U.S. Treasurys account for about 11% of total outstanding U.S. government bonds, or around 20% of total foreign holdings of U.S. Treasurys, according to our calculation. About 55% of outstanding U.S. Treasurys are held by foreigners. China is also one of the largest foreign holders of U.S. of agency bonds. While its holdings only accounts for 3% of total outstanding agency bonds, they account for around 25% of the total held by foreigners. About 12% of agency and GSE-backed securities are currently held by foreigners. Chart 18 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c18 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c18 Chart 19 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c19 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c19 Chinese outward direct investments have continued to march higher in the past year, reaching yet another record high in 2015, and will likely set a new record in 2016. Total overseas direct investments amount to USD 1.4 trillion, equivalent to about half of China's official reserves. China's overseas investments have been heavily concentrated in resources-rich regions and industries. Cumulatively, the energy sector alone accounts for almost half of China's total overseas investments, followed by transportation infrastructure and base metals, which clearly underscores China's demand for commodities. China's outbound investment was originally led by state-owned enterprises. More recently, private Chinese enterprises have become more active in overseas investments and acquisitions. Chart 20 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c20 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c20 Chart 21 Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Chart 22 Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Demystifying China's Foreign Assets Corporate China's interest in global resource space has waned in the past year. Total investment in energy space has plateaued in recent years. There has been a dramatic increase in investment in some consumer-related sectors, particularly in tourism, entertainment and technology. These investment deals are mainly driven by private enterprises, and also reflect the changing dynamics of the Chinese economy. The U.S. received by far the largest share of Chinese investment in 2016. Total U.S.-bound Chinese investment in the first half of the year already dramatically outpaced the total amount of 2015. Chinese investments in resource rich countries, such as Australia, Canada and Brazil have been much less robust. Chinese net purchase of Japanese government bonds (JGBs) increased sharply this year. In the eight months of 2016 China's net purchases of JGBs reached $86.6 billion, more than tripling the amount during the same period last year. Chinese cumulative net purchases of JGBs since 2014 reached JPY 14.5 trillion, or USD 140 billion. This amounts to 2% of total outstanding JGBs and 4% of Chinese official reserves. Chart 23 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c23 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c23 Chart 24 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c24 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c24 Chart 25 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c25 bca.cis_sr_2016_12_15_c25 Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
The previous Insight showed that businesses remain a weak link for the banking sector, as C&I loan demand has cooled and the corporate sector is the primary source of credit quality concerns following the multi-year credit binge. As such, our preference to play rising interest rates and a modest steepening in the yield curve is through the consumer finance group. Valuations remain dirt cheap, and have not discounted the widening in credit card net interest margins close to historic peaks. That is a far cry from banks, where net interest margins have improved, but only slightly and from still razor thin levels. Importantly, consumers have room to re-leverage after years of de-leveraging, an outcome predicted by the improvement in consumer income expectations. The bottom line is that the consumer finance group provides a cleaner play than banks on the sudden bullish sentiment shift in the overall financial sector. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CFINX-AXP, COF, DFS, SYF, NAVI. bca.uses_in_2016_12_14_002_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_12_14_002_c1
The scope of the revaluation in banks stocks on hopes for reduced regulatory constraints and the modest yield curve steepening has surprised us, but it would be dangerous to equate share price strength with the perception that underlying activity has reaccelerated. Indeed, the chart shows that overall bank loan growth is steadily decelerating, led by a cooling in C&I credit creation to its lowest rate since the great recession. While credit growth is far from recessionary levels, it is diverging negatively from what bank stocks might suggest. Importantly, banks have been adding to cost structures in recent months, and our gauge of bank sector productivity (bank loans/bank employment) is receding on a growth rate basis. This suggests that there could be a setback if fourth quarter profits do not validate the share price move. Rather than chase the bank group, our preference to play strength in the financial sector is through the asset manager and consumer finance groups, see the next Insight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX-JPM, WFC, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, KEY, CFG, RF, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. bca.uses_in_2016_12_14_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_12_14_001_c1
Communications equipment stocks broke out of a long-term downward sloping trend-line on the back of productivity improvement this summer, powered by a marked productivity improvement. Indeed, our productivity proxy, defined as sales/employment, is growing rapidly. These trends were supportive of profit margins, and at least a modest valuation re-rating from washed out levels. Nevertheless, our confidence that a major bullish trend change has occurred after years of underperformance has been shaken. The budding reacceleration in top-line growth has hit a snag. New orders for communications equipment have rolled over relative to inventories. Investment in communications equipment has dipped. The telecom services sector has scaled back capital spending (third panel), suggesting that final demand will continue to soften. It will be difficult for companies to maintain high productivity if revenue growth stagnates. Consequently, the most likely scenario is that relative performance is entering a base-building phase rather than a new bull market, warranting a reduction to benchmark weightings. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5COMM - CSCO, MSI, HRS, JNPR, FFIV. bca.uses_in_2016_12_13_002_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_12_13_002_c1
As a long duration sector, technology has struggled since Treasury yields began to surge. This likely marks the onset of a major trend change. Tech pricing power has nosedived and domestic deflationary pressures are likely to intensify as the U.S. dollar appreciates, particularly against the manufacturing and tech-sensitive emerging Asian currencies. While the tech sector and the U.S. dollar have typically been positively correlated during the initial stages of a currency bull market, history shows that this relationship becomes untenable the longer currency appreciation persists. In the final phase of the past two U.S. dollar bull markets, tech stocks have abruptly reversed course, rapidly ceding the previously accrued gains. Apart from a loss of competitiveness from currency strength, the new anti-globalization trend is bad for tech as it has the highest foreign sales exposure. Tech sales growth is already sliding rapidly toward negative territory, with no reprieve in sight based on the contraction in emerging market exports, as well as U.S. consumer and capital goods import prices. The bottom line is that there is no rush to lift underweight tech sector allocations. bca.uses_in_2016_12_13_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_12_13_001_c1