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Sectors

Financials have been tightly correlated with global growth expectations in recent years, given the high risk of deflation this cycle. The sector has been rattled by intensifying global growth shocks emanating from China and Emerging Markets and the spillover onto global economies. This process has culminated in a spike in banking sector fears around the world. However, the S&P financials sector has the capacity to enjoy a meaningful recovery from the drubbing it has taken year-to-date, provided the meltdown in inflation expectations takes a breather on the back of hopes for a less stringent Fed. If the U.S. dollar weakens by enough to reduce EM financial strains and reduce deflationary backlash onto the U.S. corporate sector, credit fears could subside, at least temporarily. Is it worth buying into a sunnier view? Please see the next Insight. bca.uses_in_2016_02_19_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_02_19_001_c1

Indonesia has been fighting the Impossible Trinity, a battle that cannot be won. The central bank will continue printing rupiahs and the currency will depreciate further. Eventually rupiah depreciation will push up interbank rates, and Indonesia's credit cycle and economic growth will stumble. Continue shorting the rupiah, underweighting Indonesian stocks and sovereign credit, and shorting long-term (5-year) local government bonds.

The previous Insight showed that semiconductor top-line growth remains under siege. Worse, there appears to have been little effort to realign cost structures to slower sales. The latter will become even more critical in the coming quarters, because pricing pressures are set to intensify. Our global semi inventory proxy is accelerating. Slowing demand has not been met with a sufficient output reduction to rebalance the market. Utilization rates are hitting new lows, and Taiwan export prices have plunged. These trends are a significant pricing power threat, and will compound profit margin pressures. We continue to recommend a high conviction underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: INTC, TXN, AVGO, MU, ADI, SWKS, LLTC, XLNX, NVDA, MCHP, QRVO, FSLR. (Part II) Semiconductors Are Losing Their Charge (Part II) Semiconductors Are Losing Their Charge

Greater safety for European taxpayers and bank depositors necessarily means more risk for bank equity and bond investors. We provide some detail, and also initiate two new short-term positions.

Semiconductor stocks finished last year on a strong note, supported by a surge in M&A and hopes that low oil prices would spur an increase in consumer spending, particularly on electronics. While the latter has improved, the M&A backdrop is becoming more hostile as the cost and access to capital become more restrictive. We put this group on our high-conviction underweight list to reflect our concern that once M&A euphoria faded, a renewed focus on fundamental profit drivers would trigger a de-rating. Apart from better spending on electronics, the data continues to support our bearish call. Global semi sales are shrinking, with key producing countries like Korea and Taiwan suffering from a steep export contraction. That implies heightened liquidation pressures, which will undermine profit margins. Worse, semiconductor companies have been slow to downsize despite threats to top-line growth, adding to profit margin pressures, please see the next Insight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: INTC, TXN, AVGO, MU, ADI, SWKS, LLTC, XLNX, NVDA, MCHP, QRVO, FSLR. (Part I) Semiconductors Are Losing Their Charge (Part I) Semiconductors Are Losing Their Charge
The S&P electrical equipment & components (EEC) group has comparatively less resource exposure than many other industrial sub-industries. The EEC index is comprised of mature, diversified manufacturing businesses with exposure across a broad range of end markets. This provides stability in periods of macro volatility, but limits upside potential during the initial phase of an economic expansion. The group was savaged by the relentless advance in the U.S. dollar, creating deeply oversold and undervalued conditions. To be sure, electrical equipment sales have been pressured by the global manufacturing recession. However, new orders have stabilized. Shipments are far outstripping inventories, which are contracting, and unfilled orders have held steady. Importantly, our EEC productivity proxy has been very strong throughout the general manufacturing malaise. Productivity gains will help offset the loss of competitiveness from the strong U.S. dollar, and also suggests that earnings expectations are far too bearish. If the U.S. dollar begins to soften as a consequence of U.S. economic disappointment, than a valuation normalization is probable. Upgrade to overweight. This pulls up our overall industrial sector weighting to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: EMR, ETN, ROC, AME. bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_003_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_003_c1
We recommended buying into rail weakness in November, on the view that a poor earnings outlook was already discounted and that shipment and pricing power trends would improve as 2016 progressed, allowing cost cutting efforts to shine through. However, this call was too early. Despite attractive valuations and the contrary allure of moving to overweight in the midst of recessionary conditions, the anticipated recovery in freight volumes may be more distant than we had envisioned. Domestic economic disappointment is a rising threat, owing to tightening financial conditions, exacerbated by the stubbornly hawkish Fed. Intermodal rail shipments, which account for nearly half of total freight growth, are not growing. Meanwhile, coal shipments are still a major drag. Warm North American winter weather and a manufacturing recession are keeping a lid on electricity production, which will delay any rundown in utility coal inventories. Consequently, a restocking phase, and recovery in coal shipment volumes, is not imminent. Consequently, we recommend paring back to neutral, recording a 5% loss, and shifting into another industrials group, as discussed in the next Insight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: UNP, CSX, NSC, KSU. bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_002_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_002_c1
The defensive qualities of the S&P data processing index have served investors well in recent years, particularly given its hedge against deflation pressures (top panel). However, the index is now priced for perfection and our Indicators suggest that peak performance is in the rearview mirror. Industry sales are linked to transaction volumes. Real consumer spending growth is slipping, despite rising wage inflation, reflecting an increase in the personal savings rate. Access to credit is deteriorating, on the margin, and consumers demonstrate little appetite to re-lever. The slide in revenue is hitting profit margins, as both capital spending and SG&A expenses are accelerating as a share of turnover. Meanwhile, the ISM services index is starting to play catch up with the decline in the ISM manufacturing index. A closing of this gap has previously warned that investor appetite for the services-based data processing group may diminish, at least for a few months. As a result, we recommend taking profits of 23% and downshifting to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: ADP, ADS, CSC, FIS, FISV, MA, PAYX, TSS, V, WU, XRX. bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_001_c1 bca.uses_in_2016_02_17_001_c1

Value in the U.S. Treasury market is rapidly deteriorating, and the 10-year Treasury yield is now consistent with our fair value projections. Investors should shift from an above-benchmark to a benchmark duration stance.

Reduce portfolio duration to neutral, while also cutting exposure to European bonds (both in the core and Periphery) and Canadian government bonds.