Silver
Executive Summary The US Still Dominates Economic Output
The US Still Dominates Economic Output
The US Still Dominates Economic Output
While the Ukraine war has been positive for the greenback, there is a slow tectonic shift away from the dollar as China rethinks holding concentrated foreign currency reserves. In the near term, the dollar faces positive macro variables and still-rising geopolitical tensions. Longer term, as global trade slows and countries gravitate into regional trading blocs, the dollar will need to fall to narrow the US trade deficit. By the same token, the Chinese RMB could weaken in the near term but will stabilize longer term. China will promote its currency across Asia. Currency volatility will take a step-function higher in this new paradigm. Winners will be the currencies of small open economies, especially in resource-rich nations. Trade Recommendation Inception Date Return LONG GOLD 2019-12-06 27.7% Bottom Line: Cyclical forces continue to underpin the dollar, such as rising US interest rates, a slowdown in global growth, and a safe haven premium from still-high geopolitical tensions. That said, the dollar is overbought, expensive, and vulnerable to reserve diversification over the longer term. While tactical long positions make sense, strategic investors should not chase the dollar higher. Feature Currency market action this week focused on two key central bank meetings: the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England. The Fed raised rates by 50 basis points while the BoE raised by 25 points, yet the market expectation differs. In the US, markets imply that the Fed can keep real interest positive while engineering a soft landing in the economy. In the UK (and Euro Area), markets see more acute stagflationary risks and assign a higher probability to a policy error. This situation, together with rising geopolitical risk, has put a bid under the dollar. Related Report Commodity & Energy StrategyDie Cast By EU: Inflation, Recession Risks Rise Brewing in the background is the prospect that the Ukraine war and US sanctions on Russia could have longer-term consequences on the dollar. Specifically, Russia and China are now locked into a geopolitical partnership to undermine US geopolitical dominance, including the dollar’s supremacy. While this discussion will inevitably come with some speculation about what will happen in the future, what does the evidence say so far? More importantly, what are some profitable investment opportunities that could arise from any shift? The Russo-Chinese Rebellion Chart 1The US Needs To Externally Finance Defense Spending
The US Needs To Externally Finance Defense Spending
The US Needs To Externally Finance Defense Spending
From Russia’s and China’s point of view, the United States threatens to establish global hegemony. The US possesses the world’s largest economy and most sophisticated military. It has largely maintained its preponderance in these spheres despite the rise of China, the resurgence of Russia, and the formation of the European Union as a geopolitical entity (Chart 1). If the US succeeds in its current endeavor of crippling Russia’s economy and surrounding it with NATO military allies, the world will be even more imbalanced in terms of power, while China will be isolated and insecure. To illustrate this point, NATO’s military spending is much higher than that of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), which is not nearly as developed a military alliance (Chart 2). Hence Russia and China believe they must take action to counter the US and establish a global balance of power. When Presidents Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping met on February 4 to declare that their strategic partnership will suffer “no limits,” which means no military limits, they declared a new multipolar era and warned against US domination under the guise of liberalism. If China allows Putin to fail in his conflict with the West, the Russian regime will eventually undergo a major leadership and policy change and China will become isolated. Whereas if China accepts Russia’s current strategic overture, China will be fortified. Russia can be immensely supportive of China’s Eurasian strategy to bypass US maritime dominance and improve supply security (Chart 3). Chart 2NATO Vs SCO: US Threat Of Dominance
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
The consequence of this Russo-Chinese alliance will be to transact in a currency that falls outside sanctions by the US. This will be no easy feat. The US dollar still monopolizes the world’s monetary system, even though the US is likely to lose economic clout over time. Chart 3China Cannot Reject Russia
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
De-Dollarization And A Brewing USD Crisis? Fact Versus Fiction A reserve currency must serve the three basic functions of money on a global scale – providing a store of value, unit of account, and accepted medium of exchange. This status gives the dominant reserve currency an “exorbitant privilege,” a range of advantages including the ability to run persistent current account deficits and impose devastating sanctions on geopolitical rivals. Since the turn of the century, the US has struggled to maintain domestic political stability and has failed to deter challenges to its global leadership posed by Russia, China, and lesser powers. Lacking public support for foreign military adventures after Iraq and Afghanistan, Washington turned to economic sanctions to try to influence the behavior of other states. The results have been mixed in terms of geopolitics but cumulatively they have been neutral or positive for the trade-weighted dollar. The US adopted harsh sanctions against North Korea in 2005, Iran in 2010, Russia in 2012, Venezuela in 2015, and China in 2018. The primary trend in the dollar was never altered (Chart 4). Chart 4A Chronicle Of Sanctions And The Dollar
A Chronicle Of Sanctions And The Dollar
A Chronicle Of Sanctions And The Dollar
Yet sweeping sanctions against Russia and China are qualitatively different from other sanctions– as they are among the world’s great powers. The extraordinary sanctions on Russia in 2022 – including cutting off its access to US dollar reserves – have proven deeply unsettling for China and other nations that fear they might someday end up on the wrong side of the US’s foreign policy. Russia’s own experience proves that diversification away from the dollar is likely to occur. From a peak of 47% in 2007, Russia reduced its dollar-denominated foreign exchange reserves to 16%. It cut its Treasury holdings from a peak of over 35% of international reserves to less than 1% today. Meanwhile Russia increased its gold holdings from 2% in 2008 to 20% (Chart 5). The Russians accelerated their diversification away from the dollar after invading Ukraine in 2014 to reduce the impact of sanctions. However, the world is familiar with Russian economic isolation. The West embargoed the USSR throughout the Cold War from 1949-1991. The dollar rose to prominence during this period, so it is not intuitive that Russia’s latest withdrawal from the global economy will enable other countries to abandon the dollar when they have failed in the past due to lack of alternatives. What is clear is that there is no clean or easy exit today from a dollar-denominated financial system. But there are a few lessons from Russia: The ruble has recouped all the losses since the implementation of sanctions. It runs a large current account surplus and has stemmed capital outflows. Another factor has been a sharp reduction in its dependence on the dollar. This will cushion the inflationary impact of US sanctions. Going forward, Russia will be much more insulated from the US dollar but at a terrible cost to potential economic growth (Chart 6). A dearth of US dollar capex into Russia will cripple productivity growth. The lesson for other US rivals will be to take economic stability into account when engaging in geopolitical rivalry. Chart 5Russia Was Able To Dump Treasurys...
Russia Was Able To Dump Treasurys...
Russia Was Able To Dump Treasurys...
The dollar has been unfazed by the Russian debacle. The victims have been other reserve currencies such as the euro, British pound, and Japanese yen, which are engulfed in an energy crisis from Russia’s actions. Chart 6...But The Economic Impact Will Remain Severe
...But The Economic Impact Will Remain Severe
...But The Economic Impact Will Remain Severe
The key question that matters for investors will be what China will do. As one of the largest holders of US Treasurys, a destabilizing exit would have dramatic currency market impacts and could backfire on China. The trick will be to continue exiting this system without precipitating domestic instability. What Will China Do? China has learned two critical lessons from the Russo-Ukrainian conflict, with regard to raising the appeal of the RMB. First, the economic impact of US sanctions can still be devastating even when you have diversified out of dollars. Second, access to commodities is ever more important. As such, any strategy China chooses will need to mitigate these risks. China started diversifying away from the dollar in 2011 and today holds $1.05 trillion in US Treasurys. A little less than half of its foreign exchange reserves are denominated in dollars (Chart 7). This has been a gradual diversification that has not upended the current monetary regime. More importantly, China’s diversification accounts for the bulk of the shift by non-allies away from treasuries. Their share of foreign-held treasuries has fallen from 41% in 2009 to 23% today (Chart 8). Chart 7China Has Lowered USD Reserve Holdings
China Has Lowered USD Reserve Holdings
China Has Lowered USD Reserve Holdings
Chart 8US Allies Still Willing To Hold USDs...
US Allies Still Willing To Hold USDs...
US Allies Still Willing To Hold USDs...
China’s diversification has helped drive down the overall foreign share of US government debt holdings (excluding domestic central banks) from close to 50% in the middle of the last decade to 36% today (Chart 9). It has also weighed on the dollar. China can and will speed up its diversification from the dollar in the wake of the Ukraine war. While Americans will say that China only need fear such sanctions if it attacks Taiwan or other countries, China will not rest assured. Beijing must respond to US capability, not the Biden Administration’s stated intentions. A new Republican administration could arise as soon as January 2025 and take the offensive against China. The US and China are already engaged in great power rivalry and Beijing cannot afford to substitute hope for strategy. China ran a $224 billion current account surplus in 2021, so part of its strategy could be to reduce the pool of savings that need to be recycled every year into global assets. Since 2007 China has sent large amounts of outward direct investment into the world to acquire real assets and natural resources. The Xi administration tried to bring coherence to this outward investment by prioritizing different countries and investments adhere to China’s economic and strategic aims. The Belt and Road Initiative is the symbol of this process (Chart 10). Going forward, China will continue this process. It will also recycle more of its savings at home by increasing investment in critical industries such as energy security, semiconductors, and defense. Chart 9...But A Slow Diversification From US Debt Persists
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
The key priorities will remain a Eurasian strategy of circumventing the US navy. Building natural gas pipelines and other infrastructure to link up with Russia is an obvious area of emphasis, although it will involve tough negotiations with Moscow. China will also prioritize Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia, and mainland Southeast Asia as areas where its influence can grow with limited intervention by the US and its allies (Chart 11). Chart 10The Belt And Road Initiative In Progress
The Belt And Road Initiative In Progress
The Belt And Road Initiative In Progress
Chart 11China Outward Investment Will Need To Be Strategic
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
Chart 12The RMB Could Dominate Intra-Regional Asean Trade
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
As China invests more at home and in other countries, financing and invoicing deals in the renminbi will grow. While the dollar is the transactional currency globally, it is far less relevant when considering local trading blocs. The euro dominates intra-European trade, suggesting China can try to expand RMB invoicing for intra-Asian trade (Chart 12). Even then, however, the yuan faces serious obstacles from China’s inability or unwillingness to extend security guarantees to its partners, failure shift the economic model to consumerism, persistent currency controls, closed capital account, and geopolitical competition with the United States. Investors should pay close attention to shifts occurring at the margin. The number of bilateral swap lines offered to foreign central banks by the People’s Bank of China has grown (Chart 13), with a total amount of around 4 trillion yuan. This allows the PBoC to use its massive foreign exchange reserves, worth about US$3.2 trillion, to back yuan liabilities. As China continues to grow and increases the share of RMB trade within its sphere of influence, the yuan will rise as an invoicing currency (Chart 14). This could take years, even decades, but a shift is already underway. Chart 13The People's Bank Of Asia?
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
FX Consequences Of The US-Russia Conflict
Chart 14China Is Growing In Economic Importance
China Is Growing In Economic Importance
China Is Growing In Economic Importance
In the near term, any US sanctions on China will hurt the RMB. Combined with hypo-globalization, China’s zero-Covid policy, narrowing interest rate differentials, and flight from Chinese assets, it is too soon to be positive on the RMB in the context of US-China confrontation (Chart 15). Longer term, China’s ability to ascend the reserve currency ladder will require a more radical change in Chinese policy to move the dollar. Chart 15CNY And US Sanctions
CNY And US Sanctions
CNY And US Sanctions
Where Does The Euro Fit In? The biggest competitor to the US dollar is the euro, which took the largest chunk out of the US’s share of the global currency reserve basket in recent decades (Chart 16). Yet the EU could suffer a long-term loss of security, productivity, and stability from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing energy cutoff with Russia. Chart 16The Dollar Remains A Reserve Currency
The Dollar Remains A Reserve Currency
The Dollar Remains A Reserve Currency
The EU will have to spend more on energy security and national defense. This will lead to an increase in debt securities that other countries could buy, which offers a way for countries to diversify from the dollar. However, Europe does not provide China or Russia with protection from US sanctions. The EU is allied with the US, it imposed sanctions on Russia along with the US, and like the US is pursuing extra-territorial law enforcement with its sanctions. When the US withdrew from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, the EU disagreed technically, but in practice it enforced the sanctions anyway. The euro is hardly a safer reserve currency than sterling or the yen for countries looking to quarrel with the United States. The fact is that all of these allied states are likely to cooperate together in the event that any other state attempts to revise the global order as Russia has done. Not necessarily because they are democracies and share similar values but because they derive their national security from the US and its alliance system. The takeaway is that the euro will become a buying opportunity if and when the security environment stabilizes. Then diversification into the euro will occur. But it will not become a landslide that unseats the dollar, since the euro will still have a higher geopolitical risk premium. Investment Takeaways The historical evidence suggests that US sanctions have not weighed on the dollar. In the case of the Russo-Ukrainian conflict, it has been positive for the greenback. That said, there is a slow tectonic shift from the dollar, as each economic powerhouse evaluates the merits of holding concentrated foreign currency reserves. In the near term, the dollar will continue to be driven by traditional economic variables – global growth, real interest rate differentials, and the resilience of the US economy. That remains a positive. Geopolitical tensions reinforce the dollar’s current rally. Longer term, as globalization deteriorates and countries gravitate into regional trading blocs, the dollar will need to adjust lower to narrow the US trade deficit. By the same token, the RMB could weaken in the near term but will need to stabilize longer term, if Beijing wants it to be considered an anchor and store of value for other Asian currencies. Chart 17Silver Demand Could Explode Higher As Currency Volatility Rises
Silver Demand Could Explode Higher As Currency Volatility Rises
Silver Demand Could Explode Higher As Currency Volatility Rises
The key takeaway is that currency volatility will take a step-function higher in this new paradigm. The winners could be the currencies of small open economies, especially in resource-rich nations. A world in which economic powers increasingly pursue national interests is likely to be inflationary. These powers will deplete the external pool of global savings, as current account balances wind down in favor of national and strategic interests. They will also likely encourage the demand for anti-fiat assets as currency volatility takes a step-function higher. Gold is likely to do well is this environment, but silver could be on the cusp of an explosion higher. The metal has found some measure of support around $22-23 per ounce even as manufacturing bottlenecks have hammered industrial demand. Long-only investors should hold both gold and silver, but a short gold/silver position makes sense both economically and from a valuation standpoint (Chart 17). Geopolitical Housekeeping: We are closing our Long FTSE 100 / Short DM-ex-US Equities trade for a gain of 19.5%. We still favor this trade cyclically and will look to reinstate it at a future date. We are also booking gains on our short TWD-USD trade for a return of 5.8% — though we remain short Taiwanese equities and continue to expect a fourth Taiwan Strait geopolitical crisis. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken Chief Geopolitical Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Strategic Themes Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Regional Geopolitical Risk Matrix
Highlights In the short term, the US stock market price will track the 30-year T-bond price, with every 10 bps move in the yield moving the stock market and bond price by 2.5 percent. We think that the bond market will not allow the stock market to suffer a peak-to-trough decline of more than 15-20 percent. Given that the drawdown is already 10 percent, it equates to no more than 20-40 bps of upside for the 30-year T-bond yield, to a level of 2.3-2.5 percent. Hence, we are quite close to an entry-point for both stocks and long-duration bonds. In the next few years, the structural bull market will continue, ending only at the ultimate low in the 30-year bond yield. But on a 5-year horizon, the blockchain will be the undoing of the US stock market – by undermining the vast profits that the US tech behemoths make from owning, controlling, and manipulating our data and the digital content that we create. In that sense, the blockchain will ultimately reveal – and pop – a ‘super bubble’. Fractal trading watchlist: We add Korea and CAD/SEK, and update bitcoin, biotech, and nickel versus silver. Feature Chart of the WeekIf The Market Is Not Far From Its Fundamentals, Can This Really Be A 'Super Bubble'?
If The Market Is Not Far From Its Fundamentals, Can This Really Be A 'Super Bubble'?
If The Market Is Not Far From Its Fundamentals, Can This Really Be A 'Super Bubble'?
Why has the stock market started 2022 on such a poor footing? Chart I-2 and Chart I-3 identify the main culprit. Through the past year, the tech-heavy Nasdaq index has been tracking the 30-year T-bond price on a one-for-one basis, while the broader S&P 500 shows a connection that is almost as good. Chart I-2The Nasdaq Has Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price One-For-One...
The Nasdaq Has Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price One-For-One...
The Nasdaq Has Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price One-For-One...
Chart I-3…The S&P 500 Has Also Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price
...The S&P 500 Has Also Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price
...The S&P 500 Has Also Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price
Therefore, as the 30-year T-bond price has taken a tumble, so have growth-heavy stock markets. Put simply, the ‘bond component’ of these stock markets has been dominating recent performance, overwhelming the ‘profits component’ which tends to move more glacially. It follows that the short-term direction of the stock market has been set – and will continue to be set – by the direction of the 30-year T-bond price. Stocks And Bonds Are Nearing A ‘Pinch Point’ The next few paragraphs are necessarily technical, but worth absorbing – as they are fundamental to understanding the stock market’s recent sell-off, as well as its future evolution. The duration of any investment quantifies how far into the future its cashflows lie, by averaging those cashflows into one theoretical future ‘lump sum’. For a bond, the duration also equals the percentage change in the bond price for every 1 percent change in its yield.1 Crucially, the duration of the US stock market is the same as that of the 30-year T-bond, at around 25 years. Therefore, if all else were equal, the US stock market price should track the 30-year T-bond price, with every 10 bps move in the yield moving the stock market and bond prices by 2.5 percent. In the long run of course, all else is not equal. The 30-year T-bond generates a fixed income stream, whereas the stock market generates income that tracks profits. Allowing for this difference, the US stock market should track: (The 30-year T-bond price) multiplied by (profits expected in the year ahead) multiplied by (a constant) In which the constant expresses the theoretical lump-sum payment 25 years ahead as a multiple of the profits in the year ahead – and thereby quantifies the expected structural growth in profits. We can ignore this constant if the structural growth in profits does not change. Nevertheless, remember this constant, as we will come back to it later when we discuss a putative ‘super bubble’. The ‘bond component’ of the stock market has been dominating recent performance. This model for the stock market seems simplistic. Yet it provides an excellent explanation for the market’s evolution through the past 40 years (Chart I-4), as well as through the past year in which, to repeat, the bond component has been the dominant driver. Chart I-4The US Stock Market = The 30-Year T-Bond Price Multiplied By Profits
The US Stock Market = The 30-Year T-Bond Price Multiplied By Profits
The US Stock Market = The 30-Year T-Bond Price Multiplied By Profits
In the short term then, given the 25 year duration of the US stock market, every 10 bps rise in the 30-year T-bond yield will drag down the stock market by 2.5 percent. We can also deduce that the sell-off will be self-limiting and self-correcting, because at some ‘pinch point’ the bond market will assess that the deflationary impulse from financial instability will snuff out the recent inflationary impulse in the economy. Where is that pinch point? Our sense is that the bond market will not allow the stock market to suffer a peak-to-trough decline of more than 15-20 percent. Given that the drawdown is already 10 percent, it equates to no more than 20-40 bps of upside for the 30-year T-bond yield, to a level of 2.3-2.5 percent. Hence, we are quite close to an entry-point for both stocks and long-duration bonds. The Case Against A ‘Super Bubble’ (And The Case For) As is typical, the recent market setback has unleashed narratives of an almighty bubble starting to pop. Stealing the headlines is value investor Jeremy Grantham of GMO, who claims that “today in the US we are in the fourth super bubble of the last hundred years.” Is there any merit to Mr. Grantham’s claim? An investment is in a bubble if its price has completely broken free from its fundamentals. For example, in the dot com boom, the stock market did become a super bubble. But as we have just shown, the US stock market today is not that far removed from its fundamental components of the 30-year T-bond price multiplied by profits. At first glance then, Mr. Grantham appears to be wrong (Chart of the Week). Still, if the underlying components – the 30-year T-bond and/or profits – were in a bubble, then the stock market would also be in a bubble. In this regard, isn’t the deeply negative real yield on long-dated bonds a sure sign of a bubble? The answer is, not necessarily. As we explained last week in Time To Get Real About Real Interest Rates, the deeply negative real yield on Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) is premised on an expected rate of inflation that we should take with a huge dose of salt. Putting in a more realistic forward inflation rate, the real yield on long-dated bonds is positive, albeit just. What about profits – are they in a bubble? The US (and world) profit margin stands at an all-time high, around 20 percent greater than its post-GFC average (Chart I-5). But a 20 percent excess is not quite what we mean by a bubble. Chart I-5Profit Margins Are At An All-Time High
Profit Margins Are At An All-Time High
Profit Margins Are At An All-Time High
There is one final way that Mr. Grantham could be right, and for this we must come back to the previously mentioned constant which quantifies the expected long-term growth in profits. If this expected structural growth were to collapse, then the stock market would also collapse. This is precisely what happened to the non-US stock market after the dot com bust, when the expected structural growth – and therefore the structural valuation – phase-shifted sharply lower (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). As a result, the non-US stock market also phase-shifted sharply lower from the previous relationship with its fundamentals (Chart I-8). Could the same ultimately happen to the US stock market? Chart I-6The Structural Growth And Valuation Of Non-US Stocks Phase-Shifted Down...
The Structural Growth And Valuation Of Non-US Stocks Phase-Shifted Down...
The Structural Growth And Valuation Of Non-US Stocks Phase-Shifted Down...
Chart I-7...Could The Same Happen To ##br##US Stocks?
...Could The Same Happen To US Stocks?
...Could The Same Happen To US Stocks?
Chart I-8Non-US Stocks Phase-Shifted Lower From Their Previous Relationship With Fundamentals
Non-US Stocks Phase-Shifted Lower From Their Previous Relationship With Fundamentals
Non-US Stocks Phase-Shifted Lower From Their Previous Relationship With Fundamentals
The answer is yes – and the main risk comes from the blockchain and its threat to the pseudo-monopoly status that the US tech behemoths have in owning, controlling, manipulating, and monetising our data and the digital content that we create. If the blockchain returned that ownership and control back to us, it would devastate the profits of Facebook, Google, and the other behemoths that dominate the US stock market. If the expected structural growth were to collapse, then the stock market would also collapse. That said, the blockchain is a long-term risk to the stock market, likely to manifest itself on a 5-year horizon. Before we get there, in the next deflationary shock, the 30-year T-bond yield has the scope to decline by at least 150 bps, equating to a 40 percent increase in the ‘bond component’ of the US stock market. To conclude, the structural bull market will end only at the ultimate low in the 30-year bond yield. And then, the blockchain will reveal – and pop – a ‘super bubble’. Fractal Trading Watchlist This week we add Korea and CAD/SEK, and update bitcoin, biotech, and nickel versus silver. Of note, the near 30 percent underperformance of Korea through the past year has reached the point of fractal fragility that has signalled previous major reversals in 2015, 2017 and 2019 (Chart I-9). Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is to go long Korea versus the world (MSCI indexes), setting the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 8 percent. Chart I-9Korea Is Approaching A Turning Point Versus The World
Korea Is Approaching A Turning Point Versus The World
Korea Is Approaching A Turning Point Versus The World
Korea Approaching A Turning Point Versus EM
Korea Approaching A Turning Point Versus EM
Korea Approaching A Turning Point Versus EM
CAD/SEK Could Reverse
CAD/SEK Could Reverse
CAD/SEK Could Reverse
Bitcoin Near A First Support Level
Biotech Approaching A Major Buy
Biotech Approaching A Major Buy
Biotech Approaching A Major Buy
Biotech Approaching A Major Buy
Biotech Approaching A Major Buy
Nickel Approaching A Sell Versus Silver
Nickel Approaching A Sell Versus Silver
Nickel Approaching A Sell Versus Silver
Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Defined fully, the duration of an investment is the weighted average of the times of its cashflows, in which the weights are the present values of the cashflows. Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades
The Case Against A ‘Super Bubble’ (And The Case For)
The Case Against A ‘Super Bubble’ (And The Case For)
The Case Against A ‘Super Bubble’ (And The Case For)
The Case Against A ‘Super Bubble’ (And The Case For)
6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##Europe Ex Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##Asia
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - ##br##Other Developed
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Dear client, This is our final report for this year. Clients who missed our FX key views report last week can access the link here. We thank you for your continued readership, and wish you happy and healthy holidays. Kind regards, Chester Highlights We were offside on the dollar this year. Our 94-95 ceiling for the DXY was punched in November (currently 96). More importantly, the dollar is the strongest performing G10 currency this year, which we did not anticipate. That said, both the Norges Bank and the Bank of England hiked rates today. This reinforces our conviction that the Fed will stay behind the curve. Our trades still managed to deliver alpha. Our batting average (percentage of wins) was 64%. Our worst performing trade was to go long silver in July this year and go short USD/JPY in May. This proved premature as the dollar extended its rally, following a hawkish shift by the Federal Reserve. Our best trades were being opportunistically long the Scandinavian currencies, short the gold/silver ratio and short EUR/GBP. More importantly, swimming against the tide, we benefited from respecting our stop losses, and not overstaying our welcome in profitable trades. Our current view is that the dollar has some more near-term upside. Our target for the DXY is 98 over the next few months or so, but we expect a reversal after. For the moment, we are playing three themes in the FX market – policy convergence between central banks (long EUR/GBP, AUD/NZD and short USD/JPY), a rise in FX volatility (long CHF/NZD), and forthcoming green shoots in China (long AUD/USD). That said, we will maintain tight stops on all these trades, given the landscape remains fraught with uncertainty. Feature The dollar is in a perfect storm, characterized by rising inflation that is prompting the Federal Reserve to turn more hawkish, but also raising the possibility that it kills the US recovery. The US 10/2 Treasury curve slope has flattened to 79 bps, and the 30/2 Treasury slope has collapsed to 120 bps (Chart 1A). Historically, this pattern of curve flattening has been symptomatic of a brewing recession and further gains in the dollar (Chart 1B). Chart 1AThe Dollar And The Yield Curve
The Dollar And The Yield Curve
The Dollar And The Yield Curve
Chart 1BThe Dollar And The Yield Curve
The Dollar And The Yield Curve
The Dollar And The Yield Curve
Two-year yields have shot up in the US, relative to other G10 countries. This is a phenomenon that has been pretty consistent throughout the year with sub-zero interest rate countries (euro area, Japan, Switzerland, Chart 2A) but is becoming even more broad based. Two-year yields are accelerating in the US versus countries such as Canada, New Zealand and Norway, where their central banks have already ended QE and/or are raising interest rates. It is also interesting that their currencies have depreciated more this year than what will be implied by nominal yield differentials (Chart 2B). Chart 2ARising Short-Term Rates In The US
Rising Short-Term Rates In The US
Rising Short-Term Rates In The US
Chart 2BRising Short-Term Rates In The US
Rising Short-Term Rates In The US
Rising Short-Term Rates In The US
The Federal Reserve’s own estimates suggest that a 10% increase in the dollar will shave US real growth by 50 bps the following year, an additional 20 bps the year after. This is occurring when China is easing monetary policy, which will likely support growth outside the US. Commodity currencies such as the AUD, NZD and NOK are very sensitive to subtle shifts in Chinese growth (Chart 3). If financial conditions tighten in the US while easing elsewhere, it pretty much ensures that growth will rotate next year from the US to other countries that have seen their currencies weaken (Chart 4). Chart 3Commodity Currencies Weighed Down By The China Slowdown
Commodity Currencies Weighed Down By The China Slowdown
Commodity Currencies Weighed Down By The China Slowdown
Chart 4The US Dollar And Relative ##br##Growth
The US Dollar And Relative Growth
The US Dollar And Relative Growth
This year, our bias was that the Fed will lag the inflation curve, relative to other central banks, and this will weaken the dollar. This thesis hinged on two critical observations. First, real rates in the US remained very low as the Fed was lagging other central banks in tightening policy. Almost all central banks, with the exception of the Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank, have already ended QE. Many have also hiked interest rates (Chart 5). Second, and related, inflation overshot in the US relative to other countries (Chart 6). Where we went wrong was not anticipating that the market would price in a more credible Fed, especially against other G10 central banks. Chart 5Worldwide Monetary Normalization Weighs On The Dollar
Worldwide Monetary Normalization Weighs On The Dollar
Worldwide Monetary Normalization Weighs On The Dollar
Chart 6Surging US Inflation Also Bearish For The Dollar
Surging US Inflation Also Bearish For The Dollar
Surging US Inflation Also Bearish For The Dollar
In the near term, we think the dollar continues to do well, but we are not betting on an overshoot. Longer term, the themes suggested in our outlook should play out, including a weaker dollar. In the next few sections, we review some of our big losses this year, as well as our winners. Finally, in April 2020, we designed a rules-based trading model to see if, over time, currencies could be traded purely mechanically. That model was also offside this year, shorting the dollar 9 out of 12 months. That said, over time, a model grounded in the fundamental basis that has defined the BCA approach provided alpha (Chart 7). According to the model, investors should be long most G10 currencies versus the dollar, except the Japanese yen and the New Zealand dollar (Chart 8A and 8B). Chart 7Our USD Model Takes A Long-Term Approach
Our USD Model Takes A Long-Term Approach
Our USD Model Takes A Long-Term Approach
Chart 8AOur Model Is USD Bearish
Our Model Is USD Bearish
Our Model Is USD Bearish
Chart 8BOur Model Is USD Bearish
Our Model Is USD Bearish
Our Model Is USD Bearish
Overall Trade Performance For 2021 Chart 9 highlights the timeline of closed trades in 2021, alongside performance. Our trades still managed to deliver alpha. Our batting average (percentage of wins) was 64%. The cumulative return this year was 37%, the mean return was 1.1%, and the median return was 1.3%.
Chart 9
Our worst performing trade was to go long silver in July this year and go short USD/JPY in May. Our long silver trade was by far the worst decision. Excluding this trade, our cumulative returns this year would have been 50.6%, with a mean return of 1.6%, and a median return of 1.4%. We implemented this trade after the hawkish shift by the Federal Reserve, but it proved premature as the dollar extended its rally. Short USD/JPY
Chart 10
We were long the yen against the dollar for the entire second half of 2020, and opportunistically long in the spring and summer of 2021. Real rate differentials versus the US supported the yen. Equally important was the yen’s hedging benefit among our other trades at the time, most of which were pro-growth. Finally, the yen was also cheap. Going long in June was particularly interesting. First, we believed that the dollar rally would be short lived, a view that was offside for 2021. We also observed that a nation’s currency tended to outperform as it hosted the Olympic Games, leading to our belief that the yen would benefit from the Tokyo Summer Games (Chart 10). In the end, the two-year yield differential between the US and Japan was the most important driver for the yen. We remain long, but with a stop loss at our latest entry point of 114.40. Long Petrocurrencies (CAD, NOK, MXN, RUB And COP) Versus The Euro Chart 11Commodity Currencies Still Have Upside
Commodity Currencies Still Have Upside
Commodity Currencies Still Have Upside
Our Commodity Strategists have been bullish oil since the bottom in 2020, a call that has been prescient. As a derivative, we went long a petrocurrency basket against the euro for most of the second half of 2020. We took profits on that trade when our trailing stop was triggered, but the returns were mostly from the carry. Towards the end of October 2021, we once again went long the basket, given the divergence between currency performance and surging oil prices (Chart 11). However, we were stopped out a month later as the dollar started to rally on the back of an increasingly hawkish Fed. Overall, our rational for the trade played out, but the meagre gains were because we were swimming against the tide of a strong dollar. Short EUR/GBP We sold this pair in September of 2020 mainly based on the belief that stalled UK/EU trade talks instilled too much pessimism in the market, leading to an undervalued pound against the euro. The UK data that came out during that time were also relatively strong compared to both the US and the euro area. We closed the trade for a sizeable profit. Short CAD/NOK Chart 12The CAD/NOK Still Has Downside
The CAD/NOK Still Has Downside
The CAD/NOK Still Has Downside
Our main rationale for this trade rested on the differences in geographies for these oil sources, amidst a bullish oil environment. While both of these petrocurrencies strengthened, Canadian oil’s lower grade and higher cost of transportation would subject the loonie to underperformance against the NOK. CAD/NOK is also correlated to EUR/USD because of economic ties, and so a bet on a stronger euro (driven by stronger economic performance outside the US) was also a bet on a lower CAD/NOK (Chart 12). Our view turned out to be right. Long EUR/CHF Chart 13EUR/CHF And The German Bund Yield
EUR/CHF And The German Bund Yield
EUR/CHF And The German Bund Yield
We went long EUR/CHF in November 2020 and took profits in May 2021. At the time, CHF had appreciated by 1.2% in a week, opening an interesting gap between EUR/CHF and USD/CHF. This suggested that either the franc was too high versus the euro, or the euro was too high versus the dollar. The overall rationale behind the trade was right. The SNB maintained a dovish stance with a close focus on the exchange rate. Going forward, rising yields on the back of an economic recovery will support EUR/CHF (Chart 13). EUR/CHF is also underpinned by cheap valuations. We remain long the cross. Long CAD/NZD And AUD/NZD Our bias on NZD for most of the 2021 has been negative at the crosses. This was based on two driving factors. First, according to our models, the kiwi is the most expensive G10 currency after the dollar. Second, we did not believe the Reserve Bank of New Zealand could credibly hike interest rates ahead of other G10 countries. New Zealand is an island geographically but not economically. As such, we have been short NZD at the crosses. Other factors add to this high-conviction view. First, the New Zealand stock market is the most defensive in the G10, while Canadian and Australian bourses are heavy in cyclical stocks. Should value start to outperform growth, this will favor the CAD/NZD and AUD/NZD cross. Second, in the commodity space, our bias is that energy and metals will fare better than agriculture, boosting loonie/aussie relative terms of trade. We remain long AUD/NZD, and made modest gains when we got stopped out of our previous position in April. Long Silver Relative To Gold Chart 14Gold/Silver Tracks The Dollar
Gold/Silver Tracks The Dollar
Gold/Silver Tracks The Dollar
We shorted the the gold/silver ratio four times throughout the year based on the view that global ex-US growth was poised to recover amid very accommodative policy. As such, industrial precious metals would be well supported. The gold/silver ratio is also a play on the dollar (Chart 14). Our first two attempts earlier in the spring to catch the drawdown in the gold/silver ratio both profited handsomely, registering 6.25% and 8.45% returns respectively. However, since June, the dollar has strenghthend, which has eroded the anti-fiat appeal of silver. Long Scandinavian Currencies We were long NOK and SEK for most of 2021. We were bullish on the NOK as the Norges Bank is leading the pack in raising interest rates, as we witnessed today. Indeed, for the first half of the year, the return on our Scandinavian basket was driven primarily by the NOK against both the dollar and the euro. We respected our trailing stop loss on this trade, and will reinitiate in the near future. Short AUD/MXN Chart 15AUD/MXN Still Richly Valued
AUD/MXN Still Richly Valued
AUD/MXN Still Richly Valued
Short AUD/MXN was a play on a slowdown in China. A falling credit impulse in China, and a short-term recovery in the US economy relative to the rest of the world, argued for an AUD/MXN short. Further, on a real effective exchange rate basis, AUD/MXN was richly valued (Chart 15). Our first attempt to trade the pair was unsuccessful. Once our stop loss was triggered, we reinitiated the trade and made a net profit. Long CHF/NZD We went long this pair as both a bet on rising currency volatility, but also as a hedge to our portfolio of trades, which were pivoted towards growth and recovery. Our view was right. The pair did strengthen for much of the early part of the year leading up to the end of August. We exited for a minscule profit, but reinitiated, and are now sitting on 3.98% gains. Long EUR/USD The euro has been the toughest call this year, because the ECB has been surprisingly steady on its path to keep interest rates low. In July, our limit buy on EUR/USD was triggered at 1.18. Even though a dollar rally was a major risk, we argued adjustment in the weight of the shelter component in the euro area CPI basket will boost the European CPI relative to the US. This proved premature and we obeyed our stop loss. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Kate Sun Research Analyst kate.sun@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Forecast Summary
Silver has been among the worst performing financial assets recently. It is down nearly 20% since mid-June and has underperformed gold over this period. Back in June, we noted that the near-term outlook for silver was complicated: positive fundamentals…
Highlights The rapid spread of the COVID-19 delta variant in Asia will re-focus precious metals markets anew on the possibility of another round of lockdowns and the implications for demand, particularly in Greater China and India, which account for 33% and 12% of global physical demand for gold (Chart of the Week).1 Regulatory crackdowns across various sectors in China will continue to roil markets over coming months. Policy uncertainty around these crackdowns is elevated in local financial markets, and could spill into global markets. This will support the USD at the margin, which creates a headwind for gold and silver prices. Ambiguous and contradictory signaling from Fed officials following the July FOMC meeting re its $120-billion-per-month bond-buying program also adds uncertainty to precious-metals and general commodity forecasts. Despite this uncertainty, we remain bullish gold and silver. More efficacious jabs will become available, which will support the global economic re-opening, particularly in EM economies. In DM economies, vaccination uptake likely increases as risks become more apparent. We continue to expect gold to trade to $2,000/oz and silver to trade to $30/oz this year. Feature Markets once again are focused on the possibility lockdowns will follow rising COVID-19 infections and deaths, as the delta variant – the most contagious variant to date – spreads through Asia and elsewhere. Chart of the WeekCOVID-19 Delta Variant Rampages
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Chart 2COVID-19 Infections, Deaths Rising
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Infection and death rates are moving higher globally (Chart 2). COVID-19 infections are still rising in 78 countries. Based on the latest 7-day-average data, the countries reporting the most new infections daily are the US, India, Indonesia, Brazil, and Iran. The countries reporting the most deaths each day are Indonesia, Brazil, Russia, India, and Mexico. Globally, more than 42% of infections were in Asia and the Middle East, where ~ 1mm new infections are reported every 4 days. We expect more efficacious jabs will become available, which will support the global economic re-opening, particularly in EM economies. In DM economies, vaccination uptake likely increases as risks become more apparent. China's Regulatory Crackdown Markets also are contending with a regulatory crackdowns across multiple sectors in China, which is part of a years-long reform process initiated by the Politburo.2 Industries ranging from internet, property, education, healthcare to capital markets will have new rules imposed on them under China's 14th Five-Year Plan as part of this process. Our colleagues in BCA's China Investment Service note the pace of regulatory tightening will not moderate in the near term, as policymakers transition from an annual planning cycle focused on setting economic growth targets to a multi-year planning horizon. "This allows policymakers to have a higher tolerance for near-term distress in exchange for long-term benefits," according to our colleagues. The overarching goal of this reform process is to introduce more social equality in the society. Of immediate import for precious metals markets is the potential for spillover effects outside China arising from the policy uncertainty that already is emanating from that market. Uncertainty boosts the USD and gold. This makes its effect uncertain. In our most recent modeling of gold prices, we have found strong two-way feedback between US and Chinese policy uncertainty.3 We also find that broad real foreign exchange rates for the USD and RMB exert a negative influence on gold prices, while higher economic uncertainty pushes gold prices higher (Chart 3). In addition, across markets – Chinese and US economic policy uncertainty – have similar effects, suggesting economic uncertainty across these markets has a similar effect as domestic uncertainty at home (Chart 4).4 Chart 3Domestic Uncertainty, Real FX Rates Strongly Affect Gold Prices...
Domestic Uncertainty, Real FX Rates Strongly Affect Gold Prices...
Domestic Uncertainty, Real FX Rates Strongly Affect Gold Prices...
Chart 4...As Do Cross-Border Uncertainty, Real FX Rates
...As Do Cross-Border Uncertainty, Real FX Rates
...As Do Cross-Border Uncertainty, Real FX Rates
This is yet another reason to pay close attention to PBOC and Fed policy innovations and surprises: they affect each other in similar ways within and across borders. Fed Officials Add Uncertainty Following the FOMC meeting at that end of last month, various Fed officials expressed their views of Chair Jerome Powell's post-meeting remarks, or again resumed their campaigns to begin tapering the US central bank's bond-buying program. Chair Powell's remarks reinforced the data-dependency of the Fed in directing its bond buying and monetary accommodation. He emphasized the need to see solid improvement in the jobs picture in the US before considering any lift-off of rates. As to the Fed's bond-buying program, this, too, will depend on progress on reducing unemployment in the US. Powell also reiterated the Fed views the current inflation in the US as transitory, a point that was emphasised by Fed Governor Lael Brainard two days after Powell's presser. Some very important Fed officials, most notably Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida, are staking out an early position on what will get them to consider reducing the Fed's current accommodative policies, chiefly an "overshoot" of PCE inflation, the Fed's favored gauge, above 3%. Other Fed officials are urging strong action now: St. Louis Fed President James Bullard is adamant that tapering of the Fed's bond-buying program needed to begin in the Autumn and should be done early next year. Bullard is supported by Governor Christopher Waller. The Fed's bond-buying program is more than a year old. Beginning in July 2020, the Fed started buying $80 billion of Treasurys and $40 billion of mortgage-backed securities every month, or ~ $1.6 trillion so far. This lifted the Fed's balance sheet to ~ $8.3 trillion. Thinking about this as a commodity, that's a lot of asset supply removed from the Treasury and MBS market, which likely explains the high cost of the underlying debt instruments (i.e., their low interest rates). It is understandable why the gold market would get twitchy whenever Fed officials insist the winddown of this program must begin forthwith and be done in relatively short order. The loss of that steady stream of buying could send interest rates higher quickly, possibly raising nominal and real interest rates in the process, which, given the sensitivity of gold prices to US real rates would be bearish (Chart 5). While it is impossible to know when the tapering of the Fed's asset-purchase program will end, these occasional choruses of its imminent inauguration add to uncertainty in the US, which also depresses precious metals prices, as Chart 5 indicates. A larger issue attends this topic: economic policy uncertainty is not contained within national borders. Above, we noted there is a two-way feedback between US and China economic policy uncertainty. There also is a long-term relationship in levels of economic policy uncertainty re China and Europe, which makes sense given the trading relationship between these states. Changes in the two measures of economic policy uncertainty exhibit strong co-movement (Chart 6). Chart 5Taper Talk Makes Precious Metals Markets Twitchy
Taper Talk Makes Precious Metals Markets Twitchy
Taper Talk Makes Precious Metals Markets Twitchy
Chart 6Economic Policy Uncertainty Goes Across National Borders
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Investment Implications The increase in COVID-19 infection and re-infection rates, and death rates, is forcing commodity markets to reevaluate demand projections and the likelihood of continued monetary accommodation globally. This ultimately affects the prospects for commodity prices. Conflicting interpretations of the state of local and the global economies increases uncertainty across markets, especially precious metals, which are exquisitely sensitive to even a hint of a change in policy. This uncertainty is compounded when top officials at systematically important central banks provide sometimes-contradictory interpretations of the state of their economies. Despite this uncertainty we remain bullish gold and silver, expecting efficacious vaccines to become more widely available, which will allow the global recovery to regain its footing. We are less sanguine about the prospects for the winding down of the massive monetary accommodation globally, particularly that of the US, where data-dependent policymakers still feel compelled to provide almost-certain policy prescriptions in an increasingly uncertain world.This is a fundamental factor driving global uncertainty. We remain long gold expecting it to trade to $2,000/oz this year, and long silver, expecting it to hit $30/oz. Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish While US crude oil inventories rose 3.6mm barrels in the week ended 30 July 2021 gasoline stocks fell 5.3mm barrels, contributing to an overall decline in crude and product inventories in the US of 1.2mm barrels, according to the US EIA's latest tally (Chart 7). US crude and product stocks have been falling throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and now stand ~ 13% below year earlier levels at 1.7 billion barrels. Crude oil stocks, at 439mm barrels, are just over 15% below year-ago levels. This reflects the decline in US domestic production, which is down 7.1% y/y and now stands at 11.2mm b/d. US refined-product demand, however, is up close to 9% over the January-July period y/y, and stands at 21.2mm b/d. Base Metals: Bullish Workers at the world's largest copper mine, Escondida in Chile, are in government-mediated talks with management that end on Saturday to see if they can avert a strike. There is a chance talks could be extended five days beyond that date, under Chilean law. The mine is majority owned by BHP. Workers at a Codelco-owned mine also voted to strike and will enter government-mediated talks as well. These potential strikes most likely explain why copper prices have been holding relatively steady as other commodities have come under pressure, as markets reassess the odds of a demand slowdown brought about by surging COVID-19 infections, which are hitting Asian markets particularly hard (Chart 8). Chart 7
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Uncertainty Checks Gold's Recovery
Chart 8
Copper Prices Recovering
Copper Prices Recovering
Footnotes 1 We flagged this risk in our July 8, 2021 report entitled Assessing Risks To Our Commodity Views, which is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Pricing A Tighter Regulatory Grip published on August 4, 2021 by our China Investment Strategy. It is available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 We measure this using Granger-Causality tests. 4 These broad real FX rates are handy explanatory variables, in that they combine two very important factors affecting gold prices – inflation and broad FX trade-weighted indexes. Additional modelling also suggests these broad real FX rates for the USD and RMB coupled with US real 2- and 5-year rates also provide good explanatory models for gold prices. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
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Highlights The dollar is fighting a tug of war between two diverging forces: an economic slowdown around the world but plunging real interest rates in the US. The litmus test for determining which force will gain the upper hand is if the DXY fails to break above the 93-94 level that marked the March highs. So far that appears to be the case. In the interim, investors can capitalize on a few themes that will ultimately unfold: an end to the China slowdown, a bet on real rates staying low for longer, and a play on the Olympics. The expressions of these themes are long AUD/MXN, long silver and long the yen, respectively. Natural disasters are also rising in frequency globally. Historically, this has coincided with rising currency volatility. Long CHF/NZD positions can be a potent play on this trend. We ultimately expect the dollar lower 9-12 months from now. The best currencies to express this view today are NOK and SEK. Feature We are a month into the second half of year, and it is instructive to revisit the dollar view and our roadmap towards year-end. As a starting point, two key themes are propping the dollar on a tactical basis: The first is a global economic slowdown, one that could be exacerbated by increased infections of the COVID-19 Delta variant. The dollar tends to rise in an environment where global growth is weak. This is especially the case when US growth is relatively resilient, like now (Chart I-1). The second is the resilience of the US equity market, not only due to superior earnings, but also as regulatory crackdowns hit shares in China specifically, and emerging markets in general. Equity inflows into the US were a key reason the dollar did not collapse in 2020. Renewed inflows into US equities will be particularly beneficial for the dollar (Chart I-2). This will especially be the case if technology and healthcare earnings keep surprising to the upside. Chart I-1The Dollar And Relative Economic Momentum
The Dollar And Relative Economic Momentum
The Dollar And Relative Economic Momentum
Chart I-2The US Is Leading The Earnings ##br##Cycle
The US Is Leading The Earnings Cycle
The US Is Leading The Earnings Cycle
At the same time, real interest rates in the US are very depressed. In its latest meeting, the Federal Reserve reiterated that it will keep running the economy hot, a thesis central to our bearish dollar view. This puts the dollar in a tug of war between two diverging forces: an economic slowdown around the world but plunging real interest rates in the US. Arbitrating The Tug Of War Historically, unless the world economy experiences a recession, the interest rate story has dominated currency market action. Our report last week showed that real interest rates matter for currencies both short term and longer term. Given our bias that global growth will moderate rather than contract, the future path of interest rates will once again become important for currency market action. In this light, lower real rates are negative for the US dollar. How long the outperformance of US equities will last is a tougher call. What we do know is that in a rising interest rate environment, the US equity market has tended to derate relative to the rest of the world. Our base case is that bond yields will be higher globally on a cyclical horizon, suggesting investors should fade the current outperformance of US equities. Scandinavian Currencies As A Strategic Dollar Play The best currencies to express a cyclically lower dollar are the NOK and SEK, for a few reasons other than the strong correlation with the DXY index (Chart I-3): Chart I-3NOK And SEK Are A Play On DXY
NOK and SEK Are A Play On DXY
NOK and SEK Are A Play On DXY
Economic momentum in both Norway and Sweden is picking up steam. In Norway, high oil prices will be a cyclical boost to the currency, as has been the case historically. Meanwhile, Sweden is benefiting from a strong manufacturing landscape, especially in autos where pricing has skyrocketed due to shortages. While the Swedish manufacturing PMI has moderated recently, it still sits at 65.8, the highest level since the mid-1990s. Both currencies remain very cheap according to our models. Our favored PPP model shows that NOK and SEK are trading at a discount of 20% and 17% respectively, amongst the cheapest in the G10 (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Dollar Is Expensive
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
Norway, Sweden and Canada are among the countries whose output gaps are expected to close relatively fast (Chart I-5). In the case of Norway (and Canada), the central bank has been vocal about curtailing monetary accommodation, as market conditions improve. The upside surprise in Swedish GDP this week lowers the odds of more monetary accommodation from the Riksbank. This will boost real rates in these countries, supporting their currencies. Chart I-5Output Gaps Across The G10
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
In a nutshell, if the dollar heads lower 9-12 months from now, this will benefit most procyclical currencies, with the NOK and SEK as winners. The Yen As An Olympian Chart I-6Currencies And The Olympics
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
We made the case last month that the yen was the most underappreciated G10 currency, and that certainly remains true. Since then, there has been improvement in the Japanese economy: The vaccination campaign is progressing smoothly, with 27% of the population having been inoculated from almost nil earlier this year. Meanwhile, about 38% have received at least one dose. This should curtail hospitalizations, despite the increase in new cases. Economic momentum remains tepid, but there are green shoots. Real cash earnings are inflecting higher, which is boosting household spending. There was also remarkable improvement in the Eco Watchers Survey, a sign of optimism among small and medium-sized businesses. Global trade remains strong, which is a boost to the Japanese external sector. While this may slow going forward, it will be a benign headwind. Japan is less exposed to China, a key market for exports, compared to its developed market peers like Australia and New Zealand. Meanwhile, China is already easing policy at the margin. The true catalyst for the yen could be the Olympics. Since the 1970s, the median performance of a currency hosting the Olympics is 4% over a year. The performance of the yen today falls well below the 25th percentile of this performance gap (Chart I-6). This year’s games have obviously been unique given the pandemic but given that the yen is the most shorted G10 currency, this is probably already in the price. It also it does raise the prospect that the yen rises from being an underdog to staging a powerful mean reversion rally. While Japan will not get a tourism boost this summer that will buffet discretionary spending, foreigners are likely to return as the pandemic is put behind us. It is remarkable that Japanese shares, even construction and material companies, that should have benefited from the leadup to the Olympics, have massively underperformed (Chart I-7). This suggests that at the margin, many investors have folded hands and sold Japanese equities indiscriminately. Chart I-7Japanese Shares Have Underperformed
Japanese Shares Have Underperformed
Japanese Shares Have Underperformed
Finally, real rates in Japan are among the highest in the G10. This will not only prevent Japanese concerns from deploying yen cash on foreign paper, but could also lead to some repatriation of funds, boosting the yen. Low Real Rates: Buy Silver (And Platinum) The case for buying silver has become compelling, at least on a tactical basis. First, the runup in prices from under $12/oz in March to almost $30/oz in August ushered silver into a well-defined wedge formation, with a series of higher lows. We are now sitting close to the lower bound of this wedge. Given our expectation that any DXY rally will be capped at 93-94, this puts a solid floor under silver prices around the $22-$23/oz level (Chart I-8). This makes for an attractive risk/reward since silver could overtake its 2011 highs near $50/oz, once strong resistance at $30/oz is breached. Second, similar to gold, silver benefits from low interest rates, plentiful liquidity, and the incentive for fiat money debasement. But unlike gold or even cryptocurrencies, physical use for silver is quite elevated. Silver fabrication demand benefits from electronic production (whereby there is a shortage, so it is bound to eventually increase), as well as new green industries such as solar power that are dominating the manufacturing landscape (Chart I-9). Meanwhile, our Commodity & Energy Strategists have flagged that the surplus of silver is expected to shrink significantly this year, driven by both industrial and investment demand (Chart I-10). Chart I-8Buy Some Silver
Buy Some Silver
Buy Some Silver
Chart I-9Silver Demand Is Picking Up
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
Chart I-10The Silver Surplus Is Shrinking
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
Third, silver is also a more potent play on a lower dollar. This is because the silver market is thinner and more volatile, with futures open interest at about one-third that of gold. Put another way, volatility in silver has always been historically higher than gold, which is why silver tends to outperform gold when the dollar is falling (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Silver Is A More Potent Play On The Dollar
Silver Is A More Potent Play On The Dollar
Silver Is A More Potent Play On The Dollar
It is worth pointing out that the velocity of money between the US and China is slowing again, suggesting growth is likely to start outperforming outside the US, beyond the current slowdown. The US benefits less from a pickup in Chinese growth, compared to other countries. This has generally pushed the dollar lower and set fire under the silver/gold ratio (Chart I-12). Finally, there is also a case to be made for platinum. It has lagged both gold and palladium prices (Chart I-13). Meanwhile, breakthroughs are being made in substituting palladium for platinum in gasoline catalytic converters. Chart I-12Money Velocity And The GSR
Money Velocity And The GSR
Money Velocity And The GSR
Chart I-13Platinum And Silver Have Lagged Gold
Platinum And Silver Have Lagged Gold
Platinum And Silver Have Lagged Gold
China Slowdown Almost Over: Buy AUD/MXN Soon We highlighted in February that a tactical opportunity had opened to go short the AUD/MXN cross. With the cross down 11% from its recent highs, an opportunity to go long will soon open up. China has started easing policy at the margin. The AUD/MXN cross correlates quite strongly with the Chinese credit cycle, as Australia is economically tied to China while Mexico depends more on the US (Chart I-14). The Australian PMI has remained quite firm, despite a slowdown in the Chinese credit impulse. Strong commodity prices have been a factor, but it also points to endogenous strength in the Aussie economy. Relative terms of trade favor the Aussie. We had expected terms of trade between Australia and Mexico to relapse on the basis of destocking in China, but that has not been the case (Chart I-15). With oil prices structurally challenged by EVs, while metal prices benefit from the buildout of green infrastructure, terms of trade will remain favorable for the cross longer term. Australian stocks have been underperforming the more defensive Mexican bourse (Chart I-16). This should reverse as cyclicals start to regain the upper hand. Chart I-14AUD/MXN Tracks Chinese Credit
AUD/MXN Tracks Chinese Credit
AUD/MXN Tracks Chinese Credit
Chart I-15AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
AUD/MXN And Terms Of Trade
Chart I-16AUD/MXN And Relative Equity Prices
AUD/MXN And Relative Equity Prices
AUD/MXN And Relative Equity Prices
The timing for a long position is tricky as Chinese economic activity is likely to slow in the coming months, and cyclical equities could remain under pressure. Meanwhile, as value investors, we are also uncomfortable with AUD/MXN valuations. This suggests that in the very near term, short positions still make sense. That said, the 13-14 zone should provide formidable support to go long, an opportunity likely to unfold in the next 3 months (Chart 17). Chart I-17AUD/MXN And Momentum
AUD/MXN And Momentum
AUD/MXN And Momentum
A Final Thought On Rising Catastrophes We have been watching with obvious trepidation the rising incidence of catastrophes globally. The occurrence of weather events such as droughts, floods, storms, cyclones, and wildfires has been skyrocketing (Chart I-18). Chart I-18Disasters And Volatility
Trade Themes Into Year End
Trade Themes Into Year End
The direct play is to buy global construction and machinery stocks that are likely to benefit from increased reconstruction activity. It also favors agricultural futures. As for currency markets, the one observation is rising volatility with the VIX having spiked significantly in the years with numerous weather events. We are already long CHF/NZD and the yen as a play on rising currency volatility, and we will be exploring this thesis more deeply in future publications. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Data out of the US this week was relatively robust: The Markit manufacturing PMI for July edged up from 62.1 to 63.1. That said, the services PMI fell from 64.6 to 59.8. Durable goods orders were rather weak, rising 0.8% year on year in June, versus a consensus of a 2.2% increase. Admittedly, the core non-defense measure, excluding aircraft and parts, rose by 0.5% from 0.1%. Consumer confidence remains resilient, rising from 127.3 to 129.1 in July, well above expectations. Q2 GDP came in at 6.5% quarter on quarter, versus an 8.4% consensus. The US dollar DXY index fell this week. The Fed meeting highlighted that the authorities are in no rush to tighten monetary policy, despite what has been a robust recovery in labor market conditions and inflation. The aftermath of the meeting saw a drop in US real yields and the dollar. The Fed’s dovish stance has been a central theme to our bearish dollar view. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Data out of the eurozone this week softened: The manufacturing PMI fell to 62.6 in July from 63.4. The services PMI surprisingly improved, rising from 58.3 to 60.4 in July. Economic confidence rose from 117.9 to 119 in July. The German IFO survey was below consensus in July, but the expectations component did rise from 99.6 to 100.4. The euro rose by 1% this week. We went long the euro at 1.18 on expectations that at the margin, monetary policy in the euro area will shift in a more hawkish fashion. Since then, the ECB has adopted a symmetric inflation target, promising to keep interest rates low for longer. The euro’s indifference to this dovish development suggests a strong floor under the currency, and upside should euro area growth beat consensus. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward - April 2, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Japanese data was rather mixed this week: The Jibun manufacturing PMI eased slightly in July, to 52.2 from 52.4. The services component also fell to 46.4. Department store sales came in at 3.7% year on year in June. We highlighted last week that supermarket sales also remain strong. The yen was up 0.4% against the dollar this week. In the history of the Olympics, the incumbent currency has tended to rise over the course of the year. Given the yen is the most shorted developed-market currency currently, this sets it up for a coiled spring rebound. Report Links: The Case For Japan - June 11, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
There were some mixed data out of the UK this week: Retail sales in the UK were in line with expectations. The measure excluding automobiles and fuel rose by 7.4% year on year in June. The PMIs generally slowed from very strong levels. The manufacturing print for July was 60.4, while the services component came in at 57.8. House price inflation remains strong, with the nationwide measure coming in at 10.5% year on year in July. Mortgage approvals fell slightly in June but remain at a robust 81.3K. The pound rose by 1.5% this week. The big surprise in the UK has been a reversal in the COVID-19 infection rate, despite an economy that is reopening quite briskly. This sets cable up for a volatile few weeks and months, given a poor technical picture (speculations are cutting long positions from very aggressive levels). We like GBP long term but will stand aside for now. Report Links: Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low? - March 10, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Thoughts On The British Pound - December 18, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
The inflation report in Australia was in line with expectations for Q2: Headline CPI rose from 1.1% to 3.8%. The trimmed mean and median measure came in at 1.6% and 1.7% respectively. The AUD was flat this week, the worst performing G10 currency. The dominant story remains the renewed restrictions from a resurgence in COVID-19, particularly in Sydney. That said, weakness in AUD is starting to create an attractive reward/risk profile. Speculators are net short the Australian dollar, and our bias is that there has been spillover pressure from the recent turmoil in Asian/Chinese markets. In the end, this only makes for a coiled spring rebound in the AUD. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: The trade balance came in at NZ$261 million, even with stronger imports in June. The ANZ activity outlook index fell in July, to 26.3 from 31.6. The NZD was up 0.5% this week. The strong rally in NZD after a hawkish RBNZ a fortnight ago continues to fade. This week, we highlighted a new theme, which is the rising incidence of natural disasters. Historically, this has been great for agricultural prices, benefiting NZD. But it has also been accompanied by a tremendous rise in currency volatility, which hurts the NZD vis-à-vis safe-haven currencies. We are currently long CHF/NZD and will be exploring this theme in future publications. Report Links: How High Can The Kiwi Rise? - April 30, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Data out of Canada this week has been mixed: Retail sales fell month on month in May by 2.1% but this was above expectations. Inflation remains robust. Headline CPI was 3.1%, while the core trim, median and common measures came in at 2.6%, 2.4% and 1.7% respectively. The CAD rose by 0.8% this week. The backdrop for the loonie remains positive as the Bank of Canada is leaning against monetary accommodation by tapering asset purchases, and signaling interest rate increases, while the Fed remains on hold. These pin real interest rate differentials in favor of the loonie. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 The Outlook For The Canadian Dollar - October 9, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Switzerland this week: Investor confidence from the Credit Suisse survey fell in July, from 51.3 to 42.8. Total sight deposits were unchanged at CHF 712 bn for the week of July 23. The Swiss franc was up 1.3% this week. Incoming Swiss inflation data next week will dictate whether the SNB steps up the pace of FX intervention. So far, there have been no big moves in the CHF exchange rate to implore central bank attention. A rebound in global bond yields will be a welcome relief since the franc tends to weaken in that environment. For the time being, we believe volatility can continue to rise. As such, the franc will benefit, justifying long CHF/NZD bets. Report Links: An Update On The Swiss Franc - April 9, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
There was scant data out of Norway this week: Retail sales were flat month on month in June. The NOK was up 1% this week. Our limit buy on Scandinavian currencies was triggered a fortnight ago, nudging us in the money with this week’s currency moves. We are not fighting the Norges Bank, which has signaled they will increase interest rates this year, ahead of both the Federal Reserve and the ECB. As such, we are short EUR/NOK and USD/NOK. Report Links: The Norwegian Method - June 4, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Recent data from Sweden have been improving: The PPI for July came in at 9.6%, up from 7.9%. The June trade balance showed a healthy surplus of SEK 10.3 billion. The economic tendency survey for July came in at 122.4 from 119.8. Manufacturing confidence continues to inflect higher, rising from 125.2 to 129.2 in July. The SEK was the strongest performing G10 currency this week, rising 1.5%. Swedish Q2 GDP was a welcome positive surprise, up by 10.5% year on year and 0.9% quarter on quarter. This is paring back expectations of more stimulus from the Riksbank. We have been highlighting that SEK remains one of our most potent plays on a global growth recovery. As such, we are short EUR/SEK and USD/SEK. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Sweden Beyond The Pandemic: Poised To Re-leverage - March 19, 2020 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades
Gold was a major victim of the FOMC’s recent shift to a more hawkish tone. It is down more than 4.8% since Wednesday’s FOMC meeting, taking it to levels last seen at the end of April. Although we remain positive on the cyclical outlook for gold, the yellow…
Highlights US labor-market disappointments notwithstanding, the global recovery being propelled by real GDP growth in the world's major economies is on track to be the strongest in 80 years. This growth will fuel commodity demand, which increasingly confronts tighter supply. Higher commodity prices will ensue, and feed through to realized and expected inflation. Manufacturers will continue to see higher input and output prices. Our modeling suggests the USD will weaken to end-2023; however, most of the move already has occurred. Real US rates will remain subdued, as the Fed looks through PCE inflation rates above its 2% target and continues to focus on its full-employment mandate (Chart of the Week). Given these supportive inflation fundamentals, we remain long gold with a price target of $2,000/oz for this year. We are upgrading silver to a strategic position, expecting a $30/oz price by year-end. We remain long the S&P GSCI Dynamic Roll Index ETF (COMT) and the S&P GSCI, expecting tight supply-demand balances to steepen backwardations in forward curves, and long the Global Metals & Mining Producers ETF (PICK). Global economic policy uncertainty will remain elevated until broader vaccine distributions reduce lockdown risks. Feature The recovery of the global economy catalyzed by massive monetary accommodation and fiscal stimulus is on track to be the strongest in the past 80 years, according to the World Bank.1 The Bank revised its growth expectation for real GDP this year sharply higher – to 5.6% from its January estimate of 4.1%. For 2022, the rate of global real GDP growth is expected to slow to 4.3%, which is still significantly higher than the average 3% growth of 2018-19. DM economies are expected to grow at a 4% rate this year – double the average 2018-19 rate – while EM growth is expected to come in at 6% this year vs a 4.2% average for 2018-19. The big drivers of growth this year will be China, where the Bank expects an unleashing of pent-up demand to push real GDP up by 8.5%, and the US, where massive fiscal and monetary support will lift real GDP 6.8%. The Bank expects other DM economies will contribute to this growth, as well. Growth in EM economies will be supported by stronger demand and higher commodity prices, in the Bank's forecast. Commodity demand is recovering faster than commodity supply in the wake of this big-economy GDP recovery. As a result, manufacturers globally are seeing significant increases in input and output prices (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekUS Real Rates Continue To Languish
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Chart 2Global Manufacturers' Prices Moving Higher
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
These price increases at the manufacturing level reflect the higher-price environment in global commodity markets, particularly in industrial commodities – i.e., bulks like iron ore and steel; base metals like copper and aluminum; and oil prices, which touch most processes involved in getting materials out of the ground and into factories before they make their way to consumers, who then drive to stores to pick up goods or have them delivered. Chart 3Commodity Price Increases Reflected in CPI Inflation Expectations
Commodity Price Increases Reflected in CPI Inflation Expectations
Commodity Price Increases Reflected in CPI Inflation Expectations
These price pressures are being picked up in 5y5y CPI swaps markets, which are cointegrated with commodity prices (Chart 3). This also is showing up in shorter-tenor inflation gauges – monthly CPI and 2y CPI swaps. Oil prices, in particular, will be critical to the evolution of 5-year/5-year (5y5y) CPI swap rates, which are closely followed by fixed-income markets (Chart 4). Chart 4Oil Prices Are Key To 5Y5Y CPI Swap Rates
Oil Prices Are Key To 5Y5Y CPI Swap Rates
Oil Prices Are Key To 5Y5Y CPI Swap Rates
Higher Gold Prices Expected CPI inflation expectations drive 5-year and 10-year real rates, which are important explanatory variables for gold prices (Chart 5).2 In addition, the massive monetary and fiscal policy out of the US also is driving expectations for a lower USD: Currency debasement fears are higher than they otherwise would be, given all the liquidity and stimulus sloshing around global markets, which also is bullish for gold (Chart 6). Chart 5Weaker Real Rates Bullish For Gold
Weaker Real Rates Bullish For Gold
Weaker Real Rates Bullish For Gold
Chart 6Weaker USD Supports Gold
Weaker USD Supports Gold
Weaker USD Supports Gold
All of these effects, particularly the inflationary impacts, are summarized in our fair-value gold model (Chart 7). At the beginning of 2021, our fair-value gold model indicated price would be closer to $2,005/oz, which was well above the actual gold price in January. Gold prices have remained below the fair value model since the beginning of 2021. The model explains gold prices using real rates, TWIB, US CPI and global economic policy uncertainty. Based on our modeling, we expect these variables to continue to be supportive of gold, bolstering our view the yellow metal will reach $2000/ oz this year. Unlike industrial commodities, gold prices are sensitive to speculative positioning and technical indicators. Our gold composite indicator shows that gold prices may be reflecting bullish sentiment. This sentiment likely reflects increasing inflation expectations, which we use as an explanatory variable for gold prices. The fact that gold is moving higher on sentiment is corroborated by the latest data point from Marketvane’s gold bullish consensus, which reported 72% of the traders expect prices to rise further (Chart 8). Chart 7BCAs Gold Fair-Value Model Supports 00/oz View
BCAs Gold Fair-Value Model Supports $2000/oz View
BCAs Gold Fair-Value Model Supports $2000/oz View
Chart 8Sentiment Supports Oil Prices
Sentiment Supports Oil Prices
Sentiment Supports Oil Prices
Investment Implications The massive monetary and fiscal stimulus that saw the global economy through the worst of the economic devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic is now bubbling through the real economy, and will, if the World Bank's assessment proves out, result in the strongest real GDP growth in 80 years. Liquidity remains abundant and interest rates – real and nominal – remain low. In its latest Global Economic Prospects, the Bank notes, " The literature generally suggests that monetary easing, both conventional and unconventional, typically boosts aggregate demand and inflation with a lag of 1-3 years …" The evidence for this is stronger for DM economies than EM; however, as the experience in China shows, scale matters. If the Bank's assessment is correct, the inflationary impulse from this stimulus should be apparent now – and it is – and will endure for another year or two. This stimulus has catalyzed organic growth and will continue to do so for years, particularly in economies pouring massive resources into renewable-energy generation and the infrastructure required to support it, a topic we have been writing about for some time.3 We remain long gold with a price target of $2,000/oz for this year. We are long silver on a tactical basis, but given our growth expectations, are upgrading this to a strategic position, expecting a $30/oz price by year-end. As we have noted in the past, silver is sensitive to all of the financial factors we consider when assessing gold markets, and it has a strong industrial component that accounts for more than half of its demand.4 Supportive fundamentals remain in place, with total supply (mine output and recycling) falling, demand rising and balances tightening (Chart 9). Worth noting is silver's supply is constrained because of underinvestment in copper production at the mine level, where silver is a by-product. On the demand side, continued recovery of industrial and consumer demand will keep silver prices well supported. In terms of broad commodity exposure, we remain long the S&P GSCI Dynamic Roll Index ETF (COMT) and the S&P GSCI, expecting tight supply-demand balances to continue to draw down inventories – particularly in energy and metals markets – which will lead to steeper backwardations in forward curves. Backwardation is the source of roll-yields for long commodity index investments. Investors initially have a long exposure in deferred commodity futures contracts, which are then liquidated and re-established when these contracts become more prompt (i.e., closer to delivery). If the futures' forward curves are backwardated, investors essentially are buying the deferred contracts at a lower price than the price at which the position likely is liquidated. We also remain long the Global Metals & Mining Producers ETF (PICK), an equity vehicle that spans miners and traders; the longer discounting horizon of equity markets suits our view on metals. Chart 9Upgrading Silver To Strategic Position
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Chart 10Wider Vaccine Distribution Will Support Gold Demand
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Gold, Silver, Indexes Favored As Inflation Looms
Global economic policy uncertainty will remain elevated until broader vaccine distributions reduce lockdown risks. We expect the wider distribution of vaccines will become increasingly apparent during 2H21 and in 2022. This will be bullish for physical gold demand – particularly in China and India – which will add support for our gold position (Chart 10). Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish The US EIA expects Brent crude oil prices to fall to $60/bbl next year, given its call higher production from OPEC 2.0 and the US shales will outpace demand growth. The EIA expects global oil demand will average just under 98mm this year, or 5.4mm b/d above 2020 levels. For next year, the EIA is forecasting demand will grow 3.6mm b/d, averaging 101.3mm b/d. This is slightly less than the demand growth we expect next year – 101.65mm b/d. We are expecting 2022 Brent prices to average $73/bbl, and $78/bbl in 2023. We will be updating our oil balances and price forecasts in next week's publication. Base Metals: Bullish Pedro Castillo, the socialist candidate in Peru's presidential election, held on to a razor-thin lead in balloting as we went to press. Markets have been focused on the outcome of this election, as Castillo has campaigned on increasing taxes and royalties for mining companies operating in Peru, which accounts for ~10% of global copper production. The election results are likely to be contested by opposition candidate rival Keiko Fujimori, who has made unsubstantiated claims of fraud, according to reuters.com. Copper prices traded on either side of $4.50/lb on the CME/COMEX market as the election drama was unfolding (Chart 11). Precious Metals: Bullish As economies around the world reopen and growth rebounds, car manufacturing will revive. Stricter emissions regulations mean the demand for autocatalysts – hence platinum and palladium – will rise with the recovery in automobile production. Platinum is also used in the production of green hydrogen, making it an important metal for the shift to renewable energy. On the supply side, most platinum shafts in South Africa are back to pre-COVID-19 levels, according to Johnson Matthey, the metals refiner. As a result, supply from the world’s largest platinum producer will rebound by 40%, resulting in a surplus. South Africa accounts for ~ 70% of global platinum supply. The fact that an overwhelming majority of platinum comes from a nation which has had periodic electricity outages – the most recent one occurring a little more than a week ago – could pose a supply-side risk to this metal. This could introduce upside volatility to prices (Chart 12). Ags/Softs: Neutral As of 6 June, 90% of the US corn crop had emerged vs a five-year average of 82%; 72% of the crop was reported to be in good to excellent condition vs 75% at this time last year. Chart 11
Political Risk in Chile and Peru Could Bolster Copper Prices
Political Risk in Chile and Peru Could Bolster Copper Prices
Chart 12
Platinum Prices Going Up
Platinum Prices Going Up
Footnotes 1 Please see World Bank's Global Economic Prospects update, published June 8, 2021. 2 In fact, US Treasury Inflation-Indexed securities include the CPI-U as a factor in yield determination. 3 For our latest installment of this epic evolution, please see A Perfect Energy Storm On The Way, which we published last week. It is available at ces.bcareserch.com. 4 Please see Higher Inflation Expectations Battle Lower Risk Premia In Gold Markets, which we published February 4, 2021. It is available at ces.bcareserch.com. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
Higher Inflation On The Way
Higher Inflation On The Way
Highlights Rising CO2 emissions on the back of stronger global energy growth this year will keep energy markets focused on expanding ESG risks in the buildout of renewable generation via metals mining (Chart of the Week). EM energy demand is expected to grow 3.4% this year vs. 2019 levels and will account for ~ 70% of global energy demand growth. Demand in DM economies will fall 3% this year vs 2019 levels. Overall, global demand is expected to recover all the ground lost to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the IEA. Rising energy demand will be met by higher fossil-fuel use, with coal demand increasing by more than total renewables generation this year and accounting for more than half of global energy demand growth. Demand for renewable power will increase by 8,300 TWh (8%) this year, the largest y/y increase recorded by the IEA. As renewables generation is built out, demand for bulks (iron ore and steel) and base metals will increase.1 Building that new energy supply will contribute to rising CO2, particularly in the renewables' supply chains. Feature Energy demand will recover much of the ground lost to the COVID-19 pandemic last year, according to the IEA.2 Most of this is down to successful rollouts of vaccination programs in systemically important economies – e.g., China, the US and the UK – and the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus deployed to carry the global economy through the pandemic. The risk of further lockdowns and uncontrolled spread of variants of the virus remains high, but, at present, progress continues to be made and wider vaccine distribution can be expected. The IEA expects a global recovery in energy demand of 4.6% this year, which will put total demand at ~ 0.5% above 2019 levels. The global rebound will be led by EM economies, where demand is expected to grow 3.4% this year vs. 2019 levels and will account for ~ 70% of global energy demand growth. Energy demand in DM economies will fall 3% this year vs 2019 levels. Overall, global demand is expected to recover all the ground lost to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the IEA. Chart of the WeekGlobal CO2 Emissions Will Rebound Post-COVID-19
Global CO2 Emissions Will Rebound Post-COVID-19
Global CO2 Emissions Will Rebound Post-COVID-19
Coal demand will lead the rebound in fossil-fuel use, which is expected to account for more than total renewables demand globally this year, covering more than half of global energy demand growth. This will push CO2 emissions up by 5% this year. Asia coal demand – led by China's and India's world-leading coal-plant buildout over the past 20 years – will account for 80% of world demand (Chart 2). Chart 2China, India Lead Coal-Fired Generation Buildout
China, India Lead Coal-Fired Generation Buildout
China, India Lead Coal-Fired Generation Buildout
Demand for renewable power will post its biggest year-on-year gain on record, increasing by 8,300 TWh (8%) this year. This increase comes at the back of roughly a decade of an increasing share of electricity from renewables globally (Chart 3). As renewables generation is built out, demand for bulks (iron ore and steel) and base metals will increase.3 Building that new energy supply will contribute to rising CO2, particularly in the renewables' supply chains. Chart 3Share of Electricity From Renewables Has Been Increasing
Share of Electricity From Renewables Has Been Increasing
Share of Electricity From Renewables Has Been Increasing
ESG Risks Increase With Renewables Buildout Governments have pledged to invest vast sums of money into the green energy transition, to reduce fossil fuels consumption and deforestation, thus curbing temperature increases. In addition, banks have pledged trillions will be made available to support the buildout of renewable technologies over the coming years. The World Bank, under the most ambitious scenarios considered (IEA ETP B2DS and IRENA REmap), projects that renewables, will make up approximately 90% of the installed electricity generation capacity up to 2050. This analysis excludes oil, biomass and tidal energy. (Chart 4). Building these renewable energy sources will be extremely mineral intensive (Chart 5). Chart 4Renewables Potential Is Huge …
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
While we have highlighted issues such as a lack of mining capex and decreasing ore grades in past research – both of which can be addressed by higher metals and minerals prices – the environmental, social and governance (ESG) risks posed by mining are equally important factors for investors, policymakers and mining companies to consider.4 The mining industry generally uses three principal sources of energy for its operations – diesel fuel (mostly in moving mined ore down the supply chain for processing), grid electricity and explosives. Of these three, diesel and electricity consumption contributes substantially to mining’s GHG emissions. In the mining stage, land clearing, drilling, blasting, crushing and hauling require a considerable amount of energy, and hence emit the highest amounts of greenhouse gases (GHGs). Chart 5… As Are Its Mineral Requirements
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
The Environmental Impact Of Mining Under the scenarios depicted in Chart 5, copper suppliers could be called on to produce approximately 21mm MT of the red metal annually between now and 2050, which is equivalent to a 7% annual increase of supplies vs. the 2017 reference year shown in the chart. Mining sufficient amounts of copper, a metal which is critical to the renewable energy buildout, both in terms of quantity and versatility, will test miners' and governments' ability to extract sufficient amounts of ore for further processing without massively damaging the environment or indigenous populations' habitats (Chart 6). Chart 6Copper Spans All Renewables Technologies
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
A recent risk analysis of 308 undeveloped copper orebodies found that for 180 of the orebodies – roughly equivalent to 570mm MT of copper – ore-grade risk was characterized as moderate-to-high risk.5 High risk implies a lower concentration of metal in the ore deposits. Mining in ore bodies with lower copper grades will be more energy intensive, and thus will emit more greenhouse gases. Table 1 is a risk matrix of the 40 mines that have the most amount of copper tonnage in this analysis: 27 of these mines displayed in the matrix have a medium-to-high grade risk. Table 1Mining Risk Matrix
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Another analysis established a negative relationship between the ore-grade quality and energy consumption across mines for different metals and minerals.6 This paper found that, as ore grade depletes, the energy needed to extract it and send it along the supply chain for further processing is exponentially higher (Chart 7). Lastly, a recent examination found that in 2018, primary metals and mining accounted for approximately 10% of the total greenhouse gases. Using a case study of Chile, the world’s largest producer of the red metal, the researchers found that fuel consumption increased by 130% and electricity consumption per unit of mined copper increased by 32% from 2001 to 2017. This increase was primarily due to decreasing ore grades.7 As ore grades continue to fall, these exponential relationships likely will persist or become more significant. Chart 7Energy Use Rises As Ore Quality Falls
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Renewables ESG Risks Grow With Demand
Bottom Line: While technology can improve extraction, it cannot reduce the minimum energy required for the mining process. This increased energy use will contribute to the total amount of CO2 and other GHGs emitted in the process of extracting the ores required to realize a low-carbon future. Trade-Off Between CO2 Emissions And Economic Development A recent Reuters analysis highlights the gap between EM and DM from the perspective of their renewable energy transition priorities.8 Of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), “Taking action to combat climate change” takes precedence over the rest for DM economies. This is largely because they have already dealt with other energy and income intensive SDGs such as improvements in healthcare and poverty reduction. The large scale of unmet energy demand in developing countries poses a huge challenge to controlling CO2 emissions. The populations of these countries are growing fast and are projected to continue increasing over the next three decades. Rising populations, make the issue of a "green-energy transition" extremely dynamic – i.e., not only do EM economies need to replace existing fossil fuels, but they also need to add enough extra zero-emission fuel sources to meet the growth in energy demand. Bottom Line: Coupled with the increased amount of energy required to mine the same amount of metal (due to lower ore grades), rising energy demand resulting from a burgeoning population in EM economies - which use fossil fuels to meet their primary needs - will require more metals to be mined for the renewable energy transition. This will further increase the amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas emissions from mine activity, and increase the risk to indigenous populations living close-by to the sources of this new metals supply. ESG risks will increase as a result, presenting greater challenges to attracting funding to these efforts. Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish OPEC 2.0 was expected to stick with its decision to return ~ 2mm b/d of supply to the market at its ministerial meeting Wednesday. Markets remain wary of demand slowing as COVID-19-induced lockdowns persist and case counts increase globally. The production being returned to market includes 1mm b/d of voluntary cuts by Saudi Arabia, which could, if needs be, keep barrels off the market if demand weakens. Base Metals: Bullish Front-month COMEX copper is holding above $4.50/lb, after breaching its 11-year high earlier this week. The proximate cause of the initial lift above that level was news of a strike by Chilean port workers on Monday protesting restrictions on early pension-fund drawdowns, according to mining.com. After a slight breather, prices returned to trading north of $4.50/lb by mid-week. Last week, we raised our Dec21 COMEX copper price forecast to $5.00/lb from $4.50/lb. Separately, high-grade iron ore (65% Fe) hit record highs, while the benchmark grade (62% Fe) traded above $190/MT earlier in the week on the back of lower-than-expected production by major suppliers and USD weakness. Steel futures on the Shanghai Futures Exchange hit another record as well, as strong demand and threats of mandated reductions in Chinese steel output to reduce pollution loom (Chart 8). Precious Metals: Bullish Rising COVID cases, especially in India, Brazil and Japan are increasing gold’s safe-haven appeal (Chart 9). The US CFTC, in its Commitment of Traders (COT) report for the week ending April 20, stated that speculators raised their COMEX gold bullish positions. At the end of the two-day FOMC meeting, the Fed decided against lifting interest rates and withdrawing support for the US economy. However, officials sounded more optimistic about the economy than they did in March. The decision did not give any sign interest rates would be lifted, or asset purchases would be tapered against the backdrop of a steadily improving economy. Net, this could increase demand for gold, as inflationary pressures rise. As of Tuesday’s close, COMEX gold was trading at $1778/oz. Ags/Softs: Neutral Corn and bean futures settled down by mid-week after a sharp rally earlier. After rising to a new eight-year high just below $7/bushel due to cold weather in the US, and fears a lower harvest in Brazil will reduce global grain supplies, corn settled down to ~ $6.85/bu at mid-week trading. Beans traded above $15.50/bu earlier in the week, their highest since June 2014, and settled down to ~ $15.36/bu by mid-week. Attention remains focused on global supplies. The uptrend in grains and beans remains intact. Chart 8
OCTOBER HRC FUTURES HIT A HIGH ON THE SHFE
OCTOBER HRC FUTURES HIT A HIGH ON THE SHFE
Chart 9
Covid Uncertainty Could Push Up Gold Demand
Covid Uncertainty Could Push Up Gold Demand
Footnotes 1 Please see Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, published 26 November 2020, for further discussion. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Global Energy Review 2021, the IEA's Flagship report for April 2021. 3 Please see Renewables, China's FYP Underpin Metals Demand, published 26 November 2020, for further discussion. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4 We discussed these capex issues in last week's research, Copper Headed Higher On Surge In Steel Prices, which is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Valenta et al.’s ‘Re-thinking complex orebodies: Consequences for the future world supply of copper’ published in 2019 for this analysis. 6 Please see Calvo et. al.’s ‘Decreasing Ore Grades in Global Metallic Mining: A Theoretical Issue or a Global Reality?’ published in 2016 for this analysis. 7 Please see Azadi et. al.’s ‘Transparency on greenhouse gas emissions from mining to enable climate change mitigation’ published in 2020 for this analysis. 8 Please see John Kemp's Column: CO2 emission limits and economic development published 19 April 2021 by reuters.com. Investment Views and Themes Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2021 Summary of Closed Trades
Higher Inflation On The Way
Higher Inflation On The Way
Dear client, In addition to this week’s abbreviated report, we are also sending you a Special Report on currency hedging, authored by my colleague Xiaoli Tang. Xiaoli’s previous work mapped out a dynamic hedging strategy for developed market equity investors in various home currencies. In this report, she extends the work to emerging market exposure. I hope you will find the report insightful. Next week, in lieu of our weekly report on Friday, we will be sending you a joint Special Report on the UK on Tuesday, together with our Global Fixed Income colleagues. Kind regards, Chester Highlights The DXY index is up for the year, but further gains will be capped at 2-3% from current levels. Long yen positions are offside amid the dollar rally. This should wash out stale longs, and underpin the bull case. Lower the limit-sell on the gold/silver ratio to 68. We were stopped out of our short AUD/MXN position amidst a broad-based selloff in EM currencies. We are reinitiating the trade this week. Feature Chart I-1The Dollar Has Been Strong In 2021
The Dollar Has Been Strong In 2021
The Dollar Has Been Strong In 2021
The DXY index has once again kissed off the 90 level and is gaining momentum in March. Year-to-date, the DXY index is up 1.1%. This performance has been particularly pronounced against other safe haven currencies, such as the Swiss franc and the Japanese yen. GBP and AUD have fared rather well in this environment (Chart I-1). As the “anti-dollar,” the euro has also suffered. Our technical indicators continue to warn that the dollar still has upside. Net speculative positions are at very depressed levels, consistent with many sentiment indicators that are bearish USD. However, this time around, any dollar rally could be capped at 2-3%, in sharp contrast to the bounce we witnessed in March 2020. The Message From Dollar Technical Indicators Our dollar capitulation index has bounced from very oversold levels, and is now sitting above neutral territory (Chart I-2). The index comprises a standardized measure of sentiment, net speculative positioning and momentum. It is very rare that a drop in this index below the -1.5 level does not trigger a rebound in the dollar. This time around, the bounce has been rather muted. Chart I-2BCA Dollar Capitulation Index Suggests Some Upside
BCA Dollar Capitulation Index Suggests Some Upside
BCA Dollar Capitulation Index Suggests Some Upside
Part of the reason has been concentration around dollar short positions. Investors throughout most of the pandemic executed their bearish dollar bets through the euro, yen and the Swiss franc (countries that already had negative interest rates). Positioning on risk on currencies such as the Australian dollar and the Mexican peso were neutral. This also explains the underperformance of the yen, as the dollar rises. From a sizing standpoint, ever since the dollar peaked in March 2020, counter-trend moves have been in the order of 2-3%. We expect this time to be no different. What To Do About The Yen The yen has been one of our core holdings on three fundamental pillars: it is cheap, it tends to rise during dollar bear markets and the economy in Japan is more hostage to deflation than the US. This bodes well for real rates in Japan, relative to the US. Over the last month, our long yen position has been put offside. First, demand for safe havens has ebbed as US interest rates have gapped higher (Chart I-3, panel 1). King dollar has once again become the safe haven of choice. As Chart I-1 illustrates, low beta currencies such as the Swiss franc and yen, that tend to do relatively well when the dollar is rallying, have underperformed. Yield curve control (YCC) in Japan is also negative for the yen as interest rates rise (panel 2). Economic momentum in Japan is also rolling over (panel 3). Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s mulling to extend the state of emergency in the Tokyo region could further cripple any Japanese economic recovery. Chart I-3A Healthy Reset In The Yen
A Healthy Reset In The Yen
A Healthy Reset In The Yen
Chart I-4USD/JPY Support Should Hold
USD/JPY Support Should Hold
USD/JPY Support Should Hold
For short-term investors, USD/JPY is very overbought and is approaching strong resistance (Chart I-4). In our view, a washing out of stale shorts would provide a healthy reset for the bear market to resume. Meanwhile, USD/JPY and the DXY change correlations during risk-off periods, where the yen appreciates versus the dollar. Therefore, a market reset is also positive for the yen. Housekeeping Chart I-5Remain Short AUD/MXN
Remain Short AUD/MXN
Remain Short AUD/MXN
We were stopped out of our short AUD/MXN trade last week for a loss of 6.1%. We are reinitiating the trade this week. The case for the trade, made a month ago, remains intact. A short-term recovery in the US economy, relative to the rest of the world, argues for an AUD/MXN short. In fact, a divergence has occurred between the BRL/MXN and the AUD/MXN exchange rate (Chart I-5). Domestic factors have certainly tempered the Brazilian real, but the underperformance of metal prices relative to oil in recent months is also a factor. We expect some convergence to occur, with MXN appreciating much faster than the AUD. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
USD Technicals 1
Chart II-2USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
USD Technicals 2
Recent data in the US have stepped up: Personal income rose by 10% in January, while personal spending rose by 2.4% month-on-month. The ISM report was stellar. The manufacturing PMI improved from 58.7 to 60.8 in February. Prices paid rose to 86. Factory orders were slightly above expectations at 2.6% month-on-month in January. The DXY index rose by 165 bps this week. The narrative of a counter-trend reversal in the DXY index isn playing out. As the story unfolds, it will be important to establish targets. Our bias is that the DXY stalls before 93-94 is reached. Report Links: Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Sizing A Potential Dollar Bounce - January 15, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
EUR Technicals 1
Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
EUR Technicals 2
Recent data from the euro area remain weak: Core CPI in the Eurozone came in at 1.1%, in line with expectations. The unemployment rate declined from 8.3% to 8.1% in January. January retail sales were weak at -6.4% year-on-year. The euro fell by 1.7%% against the US dollar this week. It will be almost impossible for the euro to rise in an environment where the dollar is in a broad-based decline. Given elevated sentiment on the euro, a healthy reset is necessary for the bull market to resume. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
JPY Technicals 1
Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
JPY Technicals 2
Recent data from Japan has been marginally positive: The employment report was positive, with the unemployment rate dipping to 2.9% and an improvement in the jobs-to-applicants ratio in January. Consumer confidence in February is rebounding from very low levels. The Japanese yen fell by 1.5% against the US dollar this week. The recovery in the Japanese economy is fragile, and tentative signs of a renewed lockdown will knock down confidence. In this transition phase, yen long positions could be hostage to losses. Longer-term, the yen is cheap and will benefit from a broad-based dollar decline. Report Links: On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 The Near-Term Bull Case For The Dollar - February 28, 2020 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
GBP Technicals 1
Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
GBP Technicals 2
Recent data out of the UK have been in line: Mortgage approvals rose 99K in January, in line with expectations. The construction PMI rose from 49.2 to 53.3 in February. Nationwide house prices are soaring, rising 6.9% in February on a year-on-year basis. The pound fell by 0.8% against the dollar this week. It is however the best performing currency this year. Our short EUR/GBP trade has benefited from faster vaccination in the UK (that could give way to a faster reopening of the economy) and a nice valuation starting point. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
AUD Technicals 1
Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
AUD Technicals 2
Recent data in Australia was robust: Home lending remained in an uptrend. Owner-occupied loans increased by 11% in January, while investor loans increased by 9.4%. Terms of trade are soaring, rising 24% year-on-year in February. The current account surplus came in near a record A$14.5 billion in Q4. GDP grew by 3.1% QoQ in Q4. The Aussie fell by 1.8% his week. Terms of trade will continue being a tailwind for the AUD/USD. We also like the AUD/NZD cross, as a valuation and terms-of-trade bet. However, we expect that any positive surprises in the US will hurt AUD relative to the Americas. One way to play this is by shorting AUD/MXN. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 An Update On The Australian Dollar - September 18, 2020 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
NZD Technicals 1
Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
NZD Technicals 2
There was scant data out of New Zealand this week: Terms of trade rose by 1.3% in Q4. CoreLogic home prices rose 14.5% in February. The New Zealand dollar fell by 2.4% against the US dollar this week. The kiwi ranks as the most unattractive currency in our FX framework. For one, it has catapulted itself to the most expensive currency in our PPP models. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
CAD Technicals 1
Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
CAD Technicals 2
Recent data from Canada was positive: The Nanos confidence index rose from 58.2 to 59.4 in February. Annualized 4Q GDP came in at 9.6%, above expectations. Building permits rose 8.2% month-on-month in January. The Canadian dollar fell 0.4% against the US dollar this week. Oil prices remain very much in an uptrend, which is underpinning the loonie. Better US economic performance in the near term should also help the CAD. Report Links: Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
CHF Technicals 1
Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
CHF Technicals 2
Recent data out of Switzerland have been improving: Swiss GDP rose by 0.3% quarter-on-quarter in 4Q. The KOF leading indicator rose from 96.5 to 102.7 in February. The February manufacturing PMI rose from 59.4 to 61.3. Switzerland remains in deflation, with the core CPI that came in at -0.3% year-on-year in February. The Swiss franc fell by 2.6% against the US dollar this week. Safe -haven currencies continue to be laggards, as rates rise and gold falls to the wayside. This is bullish on procyclical currencies, and negative the Swiss franc. We are long EUR/CHF on this basis, but short USD/JPY purely as portfolio insurance. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 On The DXY Breakout, Euro, And Swiss Franc - February 21, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
NOK Technicals 1
Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
NOK Technicals 2
The data out of Norway has been robust: The unemployment rate fell from 4.4% to 4.3% The manufacturing PMI increased from 51.8 to 56.1 in February. The current account balance was robust in Q4. It should increase significantly in Q1 this year given the large trade balance in January. Being long the Norwegian krone is one of our high-conviction bets in the FX portfolio. The Norwegian krone fell by 1% against the US dollar this week, but outperformed the euro, amongst other currencies. The NOK ticks all the boxes of an attractive currency – cheap valuations, a liquidity discount, and primed to benefit from a global growth rebound. Report Links: Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 A New Paradigm For Petrocurrencies - April 10, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
SEK Technicals 1
Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
SEK Technicals 2
Most Swedish data releases were in line with expectations: GDP came in at -0.2% quarter-on-quarter, below expectations. Retail sales rose 3.1% year-on-year, above expectations. The trade balance came in at a surplus of SEK 5.2 billion in January. The manufacturing PMI remained elevated at 61.6 in February. The Swedish krona fell by 2.4% against the US dollar this week. Manufacturing data is improving in Sweden but the economy remains hostage to COVID-19, compared to Norway. That is weighing on the krona. That said, Sweden is a highly levered play on the global cycle. Therefore, once the pandemic is behind us, the SEK will outperform. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Updating Our Balance Of Payments Monitor - November 29, 2019 Where To Next For The US Dollar? - June 7, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Limit Orders Closed Trades