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Special Report Dear clients, Please note that in next week’s China Macro And Market Review, we will include a section explaining our view on the coronavirus outbreak and its economic as well as financial market implications. We maintain our overweight stance on both Chinese investable and A-share equities, over a tactical (0-3 months) and cyclical (6-12 months) time horizon. Please stay tuned. Jing Sima, China Strategist   Highlights BCA’s “Golden Rule of Bond Investing” framework, which links developed economy government bond returns to central bank policy rate “surprises” versus market expectations, also works in China. The relationship between unexpected changes in China’s de facto short-term policy rate and government bond yields has been surprisingly strong over the past decade. Any additional easing by the PBoC this year is likely to be focused on reducing lending rates to the real economy, not interbank rates (which drive government bond yields). As such, yields at the short-end are likely to be flat until later this year at the earliest, whereas yields at the long-end are likely to move modestly higher, at most. The persistent historical gap between economic growth and bond yields in China makes it difficult to forecast the structural outlook for yields using conventional methods. To the extent that Chinese policymakers succeed at shifting the drivers of growth from investment to consumption, we believe that bond yields are more likely to structurally rise than fall. Over the coming 6-12 months, investors should underweight Chinese government bonds versus Chinese equities and onshore corporate bonds. Within a regional government bond portfolio, however, investors should overweight USD-hedged China versus US and developed markets ex-US, as well as in unhedged terms. Feature Last year’s inclusion of Chinese onshore government and policy bank bonds in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index was a significant milestone of China’s journey to internationalize its capital markets. Other bond benchmark providers have since followed suit, highlighting that the trend of increased passive exposure to Chinese assets is likely to continue. Over the past year, the bulk of the market discussion concerning the addition of China to the major bond indices has focused on estimating the size of potential capital inflows that could be triggered and the related impact on onshore bond yields. By contrast, comparatively little work has been done to analyze the core drivers of Chinese government bond yields, and how they compare to the factors that influence yields in the developed markets that dominate the bond indices. This Special Report attempts to fill a hole in the analysis of Chinese bonds. This Special Report attempts to fill that hole in the analysis of Chinese bonds. We look at the predictability of China’s government bond market through the lens of BCA’s “golden rule” framework, and find a surprisingly strong relationship between changes in China’s de facto short-term policy rate and government bond yields. We then present our cyclical (6-12 month) and secular outlooks for government yields given this relationship, and conclude by presenting four specific investment recommendations pertaining to China’s fixed-income market with two audiences in mind: mainland/onshore investors who are focused on returns in unhedged RMB terms, and global fixed-income investors who are primarily focused on hedged US-dollar regional bond exposure. The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing, With Chinese Characteristics In a July 2018 Special Report,1 BCA’s Chief US Bond Strategist, Ryan Swift, elegantly distilled the cyclical US government bond call into a simple question: During the next 12-months, will the Federal Reserve move interest rates by more or less than what is currently priced into the market? Chart 1The (US) Golden Rule Of Bond Investing In Practice Ryan argued that a predictive framework for US Treasury returns built around the answer to this question has historically worked so well that it should be referred to as the “Golden Rule of bond investing” (Chart 1). In a follow-up report, our Global Fixed Income Strategy service confirmed that the Golden Rule also largely works in non-US developed market economies, with the exception of Japan due to the absence of any meaningful fluctuation in policy rates over the past two decades.2 The Golden Rule provides a very strong framework to aid fixed-income investors with their cyclical (i.e. 6-12 month) asset allocation decisions, by quantitatively linking government bond returns relative to cash – in other words, the excess return earned by taking duration risk - to policy rate “surprises” compared to what is discounted in shorter-term money markets. The practical application is that a decision to allocate to longer-maturity government bonds is reduced to a bet on whether a central bank will adjust policy rates by more or less than the market expects. The first question we address in this report is to what degree does the Golden Rule apply in China (in yield space rather than in return space), along with an explanation of any differences that may exist. However, we must first note why the Golden Rule of bond investing works, particularly in the US. The first reason is that there is a strong relationship between the US 3-month T-bill rate and Treasury yields of all other maturities. Conceptually, all fixed income investors have a choice when buying US government bonds: they can purchase a 3-month Treasury bill and simply perpetually roll over the position as it matures, or they can purchase a Treasury bond of a longer maturity. This means that yields on longer maturity Treasury bonds simply reflect investor expectations for the average 3-month T-bill rate over the life of the bond, plus some positive risk premium to compensate for the inherent uncertainty of the path and tendency of short-term yields. This helps explain the close link between cyclical changes in 3-month T-bill rates and yields on longer maturity Treasurys. Chart 2In The US, The 3-Month T-Bill Rate Perfectly Tracks The Fed Funds Rate The second reason for the Golden Rule’s success is that there is a very tight relationship between the effective Fed funds rate and the 3-month T-bill rate. While it is the (higher) discount rate that is the theoretical no-arbitrage ceiling for the 3-month rate, in practice T-bill rates trade extremely close to the Fed funds rate (Chart 2). This means that Fed funds rate “surprises” (relative to traded market expectations) are akin to surprises in the 3-month rate, which in turn strongly influence the expected future path of short-term interest rates and thus yields on longer maturity Treasurys. In China, we noted in a February 2018 Special Report3 that the 7-day interbank repo rate is now the de jure short-term policy rate in China following the establishment of an interest rate corridor system in 2015. Chart 3 presents our first test of the Golden Rule in China (in yield space rather than in return space), by plotting the annual change in the level of Chinese government bond yields alongside the 7-day repo rate “surprise” over the past year from 2010 to the present. Here, we use the first principal component of zero coupon Chinese government bond yields to represent the average level of yields (rather than selecting a particular maturity), and we use the 12-month RMB swap rate (versus 7-day repo) to represent market expectations for the policy rate. The chart highlights that the fit is good, as measured by a 50% R-squared between the two series. However, deviations in the relationship do exist, with the most notable exception having occurred in 2017: Chinese government bond yields rose considerably more than what the annual surprise in the 7-day repo rate would have suggested. Chart 3In China, The Golden Rule Works Decently Well Using 7-Day Repo... Chart 4...And Extremely Well Using 3-Month SHIBOR Chart 4 helps resolve a good portion of the 2017 discrepancy, and clarifies the link between Chinese monetary policy and government bond yields. Chart 4 is similar to Chart 3, except that it replaces the 7-day repo rate surprise with that of 3-month SHIBOR (which trades very closely to the 3-month repo rate). The chart illustrates an even closer fit between the two series (with an R-squared close to 80%), and shows that the 3-month SHIBOR surprise does a meaningfully better job at explaining the 2017 rise in Chinese government bond yields. The Golden Rule of bond investing works surprisingly well in China. The fact that the annual surprise in 3-month SHIBOR has done a better job at predicting changes in bond yields over the past decade underscores that the 3-month repo rate is the de facto short-term policy rate in China, a point that we have made in several previous reports. We have noted that the spike in the 3-month/7-day repo rate spread that occurred in late-2016 and lasted until mid-2018 happened because of China’s crackdown on shadow banking activity. This crackdown caused a funding squeeze for China’s small & medium banks, which caused a material rise in lending rates and government bond yields. This episode highlights that future changes in the 3-month repo rate are likely to reflect both underlying changes in net liquidity provided to large commercial banks (measured by the 7-day repo rate), and any dislocations in the interbank market that have the potential to push up lending rates and government bond yields. Bottom Line: BCA’s “Golden Rule” framework, which links developed economy government bond returns to central bank policy rate “surprises” versus market expectations, works for China as well – using the correct measure of the PBOC policy rate. This provides a useful investment framework for Chinese government bonds, which are now significant part of major global bond market benchmarks. The Cyclical Outlook For Chinese Government Bond Yields Given the establishment of the relationship between Chinese short-term interbank rates and government bond yields detailed above, we are now able to more precisely discuss the likely cyclical trajectory of Chinese government bond yields as a function of Chinese monetary policy. Two opposing forces have the potential to affect China’s government bond market this year. The first, a stabilization and modest rebound in Chinese economic activity, may exert upward pressure on yields due to expectations of eventual policy tightening. The second, continued attempts by the PBoC to ease corporate lending rates, may exert downward pressure on yields as it will reflect not just easy but easier monetary conditions. Yields at the long-end are likely to move modestly higher this year, at most. For investors, the raises the obvious question of whether Chinese government bond yields are likely to move up, down, or trend sideways this year. In our view, yields at the short-end are likely to be flat until later this year at the earliest, whereas yields at the long-end are likely to move modestly higher, at most. Yields at the short-end of China’s government bond curve are likely to stay flat for most of this year. There are two reasons why yields at the short-end of China’s government bond curve are likely to stay flat for most of this year. The first is that the PBoC is generally a reactive central bank and has historically lagged a pickup in economic activity, as illustrated in Chart 5. The chart shows the historical path of 3-month SHIBOR in the year following a bottom in economic activity in 2009, 2012, and 2015, and makes it clear that there has been no precedent for a significant rise in interbank rates in the first nine months of an economic recovery. The 2012 episode did see a very sharp rise in 3-month SHIBOR once the PBoC shifted into tightening mode, but we doubt that this experience will be repeated again unless economic growth accelerates much more aggressively than we expect. The second reason why we expect yields at the short-end of the curve to remain muted this year is because any additional easing by the PBoC is likely to be focused on reducing corporate lending rates, not interbank rates. Chart 6 highlights that while there is a strong correlation between changes in Chinese government bond yields and average lending rates in the economy, the former leads the latter. In the past, this relationship has existed because changes in interbank rates have coincided with reductions in the now obsolete benchmark lending rate, with the former usually occurring earlier than the latter. But in a scenario where the PBoC reduces the loan prime rate (LPR) and keeps net banking sector liquidity roughly constant, the extremely tight relationship shown in Chart 4 suggests that short-term bond yields are unlikely to be affected by a reduction in lending rates. Any meaningful decline in short-term yields below short-term interbank rates would simply prompt banks to stop buying these bonds. Chart 5The PBoC Is Generally A Reactive Central Bank Chart 6Average Lending Rates Lag Short-Term Bond Yields Chart 7China's Yield Curve Is Generally Pro-Cyclical Additional easing by the PBoC does have the potential to impact the long-end of the government bond curve if investors view these actions as a sign that interbank rates will remain low for some time. This view is reinforced by the fact that China’s yield curve is not particularly flat, and thus has room to move lower. However, Chart 7 also shows that China’s yield curve, defined here as the second principal component of zero coupon Chinese government bond yields, is positively correlated with the relative performance of investable Chinese equities. This suggests that there is a procyclical element to the curve. We suspect that this procyclical element will dominate a potential decline in expectations for future short-term interest rates, but that yields at the long-end are likely to move modestly higher this year, at most. Bottom Line: Any additional easing by the PBoC this year is likely to be focused on reducing lending rates to the real economy, not interbank rates (which drive government bond yields). As such, yields at the short-end are likely to be flat until later this year at the earliest, whereas yields at the long-end are likely to move modestly higher, at most. The Secular Outlook For Chinese Government Bond Yields A common approach to forecasting the likely structural trend for nominal government bond yields is to estimate the trajectory of real long-term potential output growth and to add the monetary authority’s inflation target. This framework is based on the idea that interest rates are in equilibrium when the cost of borrowing is roughly equal to nominal income growth, a condition that results in no change in the burden to service existing debt. Chart 8China's Potential Growth Is Likely To Trend Lower... Based on this framework, we would expect Chinese government bond yields to trend down over time, or possibly flat if the PBoC were to tolerate higher inflation over the coming decade. Chart 8 illustrates the IMF’s forecast of falling real potential growth in China over the coming several years, which is consistent with a shift in the composition of growth from investment to consumption as well as China’s looming demographic crisis. But Chart 9highlights an obvious problem with applying this framework to forecast the secular trend in Chinese government bond yields: over the past decade, yields have persistently averaged below actual nominal GDP growth, both in China and in the developed world. In the latter case, it is an open question whether this will continue to be true in the future, but in China’s case it is clear that government bond yields have little connection (in magnitude) to the pace of GDP growth. This reflects the longstanding strategy of Chinese policymakers to promote investment via persistently low interest rates, as has occurred in other manufacturing and export-oriented Asian economies (Chart 10). Chart 9...But Bond Yields Are Well Below GDP Growth, Just Like In Developed Markets Chart 10In Industrial Asian Economies, Low Bond Yields Are A Policy Choice   The persistent historical gap between economic growth and bond yields in China makes it difficult to forecast the structural outlook for yields using conventional methods, and largely limits us to inference. To the extent that Chinese policymakers succeed at shifting the drivers of growth from investment to consumption, bond yields are more likely to rise than fall over time. This is because as long as interest rates remain well below the pace of income growth, the incentive to excessively borrow (and invest) is likely to persist. Chart 11China Needs Higher Interest Rates, But Only To A Point However, even in a scenario where Chinese government bond yields structurally trend higher, we expect the rise to be modest. Chart 11 highlights that China’s “private sector” debt service ratio is extremely elevated, underscoring that the country’s ability to tolerate significantly higher bond yields is not strong. In addition, since 2015, China’s debt service ratio has been mostly flat despite rising a rising debt-to-GDP ratio, which has been achieved through lower short-term interest rates. To the extent that policymakers fail to make meaningful progress in shifting China’s growth drivers away from investment over the coming few years, lower (potentially sharply lower) bond yields would appear to be all but inevitable to cope with what would become a permanently growing drag on economic activity from the servicing of debt. For now, we would characterize this scenario as a risk to our base case view, but it is a risk that we will be closely monitoring over the coming years. Bottom Line: The persistent gap between Chinese nominal GDP growth and government bond yields is likely contributing to the problem of excessive leveraging. To the extent that Chinese policymakers succeed at shifting the drivers of growth from investment to consumption, bond yields are more likely to structurally rise than fall. Investment Conclusions Our analysis above points to four recommendations for investors over the coming year: Overweight Chinese stocks versus Chinese government bonds in RMB and USD terms Overweight Chinese onshore corporate bonds versus duration-matched Chinese government bonds in RMB terms Overweight 7-10 year USD-hedged Chinese government bonds versus their US and developed market (DM) counterparts For offshore US dollar-based investors, long 7-10 year Chinese government bonds in unhedged terms Regarding the first two recommendations, our view that yields are likely to be flat at the short-end and modestly higher at the long-end suggests that investors can expect total returns on the order of 2-3% from Chinese government bonds this year. Barring a major and lasting economic slowdown from the 2019-nCoV outbreak, we expect Chinese domestic and investable equities to outperform government securities over the coming 6-12 months. Onshore corporate bonds have a similar outlook: onshore spreads are pricing in (massively) higher default losses than we believe is warranted, meaning that they will outperform duration-matched government equivalents without any changes in yield. Chart 12Within Global Fixed-Income, Hedged Chinese 10-Year Yields Are Relatively Attractive Chart 13Unhedged Yield Spreads Predict Hedged Relative Performance Versus The US For global fixed-income investors, Charts 12-14 present USD-hedged 10-year Chinese government yields versus the US and DM/DM ex-US, along with the historical relative return profile of USD-hedged Chinese bonds versus hedged and unhedged returns. In hedged space, Chinese 10-year government bond yields are modestly attractive: 2.2% versus 1.6% in the US and 1.8% in DM ex-US. China’s historically low yield beta to the overall level of global 10-year bond yields (Chart 15) suggests that Chinese yields should perform well in 2020 – a year where we expect global bond yields to drift higher as economic growth rebounds. Combined with relatively attractive valuation, this bodes well for the relative performance of Chinese debt versus DM equivalents. A low yield beta against a backdrop of drifting higher global yields implies that longer-maturity Chinese government bonds will outperform their DM equivalents. Chart 14Unhedged Yield Spreads Predict Hedged Relative Performance Versus DM Chart 15China's Yield Beta Has Been Rising, But Is Still Japan-Like   We would also recommend longer-maturity Chinese government bonds in unhedged terms versus a USD-hedged global government bond portfolio. Chart 16 highlights that the relative return of this trade is strongly (negatively) linked to USD-CNY, and we expect further (albeit more modest) gains in RMB over the cyclical horizon. Chart 16Modest Further RMB Upside Means Unhedged Chinese Bonds Will Outperform As a final point, investors should note that today’s report is part of a heightened focus on China’s fixed income market, in terms of both forecasting fixed income returns and analyzing the cyclical and structural implications of the increasing investability of China’s financial markets. More research on this topic is likely to come in 2020 and beyond: Stay Tuned!   Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com         Footnotes 1    Please see US Bond Strategy Special Report "The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing," dated July 24, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2   Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report "The Global Golden Rule Of Bond Investing," dated September 25, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 3   Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report "Seven Questions About Chinese Monetary Policy," dated February 22, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
The euro area 6-month bond yield impulse stands near +100 bps, posing the strongest headwind to growth in three years. To make matters worse, the impulse has flipped from a strong -100 bps tailwind last summer into the current strong headwind, equating to a…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy There are high odds that China’s real GDP deceleration will continue for the next decade, casting a shadow over the profit prospects of the S&P 1500 metals & mining index. A structural below benchmark allocation is warranted. Rising total mutual fund assets under management, improved trading revenue prospects, rising investor confidence along with a revival in IPO and M&A activity, all signal that it still pays to be overweight the S&P capital markets index. Recent Changes There are no changes in our portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature “When the music stops, in terms of liquidity, things will be complicated. But as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. We’re still dancing.” - Charles Owen "Chuck" Prince III (ex-CEO of Citigroup) The SPX remains near all time highs and the invincible tech sector continues to lead the pack. Two weeks ago we showed that the market capitalization concentration of the top five stocks in the S&P 500 surpassed the late-1990s parallel (Chart 1), and Table 2 shows that late in the cycle a handful of stocks explain a sizable part of the broad market’s return.1 However, in terms of valuation overshoot the current forward P/E of these top five stocks is roughly half the late-1990s parabolic episode (Chart 2). Chart 1Vertigo Warning Chart 2Unlike The Late-1990s While the overall market does not fully resemble the excesses of the dot.com bubble era, at least not yet, there are elements that are eerily reminiscent of the late-1990s. Table 2Contribution To Late Cycle Rallies In The SPX Chart 3Correlation Breakdown Contrary to popular belief, during manias historical correlations break down and the forward multiple becomes positively correlated with the discount rate. So in the late 1990s, the fed funds rate and the 10-year yield jumped 200bps in a short time span and the SPX forward P/E soared 40% from roughly 18x to 25x (Chart 3) before collapsing to 14x soon thereafter. Simultaneously, the US dollar was roaring as real interest rates were 4%, but the NASDAQ 100 outperformed the emerging markets, another break in historical correlations. As Chuck Prince mused in 2007, there is a narrative in the equity market today that, “as long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance”. While the overall market does not fully resemble the excesses of the dot.com bubble era, at least not yet, there are elements that are eerily reminiscent of the late-1990s. We filtered for large cap stocks that are at all-time highs and have increased in value at a minimum 10x since 2010. Among the stocks that met these criteria, five really stand out, Apple, Tesla, Lam Research, Amd & Salesforce, and comprise our “ATLAS” index; the mania in these stocks will likely end in tears (Chart 4). Even their forward P/E ratio has gone exponential, hitting a 60 handle last year similar to top five SPX stocks in the late-1990s. Chart 4ATLAS: Holding The World On His Shoulders Currently, SPX profits are barely growing and the sole reason equities are higher is the massive injection of liquidity via the drubbing in interest rates and the restart of QE. From peak-to-trough the 10-year yield fell 175bps in nine months, and the Fed commenced expanding its balance sheet by $60bn/month since last September; yet profits have barely budged. Ultimately, profits have to show up and the news on this front remains grim. The current non-inflationary trend-growth backdrop is a “goldilocks” scenario especially for tech stocks that thrive during disinflationary periods. While stocks can go higher defying weak EPS fundamentals as they have yet to reach a fully euphoric state according to our Complacency-Anxiety Indicator (Chart 5), a sell-off in the bond market will likely cause some consternation in equities in general and tech stocks in particular similar to early- and late-2018. Chart 5Not Max Complacent Yet Other catalysts that can suddenly cause “the music to stop” are either the recent coronavirus becoming an epidemic or a geopolitical event that would result in a risk off backdrop. Ultimately, profits have to show up and the news on this front remains grim. Our mid-January “Three EPS Scenarios” analysis still suggests that the SPX is 9% overvalued.2 This week we are updating our capital markets view and adding a sixth long-term theme and a related investment implication to our mid-December 2019, Special Report titled, “Top US Sector Investment Ideas For The Next Decade”.3 Sixth Big Theme For The Decade And Investment Implications China’s ascendancy on the world scene was a mega driver of equity markets in the 2000s following its inclusion in the WTO. The commodity super-cycle captured investors’ imaginations and China’s insatiable appetite for commodities caused a massive bubble in the commodity complex in general and commodity-related equities in particular. Nevertheless, the Great Recession posed a severe threat to China and the authorities injected an extraordinary amount of stimulus into the economy (15% of GDP over two years). This succeeded in doubling real GDP growth, but only temporarily. The unintended consequence was an enormous debt binge fueled by cheap money. Moreover, this debt burden along with falling labor force growth and productivity forced the government to re-think its policies as they caused a steady down drift in real output growth. The sixth big theme for the 2020s is a sustained deceleration of Chinese real GDP growth to a range of 4% to 2% (Chart 6). Not only is the debt overhang weighing on real output growth, but Chinese leaders are adamant about transitioning the economy to developed market status, which is synonymous with higher consumption expenditures at the expense of gross fixed capital formation. Chart 6From Boom… Chart 7…To Bust In other words, China remains committed to weaning its economy off of investment and reconfiguring it toward consumption (Chart 7). This is a strategic plan but it is possible that the Chinese economy can achieve this transition in due time. While this will not happen overnight, the implication is steadily lower real GDP growth as is common among large, mature, developed market economies. China will remain one of the top commodity consumers in the world, as urbanization is ongoing, but the intensity of commodity consumption will continue to decelerate (Chart 8). At the margin, this change in consumption behavior will have knock on effects on the broad basic resources sector in general and the S&P 1500 metals & mining index in particular. Were this Chinese backdrop to pan out in the coming decade as we expect, it would sustain the relative underperformance of metals & mining equities as Chart 6 & 7 depict. Chart 8Commodity Consumption Deceleration Will… Chart 9…Continue To Weigh On Metals & Mining Profits Importantly, these commodity producers will have to adjust their still bloated cost structures to lower run rates which is de facto negative both for relative sales and profit growth (Chart 9). Tack on the large negative footprint mining extraction has on the environment, and if ESG investing (our fifth big theme for the decade4) also takes off, investors should avoid the S&P 1500 metals & mining index on a secular basis. Bottom Line: There are high odds that China’s real GDP deceleration will continue for the next decade, casting a shadow over the profit prospects of the S&P 1500 metals & mining index. A structural below benchmark allocation is warranted. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S15METL – NEM, FCX, NUE, RS, RGLD, STLD, CMC, ATI, CRS, CLF, CMP, X, KALU, WOR, MTRN, HCC, AKS, SXC, HAYN, CENX, TMST, ZEUS. Capital Markets Update Capital markets stocks have come out of hibernation recently and are on the cusp of breaking out – in a bullish fashion – of their 18-month trading range. A number of the indicators we track signal that an earnings-led outperformance period is in the cards for this financials sub-group and we reiterate our overweight stance. Sloshing liquidity has pushed investors out the risk spectrum and high yield bond option adjusted spreads are flirting with multi-year lows. Such a tame junk bond market backdrop coupled with easy financial conditions are conducive to rising M&A activity (Chart 10). Importantly, the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer Survey paints an improving profit backdrop for investment banks. Not only are bankers willing extenders of credit, but demand for credit for the majority of loan categories that the Fed tracks is squarely in positive territory (top panel, Chart 11). Chart 10Subsiding Risks Are A Boon To Capital Markets Chart 11Positive Profit Catalysts This is likely a consequence of last year’s drubbing in the price of credit. M&A activity usually goes hand in hand with loan growth, underscoring that business combinations are on track to accelerate (third panel, Chart 10). This will revive a lucrative business line for capital markets firms. Total mutual fund assets are expanding at a brisk rate and hitting fresh all-time highs, signaling an uptick in risk appetite (third panel, Chart 11). Rising investor confidence will facilitate both new and secondary share issuance, an important source of fee generation for capital markets firms. Moreover, equity trading volumes have sprang back to life in recent weeks underscoring that the recent impressive Q4 earnings results will likely continue into Q1/2020 (bottom panel, Chart 10). Meanwhile, the three Fed rate cuts last year should work through the economy and at least stem further losses in the ISM manufacturing survey. The US/China trade détente will also lead to a stabilization in global growth. In fact, the V-shaped recovery in the global ZEW survey suggests that capital markets profits will likely outpace the broad market this year (second & bottom panels, Chart 11). Finally, the recent surge in the stock-to-bond ratio reflects a massive psychological shift, from last year’s recessionary fears to growing investor confidence that tail risks are abating (Chart 12). Still depressed valuations neither reflect the firming capital markets profit outlook nor the rising industry ROE (bottom panel, Chart 12). Adding it all up, accelerating total mutual fund assets under management, improved trading revenue prospects, rising investor confidence and a revival in IPO and M&A activity, all signal that it still pays to be overweight the S&P capital markets index.  Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P capital markets index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG S5CAPM – GS, CME, SPGI, MS, BLK, SCHW, ICE, MCO, BK, TROW, STT, MSCI, NTRS, AMP, MKTX, CBOE, NDAQ, RJF, ETFC, BEN, IVZ. Chart 12Valuation Re-Rating Looms     Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com     1     Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Three EPS Scenarios” dated January 13, 2020, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2     Ibid. 3     Please see BCA US Equity Strategy Special Report, “Top US Sector Investment Ideas For the Next Decade” dated December 16, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4     Ibid.   Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives (downgrade alert) Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps (Stop 10%)
Highlights Global growth is poised to accelerate this year, although the spread of the coronavirus could dampen spending in the very short term. History suggests that the likelihood of a recession rises when unemployment falls to very low levels. Three channels have been proposed to explain why that is: 1) Low unemployment can prompt households and businesses to overextend themselves, making the economy more fragile; 2) Faster wage growth stemming from a tight labor market can compress profit margins, leading to less capital spending and hiring; 3) Shrinking spare capacity can fuel inflation, forcing central banks to raise rates. The first channel is highly relevant for some smaller, developed economies where housing bubbles have formed and household debt has reached very high levels. However, it is not an immediate concern in the US, Japan, and most of the euro area. We would downplay the importance of the second channel, as faster wage growth is also likely to raise aggregate demand and incentivize firms to increase capital spending on labor-saving technologies. The third channel poses the greatest long-term risk, but is unlikely to be market-relevant this year. Investors should remain bullish on global equities over the next 12-to-18 months. A more prudent stance will be warranted starting in the second half of 2021. Global Equities: Sticking With Bullish Global equities are vulnerable to a short-term correction after having gained 16% since their August lows. Nevertheless, we continue to maintain a positive outlook on stocks for the next 12 months due to our expectation that global growth will gather steam over the course of the year. The latest data on global manufacturing activity has generally been supportive of our constructive thesis. The New York Fed Manufacturing PMI beat expectations, while the Philly Fed PMI jumped nearly 15 points to the highest level in eight months. The business outlook (six months ahead) component of the Philly Fed index rose to its best level since May 2018. European manufacturing should also improve this year. Growth expectations for Germany in the ZEW index surged in January, rising to the highest level since July 2015 (Chart 1). The Sentix and IFO indices have also moved higher. Encouragingly, euro area car registrations rose by 22% year-over-year in December. In the UK, business confidence in the CBI survey of manufacturers surged from -44 in Q3 of 2019 to +23 in Q4, the largest increase in the 62-year history of the survey. Fiscal stimulus and diminished risk of a disorderly Brexit should also bolster growth this year. Chart 1Some Green Shoots Emerging In The Euro Area Chart 2EM Asia Is Rebounding The manufacturing and trade data in Asia have been improving. Following last week’s better Chinese trade data, Korean exports recovered on a rate-of-change basis for a fourth month in a row. Japanese exports to China increased for the first time since last February. In Taiwan, industrial production increased by more than expected in December, as did export orders. Our EM Asia Economic Diffusion Index has risen to the highest level since October 2018 (Chart 2). Coronavirus: Nothing To Sneeze At? The outbreak of the coronavirus represents a potential short-term threat to the budding global economic recovery. Conceptually, outbreaks can affect the economy in two ways. One, they can reduce demand by curtailing spending on travel, entertainment, restaurants, or anything that requires close proximity to others. Two, they can reduce supply by causing people to avoid going to work. In practice, the first effect usually dominates the second. As a result, such outbreaks tend to have a deflationary impact. The Brookings Institution estimates that the 2003 SARS epidemic shaved about one percentage point from Chinese growth that year.1 The fact that this outbreak is happening during the Chinese New Year celebrations, when over 400 million people will be on the move, has the potential to exacerbate the transmission of the virus, and in the process, amplify the economic damage. That said, while it is from the same class of zoonotic viruses, early indications suggest that this particular strain is less lethal than SARS. In addition, the Chinese authorities have moved faster to address the risks than they did during the SARS outbreak. The government has effectively quarantined Wuhan, a city of 11 million people, where the virus appears to have originated. They have also sequenced the virus and shared the information with the global medical community. This has allowed the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to develop a test for the virus, which is likely to become available over the coming weeks. The Dark Side Of Low Unemployment Provided the coronavirus outbreak is contained, stronger global growth should continue to soak up lingering labor market slack. This raises the question of whether, at some point, declining unemployment could become counterproductive. The outbreak of the coronavirus represents a potential short-term threat to the budding global economic recovery. The unemployment rate in the OECD currently stands at 5.1%, below the low of 5.5% set in 2007 (Chart 3). In the US, the unemployment rate has dropped to a 50-year low. Chart 3Unemployment Rates Are Below Their Pre-Crisis Lows In Most Economies No one would deny that the decline in unemployment since the financial crisis has been a welcome development. However, it does carry one major risk: Historically, the likelihood of a recession has risen when unemployment has fallen to very low levels (Chart 4). Chart 4Recessions Become More Likely When The Labor Market Begins To Overheat Three channels have been proposed to explain this positive correlation: 1) Low unemployment can prompt households and businesses to overextend themselves, making the economy more fragile; 2) Faster wage growth stemming from a tight labor market can compress profit margins, leading to less capital spending and hiring; 3) Shrinking spare capacity can fuel inflation.  This can force central banks to raise rates, choking off growth. Let’s examine each in turn. Unemployment And Irrational Exuberance Chart 5Growing Housing Imbalances In Some Economies A strong economy promotes risk-taking. While some risk-taking is essential for capitalism, an excessive amount can lead to the buildup of imbalances, thereby setting the stage for an eventual downturn. In Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the Scandinavian economies, the combination of low interest rates and strong economic growth has stoked debt-fueled housing bubbles (Chart 5, panel 3). As we discussed last week, higher interest rates in those economies could sow the seeds for economic distress.2 In most other countries, financial imbalances are not severe enough to trigger recessions. Chart 6 shows that the private-sector financial balance – the difference between what the private sector earns and spends – still stands at a healthy surplus of 3.4% of GDP in advanced economies. In 2007, the private-sector financial balance fell to 0.4% in advanced economies, reaching a deficit of 2% in the US. The private-sector balance also deteriorated sharply in the lead-up to the 2001 recession (Chart 7). Chart 6The Private Sector Spends Less Than It Earns In Most Economies Chart 7The Private-Sector Surplus Is Larger Than It Was Before The End Of Previous Expansions   In the US, the personal savings rate has risen to nearly 8%, much higher than one would expect based on the level of household net worth (Chart 8). Despite growing at around 2.5% in 2018/19, real personal consumption has increased at a slower pace than predicted by the level of consumer confidence. This suggests that households have maintained a fairly prudent disposition. Consistent with this, the ratio of household debt-to-disposable income has declined by 32 percentage points since 2008. Chart 8Households Are Saving More Than One Would Expect Granted, some credit categories have seen large increases (Chart 9). Student debt has risen to 9% of disposable income. Auto loans have moved back to their pre-recession highs. We would not worry too much about the former, as the vast majority of student debt is guaranteed by the government. Auto loans are more of a concern. However, it is important to keep in mind that the auto loan market is less than one-sixth as large as the mortgage market. Moreover, after loosening lending standards for vehicle loans between 2011 and 2016, banks have since tightened them. This adjustment appears to be largely complete. Lending standards did not tighten any further in the latest Senior Loan Officer Survey, while demand for auto loans rose at the fastest pace in two years. The share of auto loans falling into delinquency has been trending lower, which suggests that delinquency rates are peaking (Chart 10). Chart 9US Household Debt Levels Have Fallen, Despite Increases in Student And Auto Loans Chart 10Auto Loans: Monitoring Trends In Credit Standards And Delinquency Rates Lastly, we would point out that despite all the hoopla over the state of the auto market, auto loan asset-backed securities have performed well (Chart 11). While default rates have risen, lenders have generally set interest rates high enough to absorb incoming losses. Chart 11Securitized Auto Loans Have Performed Well Will Falling Profit Margins Derail The Expansion? Profit margins usually peak a few years before the onset of a recessions (Chart 12, top panel). This has led some to speculate that falling margins could usher in a recession by curbing companies’ willingness to hire workers and invest in new capacity. Chart 12A Peak In Profit Margins: An Ominous Sign? While it is an interesting theory, it does not stand up to closer scrutiny. Surveys of business sentiment clearly show that capital spending intentions are positively correlated with plans to raise wages (Chart 13, left panel). Far from cutting capital expenditures in response to rising wages, firms are more likely to boost capex if they are also planning to increase labor compensation.  Chart 13AFaster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (I) Chart 13BFaster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (II) One reason for this is that rising wages make automation more attractive. By definition, automation requires more capital spending. However, that is not the entire story because firms also tend to hire more workers during periods when wage growth is rising (Chart 13, right panel). This implies that a third factor – strong economic growth – is responsible for both accelerating wages and rising hiring intentions. The fact that real business sales are strongly correlated with both employment growth and nonresidential investment is evidence for this claim (Chart 12, bottom panel). Falling Margins: A Symptom Of A Problem The discussion above suggests that faster wage growth is unlikely to dissuade firms from either hiring more workers or boosting capital spending. Indeed, the opposite is probably true: Since workers normally spend more of every dollar of income than firms do, an increase in the share of national income flowing to workers will lift aggregate demand. So why do profit margins usually peak before recessions? The answer is that declining labor market slack tends to push up unit labor costs, forcing central banks to hike interest rates in an effort to stave off rising inflation. Thus, falling margins are just a symptom of an underlying problem: economic overheating. Don’t blame lower margins for recessions. Blame central banks. Inflation Is Not A Threat... Yet For now, unit labor cost inflation remains reasonably well contained in the major economies (Chart 14). However, there is little evidence to suggest that the historic relationship between labor market slack and wage growth has broken down (Chart 15). Barring a major surge in productivity growth, inflation is likely to accelerate eventually as companies try to pass on higher labor costs to their customers. Chart 14AUnit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (I) Chart 14BUnit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (II)       Chart 15Correlation Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Growth Remains Intact We do not know exactly when such a price-wage spiral will emerge. Inflation is a notoriously lagging indicator (Chart 16). Our best guess is that inflation could become a serious risk for investors in late 2021 or 2022. Thus, investors should remain overweight global equities for the next 12-to-18 months, but be prepared to turn more cautious in the second half of 2021.  Chart 16Inflation Is A Lagging Indicator   Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1   Jong-Wha Lee and Warwick J. McKibbin, “Globalization and Disease: The Case of SARS,” Brookings Institution, dated February 2004. 2  Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Yields: How High Is Too High?” dated January 17, 2020.   Global Investment Strategy View Matrix MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
As tensions from the US-China trade war abate, investors are starting to refocus on economic fundamentals. This year, Chinese policymakers will maintain their tight grip on local government spending and bank lending, and will continue to fine-tune policies…
We have been cyclically overweight Chinese stocks, because we expected the economy to bottom in the first quarter of 2020 and a trade deal to materialize eventually. In the past two weeks, these two possibilities became realities. Last week's small selloffs…
Highlights An analysis on India is available on page 12. There is extreme complacency in global financial markets. With currency markets’ implied volatility at a record low, we recommend going long EM currency volatility. The latter will rise in the next six month regardless the direction of global risk assets. For now, we remain long the EM MSCI equity index with a stop point at 1050. In India, nominal income growth has fallen below lending rates. The latter have not declined despite monetary easing. The authorities will force banks to reduce their lending rates, which will hurt bank stocks. Feature “…we have probably seen the end of the boom-bust cycle.” Bob Prince, Co-CIO of Bridgewater World Economic Forum, Davos January 22, 2020 Low Volatility = Complacency Chart I-1Go Long Currency Volatility The comment above by co-CIO of the largest hedge fund declaring the end of boom-bust cycle is consistent with lingering complacency in global financial markets. Any time an influential person made a similar declaration in the past, it marked a major turning point in financial markets. Remarkably, implied volatility for the US dollar has plummeted to a record low, as it has for EM currencies and a wide range of equity markets. Chart I-1 illustrates the implied volatility for EM currencies and the US dollar. Such low levels of implied currency market volatility historically preceded major moves in currency markets and often led to a material selloff in broad EM financial markets. It does not mean that the world economy will crash but financial markets volatility in general and currency market volatility in particular are bound to rise considerably in the months ahead. The risk-reward profile of going long EM currency or US dollar volatility appears very attractive. Today we recommend investors to go long EM currency volatility. The latter will rise regardless the direction of global risk assets. Concerning overall strategy, EM financial markets are entering a testing period. How broader EM risk assets and currencies perform in the coming weeks will signal how durable and long-lasting the current EM rally will be. Given global risk assets are overbought, a correction or consolidation phase is overdue. If EM equities, currencies and credit markets outperform, or at least do not underperform their DM peers in the course of this indigestion phase, it will beckon more upside for EM risk assets in 2020. If during budding market turbulence EM risk assets and currencies underperform their DM peers, it will signal their vulnerability in 2020.Implied volatility for the US dollar has plummeted to a record low, as it has for EM currencies. Implied volatility for the US dollar has plummeted to a record low, as it has for EM currencies. For now, we remain long the EM MSCI equity index with a stop point at 1050. We will upgrade our EM equity and credit market allocations versus DM if the EM universe generally exhibits relative resilience in the coming weeks, and more of our indicators confirm China’s growth recovery. Hints Of Recovery… December economic data out of China were strong, and it seems that the credit and fiscal stimulus are finally beginning to lift growth: Chinese imports and nominal industrial output – among the most reliable measures of the Chinese business cycle – posted very robust growth numbers in December (Chart I-2). DRAM and NAND semiconductor prices are climbing, and China’s container freight index is also in revival mode (Chart I-3). These high-frequency (daily and weekly) data confirm improving business activity in both the global semiconductor sector and in overall world trade. Chart I-2China's December Economic Data Were Strong Chart I-3Asia's Trade Is Recovering   There are tentative signs of amelioration in our proxies for marginal propensity to spend by households and enterprises in China (Chart I-4). A more decisive improvement in these indicators is needed to reinforce the positive outlook for China’s growth. …But Doubts Still Linger Despite the recent improvement in Chinese economic data and the rebound in China-related plays, there are a number of financial market indicators that are not yet confirming a sustainable business cycle recovery in China and global trade. In particular: First, apart from semiconductor stocks, global cyclical equity sectors and sub-sectors – industrials, materials, and freight and logistics – have begun, once again, underperforming defensive sectors (Chart I-5). Outperformance by these cyclical sectors against defensives is essential in confirming that global and Chinese capital spending – which were the primary sources of the most recent slowdown – are picking up again. Chart I-4China: Tentative Improvement In Household And Corporate Marginal Propensity To Spend Chart I-5Global Equities: Cyclicals Are Again Underperforming Defensives   Notably, the relative performance of EM share prices to the global equity benchmark historically tracks the relative performance of global materials versus the global overall stock index.1 However, the two have recently diverged (Chart I-6). In short, global materials are not corroborating sustainability in the recent EM outperformance. If EM equities, currencies and credit markets outperform, or at least do not underperform their DM peers in the course of this indigestion phase, it will beckon more upside for EM risk assets in 2020. Second, the rebound in Chinese and EM shares prices is not corroborated by Chinese onshore government bond yields, which are dipping to new cyclical lows (Chart I-7). In other words, interest rate expectations in China are falling – i.e., they are not confirming a robust recovery. Chart I-6Unsustainable Decoupling Chart I-7A Message From The Chinese Fixed-Income Market   Third, EM ex-China currencies have not yet broken out versus the US dollar (Chart I-8). Consistently, the broad trade-weighted US dollar has not yet broken down. Chart I-9 illustrates that the greenback’s advance-decline line has not yet fallen below its 200-day moving average, a condition that has historically been required to confirm the dollar’s cyclical bear market. Chart I-8EM Currencies: No Breakout Yet Chart I-9The US Dollar Is At A Critical Juncture   We view these exchange rate patterns as a litmus test to validate turning points in the global business cycle. Finally, the technical profiles of the KOSPI, EM small cap stocks and copper prices are inconclusive (Chart I-10). These markets have rebounded but seem to be confronting a critical technical test. If they decisively break above these technical levels, it will be a sign that the EM bull market will be lasting and durable. Otherwise, caution is still warranted. Bottom Line: There is a good amount of complacency among global investors at a time when there are several market signals that are still challenging the view of enduring revival in China/EM growth. Corporate Profits Will Be The Arbiter Ultimately, economic growth and corporate profits will determine the direction of not only share prices but also EM sovereign and corporate credit spreads as well as their currencies. So far, the EM equity rebound of the past 12 months has been solely due to multiples expansion amid a deepening EM profit recession: Earnings per share in US dollar terms has been contracting by 10% from a year ago, and the rate of change has so far not turned around (Chart I-11). Chart I-10The KOSPI And Copper Are Facing A Resilience Test Chart I-11EM Equities: A Profitless Rally?   Going forward, however, EM corporate profits growth is set to improve. Our indicator for semiconductor companies’ revenues is heralding a revival in semi sector profits (Chart I-12, top panel). The rate-of-change improvement in commodities prices is also foreshadowing potential amelioration in corporate earnings growth among energy producers and materials (Chart I-12, middle and bottom panels). Chart I-12EPS Growth In EM Technology, Energy And Materials We are negative on EM bank profits due to their need to recognize and provision for non-performing loans as well as the authorities’ mounting pressures on them to reduce lending rates. The latter will shrink banks’ elevated net interest rate margins. The profit profile of other EM equity sectors is illustrated in Chart I-13A and I-13B. Chart I-13AEM EPS Growth By Sectors Chart I-13BEM EPS Growth By Sectors   Provided technology, materials and energy stocks account for 33% of the MSCI EM aggregate equity index’s earnings (banks account for another 28% of total profits), it is safe to assume that the growth rate of EM EPS will move from -10% currently to zero or mildly positive territory by mid-2020. Nevertheless, beyond the next several months, our leading indicators on the EM profit outlook are not positive. China’s narrow money growth leads EM EPS by 12 months, and currently suggests the EPS recovery will be both muted and short-lived (Chart I-14). The technical profiles of the KOSPI, EM small cap stocks and copper prices are inconclusive. Further, China’s broad money impulse points to a peak in the credit impulse in the first half of the year (Chart I-15). Given that EM share prices bottomed a year ago, simultaneously with China’s credit impulse, odds are that EM equities could slump with a rollover in the latter. Chart I-14EM EPS: Marginal Improvement Ahead But No Robust Recovery Chart I-15China: A Signpost Of A Potential Top In The Credit Impulse   Chart I-16DM Central Banks' Assets And EM Stocks And Currencies: No Stable Correlation What if the current liquidity-driven rally continues? In our report last week titled A Primer On Liquidity, we elaborated at great length about the different liquidity measures and how they influence financial asset prices. Empirically, changes in DM central banks’ balance sheets have had no stable correlation with either EM share prices or EM local currency bonds, as demonstrated in Chart I-16. There have been periods over the past 10 years when EM risk assets and currencies have performed poorly, despite an accelerating pace of QE programs worldwide (Chart I-16). The true and critical driver for EM equity and currency performance has been EM’s own domestic fundamentals and China’s business cycle (please refer to Chart I-11 on page 7). To be sure, we are not suggesting that DM central bank policies have not affected global and EM financial markets at all. They have done so in spades. By purchasing and withdrawing about $9 trillion in high-quality securities from the marketplace, the monetary authorities have shrunk the stock of available financial assets. Consequently, even though QE programs have expanded broad money supply only modestly,2 the upshot has been that more money has been chasing fewer financial assets. Also, low interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of owning risk assets. These two phenomena have led investors to bid up prices of various securities, including EM ones. Nevertheless, despite the ongoing and indiscriminate global search for yield, EM share prices in US dollar terms and EM ex-China currencies (including carry, i.e. on a total-return basis) are still below their 2010 levels. Such poor performance of EM risk assets has been a corollary of just how bad EM fundamentals have been. Bottom Line: EM corporate profits will improve on a rate-of-change basis in the coming months. However, forward-looking indicators do not yet point to a robust recovery in EM corporate profits as occurred in 2017. Investment Conclusions We are maintaining our long EM equities position with a stop point at 1050 for the MSCI EM stock index (7% below the current level). If EM share prices, credit markets and currencies outperform their DM peers during a correction/consolidation phase, we will upgrade EM allocations to overweight in global equity and credit portfolios. At the moment, EM is confronting a resilience test. Within the EM equity universe, our overweights are Russia, Korea, Thailand, Mexico, UAE, Pakistan and central Europe. Our recommended equity underweights include Indonesia, the Philippines, Hong Kong domestic stocks, South Africa, Turkey and Colombia. In sovereign credit and local bond markets, our overweights are Mexico, Russia, Thailand, Malaysia, Pakistan and Ukraine. In turn, South Africa, Turkey, Philippines and Indonesia warrant an underweight stance. Today we are upgrading Indian bonds from neutral to overweight (see page 17).  In the currency space, we continue holding a short position versus the US dollar in the following basket of currencies: BRL, ZAR, CLP, COP, IDR, PHP and KRW. As always, the full list of our positions is presented at the end of report (please refer to pages 18-19 and on our website).   Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com India: Beware Of Private Banks And Consumer Perils Indian private banks and consumer staple stocks have been holding up the Indian equity market at a time when the rest of the bourse has been sluggish. Both sectors, however, are extremely expensive and thus tremendously sensitive to minor profit disappointments. Remarkably, private banks now trade at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 31 and price-to-book value (PBV) ratio of 4. Indian consumer staple stocks, on the other hand, trade at a P/E ratio of 41 (Chart II-1 and Chart II-2). Chart II-1Indian Private Bank Stocks Are Expensive Chart II-2Indian Consumer Staple Stocks Are Very Pricey   Chart II-3A Credit Boom Among Indian Private Banks Given that private banks have been specializing in both mortgages and non-mortgage consumer lending, the call on both private bank and consumer staple stocks is contingent on consumer financial health. The loan book of private banks has expanded tremendously: since 2010 it has grown at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20% and 14% in nominal and real (inflation-adjusted) terms, respectively (Chart II-3).3 In turn, the share of household loans is reasonably large at around 52% of private banks total loan book.  Unfortunately, India’s consumer sector appears to be fragile at the moment. Employment and wage growth have downshifted – the Manpower employment index is at a 14-year low (Chart II-4). Consequently, household disposable income growth has decelerated to 9% in nominal terms (Chart II-5). Critically, households’ ability to service debt has deteriorated as nominal disposable household income growth has fallen slightly below borrowing costs, i.e., bank lending rates (Chart II-5). This development is precarious not only because it makes it more difficult for consumers to service their debt – causing NPLs to rise – but it also dampens consumer credit demand. Consequently, private banks’ considerable exposure to consumers could reverse the fortunes of the former as consumers face increasing difficulties servicing their debt. Moreover, with borrowing costs above nominal income growth, banks in India could face adverse selection problem. The latter is a phenomenon when loan demand primarily comes from riskier borrowers who are in desperate need for funding. In such a case, non-performing loans are bound to mushroom. Chart II-4India's Labor Market Is In Doldrums Chart II-5India: Household Nominal Income And Lending Rate Overall, household spending is in the doldrums. Two- and three-wheeler and passenger car unit sales have all been contracting. In the meantime, consumer demand for non-durable goods has also weakened, as reflected by stalling non-durable consumer goods production. Residential property demand has plummeted. According to the Reserve Bank of India’s December Financial Stability Report – quoting data from PropTiger DataLabs – housing sales units contracted by 20% in September from a year ago. In turn, growth in house prices has been anemic (Chart II-6). Prices are now growing below core inflation, i.e. property prices are deflating in real terms. Households’ ability to service debt has deteriorated as nominal disposable household income growth has fallen slightly below borrowing costs. Going forward, odds are that employment and wage growth will remain weak in India. The basis is the corporate sector is also struggling and still reluctant to invest and hire. Chart II-7 illustrates that the number of investment projects has collapsed, while capital goods production and capital goods imports are both shrinking (Chart II-7). Chart II-6India: Housing Market Is Feeble Chart II-7India: Companies Are Not Investing   Overall, the entire Indian economy is suffering from high borrowing costs in real (adjusted for inflation) terms (Chart II-8, top panel). Chart II-8Lending Rates Have Not Declined Despite Monetary Easing Importantly, the monetary policy transmission mechanism has not been working effectively in India. Even though the central bank has cut its policy rate by 135 basis points in 2019, prime borrowing did not budge (Chart II-8, middle panel). Consequently, loan growth has decelerated sharply (Chart II-8, bottom panel). On the whole, for the economy to recover, it requires considerably lower borrowing costs or a substantial fiscal boost. Indian central and state fiscal aggregate budget deficit is already wide at 6% of GDP. With public debt-to-GDP ratio at 68%, there is some but not enormous room for boosting government expenditures drastically. This makes reducing commercial bank lending rates the most feasible mechanism to jump-start the economy. Consequently, the authorities will become more aggressive in forcing commercial banks to cut their lending rates. This seems to be taking place as in September 2019 the RBI asked Indian commercial banks to link lending rates on certain types of loans more closely to the central bank’s policy rate to ensure more effective monetary policy transmission. Yet doing so will squeeze down commercial banks’ net interest rate margins – which have widened – and will hit banks’ profits. Alternatively, if lending rates do not fall, non-performing loans (NPLs) will increase because only risky borrowers will be willing to borrow while existing debtors will struggle to service their debt at current elevated interest rates. This will also depress bank profits. These two negative scenarios are probably reflected in low valuations of public bank share prices, but they are not yet priced in among private banks stocks. Given the latter’s exuberant valuations, only a small drop in net interest rate margins or a small rise in NPLs, will be enough to drag their share prices lower. Investment Conclusions Chart II-9India Vs. EM Relative Equity Performance Is Often About Oil Travails of the Indian economy will persist for now. Much more policy support is required to turn the business cycle around. EM equity investors should keep a neutral allocation to Indian stocks within an EM equity portfolio. Indian share prices often outperform their EM peers when oil prices drop and lag when crude prices rally (Chart II-9). Given our negative view on oil prices,4 we are reluctant to downgrade this bourse to underweight. Private banks are susceptible to a drawdown as either their net interest rate margins will drop or they will face rising non-performing loans. Consumer staples stocks are expensive and, hence, are vulnerable to marginal profit disappointments. We are upgrading our allocation to Indian domestic bonds from neutral to overweight within an EM local bond portfolio. Consistently, we are closing our yield curve steepening trade in India. This position has produced a 30 basis points gain since July 2016. Low inflation, weak real growth, a struggling credit system and ineffective transmission of monetary easing argue for even lower interest rates in India. The surge in food prices should be viewed as a relative price shock, not inflation. Higher food prices will curb the spending power of consumers and weaken their expenditures on non-food items. In addition, core inflation remains very low. Ayman Kawtharani Editor/Strategist ayman@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1  Please click on the link to access EM: Perception versus Reality report. 2  Commercial banks’ reserves at central banks do not constitute and are not a part of narrow or broad money supply. 3  The calculation is based on the annual reports of four large Indian private banks: HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank, and Axis Bank. 4   This is the Emerging Markets Strategy team’s view and it differs for BCA’s house view on oil. Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
Highlights The bank credit 6-month impulse is likely to drop sharply in Europe, drop modestly in the US, but remain positive in China. Hence, the momentum of first-half economic data is likely to be worse in Europe than in China – albeit the Wuhan coronavirus scare is an unknown risk to this view. Initiate long CNY/GBP on a 6-month horizon. Underweight banks and the cyclical-heavy Eurostoxx 50 versus other markets, again on a 6-month horizon. There will be a better time to enter these positions later in the year when 6-month impulses are improving. Long-term investors seeking value in Europe should focus on the main currencies and not on the main equity indexes. Fractal trade: long EUR/GBP. Europe And China Play A Role-Reversal In recent dispatches we have highlighted that the euro area bond yield 6-month impulse stands near +100 bps, posing the strongest headwind to growth for three years. To make matters worse, the impulse has flipped from a strong -100 bps tailwind last summer into the current strong headwind, equating to a marked deterioration in the weather. But in China, it is the opposite story. Last summer, the China bond yield 6-month impulse constituted a strong +80 bps headwind; today the headwind has disappeared. Indeed, it has morphed into a tailwind, albeit a very mild tailwind at just -10 bps. In this sense, Europe and China are now playing a role-reversal. The momentum of first-half economic data is likely to be worse in Europe than in China – albeit with the caveat that the Wuhan coronavirus scare is an unknown risk to this view (Chart of the Week). Chart of the WeekBond Yields In Europe And China Play A Role-Reversal For the sake of completeness, we should address the world’s other large economy, the United States. Just as in the euro area, the US bond yield 6-month impulse has flipped from a strong -100 bps tailwind last summer into a current headwind. But the headwind, at +50 bps, is not as strong as it is in the euro area (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Headwind Impulses In The Euro Area And The US, But Not In China The Four Impulse Framework For Short-Term Growth The bond yield 6-month impulse is the first component of our proprietary ‘four impulse framework’ for short-term growth. The bond yield 6-month impulse is important because it usually leads the framework’s second component, the bank credit 6-month impulse, by a few months. This relationship makes perfect sense as, at the margin, it is the price of credit that drives credit demand. Indeed, to the extent that monetary policy drives growth, this is the main mechanism by which it operates, albeit with a slight delay. The bond yield impulse usually leads the credit impulse. On this compelling theoretical and empirical evidence, the bank credit impulse is now likely to drop sharply in the euro area (Chart I-3), drop modestly in the US (Chart I-4), but remain positive in China (Chart I-5). Chart I-3The Credit 6-Month Impulse Is Likely To Drop Sharply In The Euro Area... Chart I-4...Drop Modestly In ##br##The US...   Chart I-5...But Remain Positive In China But we must also consider the other two impulses in our four impulse framework. In the case of the euro area, the third important impulse is the oil price 6-month impulse. This is because the euro area relies on oil imports whose volumes tend to be price inelastic. Hence, when the oil price falls it subtracts from imports, thereby adding to net exports and growth – and vice-versa when the oil price rises. In the middle of 2019, the oil price impulse constituted a very strong headwind which helps to explain the midyear sharp slowdown in Germany. Subsequently, the headwind eased, even reversing into a modest tailwind which facilitated a recovery. But the tailwind is now fading (Chart I-6).  Chart I-6A Fading Tailwind From The Oil Price 6-Month Impulse The fourth and final component of our four impulse framework is geopolitical risk. This is not an impulse in the strict mathematical sense, but it is the same broad idea applied to the flow of geopolitical tail-events, both negative and positive. Europe’s positive events came several months ago: first in early-August when Italy ousted the firebrand Matteo Salvini from government; then in early-October when the UK parliament legislated against a no-deal Halloween Brexit. The tailwind from these positive events has now likely faded. For China, a positive geopolitical event and potential mild tailwind has come more recently, with the signing of the phase one trade deal with the US. Against this, the Wuhan coronavirus scare is a new risk – though based on the latest information it is unlikely to impact a 6-month view. The tailwind from the oil price impulse is now fading. On the four impulse framework, the momentum of first-half economic data is likely to favour China over Europe. We have found that the best way of playing this is through the exchange rate (Chart I-7), though given recent moves our preferred expression is versus the pound rather than the euro. Hence, on a 6-month horizon, initiate long CNY/GBP. Chart I-7Play Relative Impulses Through Currencies More generally, can the mild tailwind in China counter the headwinds in the West? No. Despite the improvement in China, the aggregate global bond yield impulse still constitutes a +50 bps headwind, which is almost certain to weigh down the global credit impulse through the early months of 2020 (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Global Credit 6-Month Impulse Will Weaken In Early 2020 Therefore, as discussed last week in Strong Headwind Warrants Caution In H1, we recommend an underweight stance to banks and to the cyclical-heavy Eurostoxx 50 versus other markets, again on a 6-month horizon. This is not to say that these positions cannot do better on a 12-month view, as per the BCA house view. But if so, any outperformance will be back-end loaded, and there will be a better time to enter these positions later in the year when 6-month impulses are improving. Where Is The Value In Europe? One of the most common questions we get is: are European equities cheaper than US equities? Usually, this question comes from our US clients who are aware that their own stock market is expensive and wish that Europe might be less so. Unfortunately, the wishful thinking won’t make it come true! Major stock market indexes comprise multinational companies with global footprints. For these multinationals, there is no such thing as a ‘European’ company or a ‘US’ company. They are simply global companies that could list their shares on any major stock market. Now ask yourself this: is it really plausible that such a multinational would be cheaper if its primary listing was in Frankfurt as opposed to New York? Of course not. The valuation depends on the industry and company specifics, but it is highly unlikely to depend on whether the company is listed in Frankfurt or New York. It is not European equities that are cheap, it is European currencies that are cheap. But then why do companies with dual listings in Europe and outside Europe trade at a valuation discount in their European listing? For example, Carnival Cruises trades around 8 percent dearer in New York than in London (Chart I-9); and BHP Billiton trades around 15 percent dearer in Sydney than in London (Chart I-10). The answer is that the London listing is quoted in pounds, the New York listing is quoted in US dollars, the Sydney listing is quoted in Australian dollars, but Carnival’s and BHP’s sales and profits are denominated in a mix of international currencies. Chart I-9Carnival Cruises Trades Dearer In New York Than In London Chart I-10BHP Trades Dearer In Sydney ##br##Than In London Hence, Carnival and BHP are trading dearer in New York and Sydney because the market is expecting their mixed currency earnings to appreciate more in US dollar and Australian dollar terms respectively than in pound terms. Put another way, the market is expecting the pound to appreciate structurally versus the major non-European currencies. Therein lies the important message. It is not European equities that are cheap, it is European currencies that are cheap. For those of you still in doubt, just visit the ECB website. The central bank’s own currency valuation indicator admits that the trade-weighted euro is 10 percent undervalued (Chart I-11). Chart I-11The ECB Admits That The Euro Is 10 Percent Undervalued Hence, investors seeking value in Europe should not focus on the main equity indexes. Instead, they should focus on the main currencies. That said, valuation based investing only works if you have a long enough time horizon, meaning at least two years. For shorter horizons, economic momentum and technical factors dominate. In this regard, the pound’s strong rally faces resistance once post-Brexit trade deal negotiations begin in earnest after January 31. As a tactical trade, go long EUR/GBP (see next section). Fractal Trading System* The Brexit deal unleashed a strong rally in the pound, but this is vulnerable to a countertrend setback once the trade deal negotiations begin in earnest. Accordingly, this week's recommendation is long EUR/GBP. Set a profit target at 2 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, long tin achieved its 5 percent profit target at which it was closed. The rolling 1-year win ratio stands at 62 percent. Chart I-12EUR/GBP When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated   December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com.   Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System   Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields   Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations  
Highlights The recently signed Phase One deal is positive for China and global equity markets as it brings a temporary truce to the trade war. However, China is unlikely to change its current policy trajectory to create additional domestic demand to consume $200 billion in new imports from the US. China is likely to meet the commitment only half way in the next two years, and meet the 2020 import target from the US by a redistribution of its purchases overseas. The RMB will modestly appreciate in the next three to six months. On the monetary policy front, there is no sign of further monetary easing from the PBoC. We continue to recommend an overweight stance towards Chinese stocks in the next six months, relative to the global benchmark. Feature Economic data released last week, including Q4 GDP growth, December industrial production, fixed-asset investment and trade data, all suggest that the Chinese economy bottomed before the end of 2019. The Phase One trade deal between China and the US marks a significant de-escalation in a two-year trade war. The RMB appreciated by 1.4% against the greenback since the beginning of the year, pushing USD-CNY firmly below the key psychological 7 mark. The performance of equities in China’s onshore and offshore markets confirms that the economy has bottomed. Since December 11, 2019, Chinese cyclical sectors have outperformed defensives and both the investable and domestic markets have broken above their respective 200-day moving averages versus global stocks (Chart 1A and 1B). Chart 1ABoth Onshore And Offshore Equities Signal A Bottoming In China's Economy Chart 1BCyclicals Have Significantly Outperformed Defensives Lately We continue to recommend a cyclical long stance on Chinese stocks. We expect pro-growth policy support to accelerate in the first quarter, economic recovery to further solidify, and the Phase One trade deal to reduce economic and financial market volatility until the November 2020 US presidential election. All of these factors should support an outperformance in Chinese stocks relative to their global peers. Some Inconvenient Truth To The Truce China’s commitment to purchase an additional $200 billion in goods from the US was more than market participants anticipated. We do not think China will honor this commitment to its full extent. Moreover, we also do not think this will change China’s domestic economic policy trajectory for 2020. Details in Chapter 6 of the Phase One trade agreement titled “Expanding Trade”1 include: In the next 2 years, China is committed to purchase an additional $200 billion worth of goods and services from the US, from the 2017 baseline. The additional $200 billion amount is split over the next two years: China will need to add no less than $77 billion of imports from the US in 2020, and $123 billion in 2021. This amounts to a 41% increase in 2020 and a 66% increase in 2021, from the 2017 baseline of $186 billion (Chart 2). The text from Chapter 6 of the Phase One deal also specifies that, between January 2020 and December 2021, China will add a total of $77.7 billion in purchases of manufactured goods (including aircraft components), $32 billion in agricultural products, $52.4 billion in energy and $37.9 billion in services from the US (Chart 3). Chart 2Phase One Trade Deal Sets An Ambitious Import Target For The Next Two Years Chart 3Chinese Imports Of Agro And Energy Goods From The US Likely To See The Biggest Increase In 2020 From 2019   China’s annual import growth from the US in 2017 was the highest one in the past ten years.  If we assume that China will simply add $200 billion of new imports in the next two years from the US to this high starting point, it will need to boost domestic demand to accommodate at least a 4-6% increase in total imports in the next two years from 2019.2 In contrast, growth in China’s total imports in 2019 contracted by 3% from 2018, and averaged at only 2% in the last five years. In other words, in 2020 and 2021, even if China does not increase imports from other countries, just the commitment from purchases of US goods alone would require a sizable boost in China’s domestic demand. However, the assumption above is overly simplified and optimistic. Even though Chinese leadership may have shifted their policy priority from financial deleveraging to supporting economic growth this year, we do not think they will fully abandon the battle against systemic risks in the financial sector. Therefore, China is unlikely to significantly deviate from its current policy trajectory and stimulate aggressively to create additional domestic demand to consume the agreed $200 billion in new imports from the US. It is equally unlikely that China will absorb the $200 billion additional imports from the US, at the expense of its domestic production. A more plausible approach, which is our base case scenario, is that China will meet a large portion of the 2020 import target before November, to show good faith. After the US presidential election, China will face the challenge of either a re-escalation from the Phase Two trade talk with a re-elected President Trump, or a new US president with his/her own political agenda. In either case, at this point China is unlikely to have the intention to meet the import target for 2021. Chart 4China Likely To Shift Agro And Energy Import Suppliers To The US In 2020, to absorb a $77 billion additional imports from the US, China will likely shift some of its imports, such as agriculture and energy products, from other countries to suppliers in the US. China currently imports $150 billion of agriculture goods and $298 billion of energy related products on an annual basis, so the pie is large enough to absorb some of increased import commitments by shifting the sources of imports (Chart 4). The same logic goes for the manufactured goods category in the trade agreement, which includes cars, airplanes, steel, industrial machinery, and so on.3 China is likely to choose to shift its import suppliers of these goods to the US, while increasing its own share of intermediate goods supplies to the US manufacturers. Almost all of the eight subcategories under the manufactured goods category in the Phase One trade agreement are deeply integrated in the global supply chain. For example, foreign value-added share accounts for 23% of the total output value of the US automobile industry.4 In other words, if a “Made in America” car is worth $20,000, $4,600 is produced by foreign suppliers of intermediate goods. Since China has been the leading source of this foreign value-added in the US automobile industry, a sizeable slice of these additional imports will likely benefit Chinese manufacturers. In this scenario, we expect an increase in bilateral trade between China and the US in 2020, at the expense of other players in the global supply chain. Lastly, while this is not our base case scenario, it is possible the Phase One trade agreement was set up for failure, if China is simply hoping to delay the imposition of additional tariffs as part of a gamble that President Trump will not be re-elected. In this scenario, China might not make any meaningful additional purchases from the US even in 2020 (while claiming that they will be made closer to the election), implying that bilateral trade between China and the US will only revert to its historical average this year, at best. Bottom Line: Chinese policymakers are unlikely willing to alter their existing policy trajectory when accommodating more imports of US goods. China will, at best, reshuffle its supply chain to absorb a portion of the commitment before November 2020. The RMB And Monetary Policy: A Refocus On The Economic Fundamentals As tensions from the US-China trade war abate, investors are starting to refocus on economic fundamentals. The RMB has appreciated by 1.4% against the USD since the beginning of this year (Chart 5). The recent appreciation in the currency is a reversal to its fair value, which reflects an ongoing economic recovery (Chart 6). In the next three to six months, the improvement in China’s economic fundamentals and market sentiment should support a continuation in the RMB’s reversal to its structural trend. Chart 5USD/CNY Has Durably Fallen Below 7 Chart 6The Recent Appreciation In RMB Is A Reversal To Its Fair Value   But Chinese leadership’s cautious approach to boosting domestic demand will also cap the upside potential in the RMB appreciation. We think Chinese policymakers will maintain their tight grip this year on local government spending and bank lending, and will continue to fine-tune policies based on economic conditions. This will limit the magnitude in both the stimulus and economic recovery. Baring a major re-escalation in the trade war, the RMB should oscillate within a relatively narrow band through the third quarter of this year. For that reason, the PBoC is unlikely to intervene in the RMB exchange rate by significantly altering its monetary stance (Chart 7). The 3-month interbank lending rate, China’s de facto policy rate, remains low compared with the 2015-16 easing cycle. There is no sign that the PBoC will allow the rate to fall much more. The recent bank reserve requirement ratio (RRR) rate cut provides additional liquidity to the interbank system, but on a net basis liquidity does not seem excessive (Chart 8). Chart 7PBoC Unlikely To Alter Monetary Policy To Intervene RMB Exchange Rate This Year Chart 8No Sign Of Meaningful Monetary Easing From PBoC   Historically, the 3-month interbank lending rate only falls significantly and durably when the PBoC places consecutive RRR rate cuts (in both 2015 and mid-2018) and/or keeps net fund injections positive through the open market for a prolonged period (such as in the 2015/16 easing cycle). Chart 8 suggests the current monetary environment does not indicate that such an extremely easy stance is in place, as PBoC net fund injections through the open market remain negative. Furthermore, neither the 3-month interbank lending rate nor the 10-year government bond yield has fallen below its most recent lows in the third quarter of last year. Bottom Line: While the current environment supports a stronger RMB, the upside potential in RMB appreciation is capped by a modest scale of economic recovery. There is no sign that the PBoC is easing its monetary stance by lowering the policy rate. Investment Conclusions We have been cyclically overweight Chinese stocks on the basis of a bottoming in the economy in the first quarter of 2020, and the likelihood of an eventual trade deal. These two factors were confirmed in the past two weeks. Last week’s small selloffs in both onshore and offshore Chinese equity markets were likely technical corrections and pre-Chinese New Year profit taking, rather than a fundamental shift in investors’ sentiment towards Chinese stocks (Chart 9). We expect Chinese stocks to resume an upward trajectory after the Chinese New Year. Chart 9Small Corrections Following A 14% Gain Since Dec 2019 Chart 10Offshore Stocks Still Showing More Upside Potential Than Onshore China’s economic conditions and corporate earnings should continue to improve, with investable stocks showing more upside potential than their domestic counterparts (Chart 10). As growth supporting measures continue to work their way through the economy and solidify an economic recovery, China’s leadership may pull back the scale of the stimulus in the second half of the year. Therefore, the relative outperformance in both markets may be front loaded and subsequently subside in the second half of 2020. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1    https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/rVaHxDBUtdew/v0  2   China’s total imports of goods and services in 2019 was $2604 billion, including $168 billion imports from the US. If China was to fully meet the $200 billion target of additional imports from the US, assuming no change to imports from other countries in 2020 from 2019, China’s total imports would jump to $2699 billion in 2020 and $2745 billion in 2021. 3   The eight subcategories of Manufacturing Goods listed in the Annex 6.1 of the Phase One Trade agreement include: Industrial Machinery, Electrical Equipment and Machinery, Pharmaceutical Products, Aircraft, Vehicles, Optical and Medical Instruments, Iron and Steel, Other Manufactured Goods including solar-grade polysilicon and other organic and inorganic chemicals, hardwood lumber, integrated circuits (manufactured in US), and chemical products. 4   WIOD Data, 2016 release and OECD Input-Output Tables (IOTs), 2015 release. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
While Chinese authorities are most likely targeting “around 6%” in 2020, the authorities may allow an undershoot in the 5.5%-5.9% range. They will argue that the GDP target for 2020 has already been met on a compound growth rate basis. They may see less need…