Equities
Listen to a short summary of this report. Executive Summary Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off We tactically downgraded global equities in late February but see the current level of stock prices as offering enough upside to warrant an overweight. Global equities are now trading at 15.6-times forward earnings, and only 12.6-times outside the US. More importantly, the forces that pushed down stock prices are starting to abate: The war in Ukraine no longer seems likely to devolve into a broader conflict; the number of new Covid cases in China has fallen by half; and global inflation has peaked. The next 18 months of falling inflation and receding recession fears could see stocks recover much of their losses. The “Last Hurrah” for equities is coming. We continue to think that over a 5-year horizon, bond yields will rise from current levels, value stocks will outperform growth stocks, and crypto prices will fall. However, countertrend rallies are likely. To express this view, we recommend taking partial profits on our short 10-year Treasury trade recommendation (up 9.3% from an initial entry yield of 1.45% on June 30, 2021). We are also halving our long global value/growth position (up 20.1% since inception on December 10, 2020) and our short Bitcoin position (up 98% based on our exponential shorting technique). Bottom Line: Global equities are heading towards a “last Hurrah” starting in the second half of this year. Tactically upgrade stocks to overweight. Feature Dear Client, We published a Special Alert early this afternoon tactically upgrading global equities to overweight. As promised, the enclosed report elaborates on our view change. Best regards, Peter Berezin Restore Tactical Overweight On Global Equities Chart 1Global Equities Are More Attractively Valued After The Recent Sell-Off We tactically downgraded global equities from overweight to neutral on February 28th. The war in Ukraine, the Covid outbreak in China, and most importantly, the rise in bond yields have kept us on the sidelines ever since. At this point, however, the outlook for stocks has brightened, and thus we are restoring our tactical (3-month) overweight to stocks so that it is consistent with our bullish 12-month cyclical view. First, valuations have discounted much of the bad news. After the recent sell-off, global equities are trading at 15.6-times forward earnings (Chart 1). Outside the US, they trade at only 12.6-times forward earnings. Second, the forces that pushed down stock prices are starting to abate. The war in Ukraine is approaching a stalemate, with Russian troops unable to take much of the country, let alone seriously threaten regional neighbours. A European embargo on Russian oil is likely but will be watered down significantly before it is implemented. European officials have shied away from banning Russian natural gas, an action that would have much more severe economic implications. While still very high in absolute terms, December-2022 European natural gas futures are down 36% from their peak on March 7 (Chart 2). The 7-day average of new Covid cases in China has fallen by more than half since late April (Chart 3). Considering that a significant fraction of China’s elderly population is unvaccinated, the authorities will continue to play whack-a-mole with the virus for the next few months (Chart 4). Fortunately, Chinese domestic production of Pfizer’s Paxlovid anti-Covid drug is starting to ramp up, which should allow for some easing in lockdown measures later this year. Chart 2European Natural Gas Futures Have Come Off The Boil Chart 3Covid Cases Are Falling In China… The 20th Chinese National Party Congress is slated for this fall. In the lead-up to the Congress, it is likely that the government will move to diffuse social tensions over its handling of the pandemic by showering the economy with stimulus funds. Of note, the credit impulse has already turned higher, which bodes well for both Chinese growth and growth abroad (Chart 5). Chart 4… But Low Vaccination Rates Among The Elderly Remain A Risk Chart 5A Rebound In China's Credit Impulse Bodes Well For China And The Rest Of The World Inflation Is Peaking On the inflation front, the data flow has gone from unambiguously bad to neutral (and perhaps even slightly positive). In the US, core goods inflation fell by 0.4% month-over-month in April, the first outright decline in core goods prices since February 2021. The Manheim Used Vehicle Value Index has crested and is now 6.4% below its January peak (Chart 6). Global shipping rates have moved up a bit recently on the back of Chinese port shutdowns but remain well below their highs earlier this year (Chart 7). Chart 6Used Car Prices Appear To Have Peaked Chart 7Global Shipping Rates Are Well Off Their Highs It Is The Composition Of Spending That Is Distorted Despite the often-heard claim that US consumer spending is well above trend, the reality is that spending is more or less in line with its pre-pandemic trend (Chart 8). It is the composition of spending that is out of line: Goods spending is well above trend while services spending is well below. One might think that only the overall level of spending should matter for inflation, and that the composition of spending is irrelevant. However, this ignores the reality that services prices are generally stickier than goods prices. Companies that sold fitness equipment during the pandemic had no qualms about raising prices. In contrast, gyms barely cut prices, figuring that lower membership fees would do little to drive new business through the door (Chart 9). Chart 8Total US Consumer Spending Is Almost Exactly At Its Pre-Pandemic Trend, But The Composition Of Spending Remains Skewed Chart 9Asymmetries Matter: Firms Manufacturing Sports Equipment Jacked Up Prices, But Gyms Barely Cut Prices This asymmetry matters, and it suggests that goods inflation should continue to fall over the coming months as the composition of spending shifts back to services. A Lull In Wage Growth Wages are the most important determinant of services inflation. While it is too early to be certain, the latest data suggest that wage growth has peaked. The 3-month annualized growth rate in average hourly earnings for production and nonsupervisory workers slowed from 7.2% in the second half of 2021 to 3.8% in April (Chart 10). Assuming productivity growth of around 1.5%, this is consistent with inflation of only slightly more than 2%. Nominal wage growth is a function of both labor market slack and expected inflation. Slack should increase modestly during the rest of the year as labor participation recovers. Chart 11 shows that the labor force participation rate is still about 0.9 percentage points below where one would expect it to be, even adjusting for an aging population and increased early retirements. Chart 10Wage Growth Seems To Be Topping Out Chart 11Labor Participation Has Further Scope To Recover Employment has been particularly depressed among lower-wage workers (Chart 12). This should change as more low-wage workers exhaust their savings and are forced to seek employment. According to the Fed, the lowest-paid 20% of workers are the only group to have seen their bank deposits dwindle since mid-2021 (Chart 13). Chart 12More Low-Wage Employees Will Return To Work Chart 13The Savings Of Low-Wage Workers Are Dwindling Inflation expectations should come down as goods inflation recedes and oil prices come off their highs (Chart 14). Bob Ryan, BCA’s Chief Commodity Strategist, sees the price of Brent averaging $86/bbl in the second half of this year, down 16% from current levels. Central Banks Will Dial Back The Hawkishness With inflation set to fall over the remainder of the year, and financial markets showing increasing signs of stress, the Fed and other central banks will adopt a softer tone. It is worth noting that the median terminal dot for the Fed funds rate actually declined from 2.5% to 2.4% in the March Summary of Economic Projections (Chart 15). Given that markets expect US interest rates to rise to 3.25% in 2023, the Fed may not want investors to further rachet up rate expectations. Chart 14US Inflation Expectations Should Recede If Oil Prices Drop Chart 15Rate Expectations Have Moved Well Above The Fed's Estimate of Neutral The Bank of England has already veered in a more dovish direction. Its latest forecast, released on May 5, showed real GDP contracting slightly in 2023. Based on market interest rate expectations, the BoE sees headline inflation falling to 1.5% by end-2024, below its target of 2%. Even assuming that interest rates remain at 1%, the BoE believes that inflation will only be slightly above 2% at the end of 2024, implying little need for incremental policy tightening. Not surprisingly, the pound has sold off. We have been tactically short GBP/USD but are using this opportunity to turn tactically neutral. Given favorable valuations, we like the pound over the long run. Chart 16Spending In The Euro Area Is Well Below Its Pre-Pandemic Trend The euro area provides a good example of the dangers of focusing too much on short-term inflation dynamics. Supply-side disruptions stemming from the pandemic and the war in Ukraine have weighed on European growth this year. Yet, those very same factors have also pushed up inflation. Harmonized inflation across the euro area reached 7.5% in April, the highest since the launch of the common currency. The ECB is eager to put some distance between policy rates and the zero bound. However, there is little need for significant tightening. Unlike in the US, spending in the euro area is well below its pre-pandemic trend (Chart 16). If anything, more inflation would be welcome since that would give the ECB scope to bring real rates further into negative territory if economic conditions warrant it. To its credit, the Bank of Japan has stuck with its yield curve control system, even as bond yields have risen elsewhere in the world. Japan’s currency has weakened but given that inflation expectations are too low, and virtually all of its debt is denominated in yen, that is hardly a bad thing. Too Late? Has the surge in bond yields already done enough damage to the global economy to make a recession inevitable? We do not think so. As noted above, much of the recent harm has been caused by various dislocations, namely the war in Ukraine and the ongoing effects of the pandemic. As these dislocations dissipate, inflation will fall and global growth will recover. Despite the hoopla over how the US economy contracted in the first quarter, real private final sales to domestic purchasers (a measure of GDP growth that strips out the effects of changes in government spending, inventories, and net exports) rose by 3.7% at an annualized rate. As Table 1 shows, this measure of economic activity has the highest predictive power for GDP growth one-quarter ahead. Table 1A Good Sign: Real Final Sales To Private Domestic Purchasers Rose By 3.7% In Q1 Meanwhile, and completely overlooked at this point, S&P 500 earnings have come in 7.3% above expectations so far in Q1, with nearly 80% of S&P 500 companies surprising on the upside. Earnings are up 10.4% year-over-year in Q1. Sales are up 13.6%. Looking out to Q4 of 2022, S&P companies are expected to earn $60.93 in EPS, up 4.3% from what analysts expected at the start of the year. It is also worth noting that homebuilder stocks have basically been flat over the past 30 days, even as the S&P 500 has dropped by nearly 10% over this period. Housing is the most interest rate-sensitive sector of the economy. With the homeowner vacancy rate at record low levels, even today’s mortgage rates may not be enough to push the economy into recession (Chart 17). Economic vulnerabilities are greater outside the US. Nevertheless, there is enough pent-up demand on both the consumer and capital spending side to sustain growth. The Last Hurrah How long will the “Goldilocks” period of falling inflation and supply-side driven growth last? Our guess is about 18 months, starting this summer and lasting until the end of 2023. Unfortunately, as is often the case, the benign environment that will emerge in the second half of this year will sow the seeds of its own demise. Real wages are currently falling across the major economies (Chart 18). That has dampened consumer confidence and spending. However, as inflation comes down, real wage growth will turn positive. This will stoke demand, leading to a reacceleration in inflation, most likely in late 2023 or early 2024. Chart 17Tight Supply Makes Housing More Resilient Chart 18Real Wages Are Falling In Most Countries In the end, central banks will discover that the neutral rate of interest is higher than they thought. That is good news for stocks in the short-to-medium run because it means that forthcoming rate hikes will not induce a recession. Down the road, however, a higher neutral rate means that investors will eventually need to value stocks using a higher discount rate. It also means that the disinflation we envision over the next 18 months will not last. All this puts us in the rather lonely “transitory transitory” camp: We think much of today’s high inflation will prove to be transitory, but the transitory nature of that inflation will itself be transitory. Be that as it may, the next 18 months of falling inflation and receding recession fears could see stocks recover much of their losses. For most investors, that is too long a period to sit on the sidelines. The “Last Hurrah” for equities is coming. Taking Partial Profits On Our Short Treasury, Long Value/Growth, And Short Bitcoin Trades We continue to think that over a 5-year horizon, bond yields will rise from current levels, value stocks will outperform growth stocks, and crypto prices will fall. However, with the “Last Hurrah” approaching, countertrend rallies are likely. To express this view, we recommend taking half profits on our short 10-year Treasury trade recommendation (up 9.3% from an initial entry yield of 1.45% on June 30, 2021). We are also halving our long global value/growth position (up 20.1% since inception on December 10, 2020), and our short Bitcoin position (up 98% based on our exponential shorting technique). Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Executive Summary Ingredients For A Policy Mistake The hawks on the European Central Bank Governing Council have become vocal about a July rate hike. Such a move would be a policy mistake because European growth is weak, while inflation is supply-driven and will soften meaningfully. July 2022 hike is not yet certain. A policy mistake suggests that the current interest rate pricing for June 23 is too aggressive. Buy June 2023 Euribor contract. The serious risk of a policy mistake and the uncertainty surrounding Europe’s energy security confirm that investors should maintain a defensive stance in European assets. The pronounced threats to UK growth warrant a negative view on the pound. Recommendation INCEPTION DATE RETURN SINCE INCEPTION (%) COMMENT Buy June 2023 Euribor contract 05/09/2022 Bottom Line: Stay defensive in Europe. The risk of a policy mistake is high. Only when inflation peaks should investors move into cyclical stocks. In recent weeks, a chorus of ECB hawks expressed the need to increase rates as early as July 2022. Inflation data is on their side; HICP stands at 7.5% and core CPI has reached 3.5%, levels never seen since the introduction of the euro. Markets are responding. The ESTR curve is pricing in a positive ECB deposit rate for the October 2022 Governing Council meeting. We need to examine the underlying European economic picture to address two key questions: Will the ECB lift rates as early as July? And will doing so constitute a policy mistake that would hurt European assets? Weaker Growth Let’s start with the growth outlook. European economic activity is rapidly deteriorating. Real GDP growth in the Eurozone has slowed markedly. In Q1, real GDP growth fell to 0.2% quarter-on-quarter or an annualized rate of 0.8%. Worrisomely, Italy’s GDP contracted by -0.2% over that time frame and the very economically sensitive Swedish activity contracted by -0.4%, which suggests that Europe’s deceleration is only starting. Soft data confirm the flagging economic outlook on the continent. Consumer confidence is plunging to levels that are consistent with a recession, led by the collapse in the willingness to make large purchases (Chart 1, top panel). The ZEW as well as the Ifo survey confirm that growth expectations point to a very large decline in output (Chart 1, bottom panel). The weakness is also evident in hard data. High inflation erodes real household income, which squeezes consumer spending. Retail sales across Europe are slowing sharply, only growing at an annual rate of 0.8% while contracting -0.4% on a monthly basis; on a level basis, they are lower today than they were in June 2021. Meanwhile, German retail sales volumes are falling at a -5.4% annual rate. The situation is even worse for new car registrations, which are collapsing at an annual rate of 20.2% (Chart 2). Chart 1Soft Data Point To Soft Growth... Chart 2...So Do Hard Data Industrial production has not been spared. Euro Area IP softened to 2% annually in February and contractions are now visible in Germany and France. Some of this weakness reflects supply difficulties, but the -3.1% annual fall in German factory orders indicates that demand is frail too and that industrial production will shrink further in the months ahead (Chart 2, bottom panel). The deterioration in the global outlook further hurts Europe economic prospects. Our global growth tax indicator, based on energy prices, the dollar, and global bond yields, points toward a further deceleration in the global and US manufacturing PMI, it suggests Euro Area PMIs could fall below 50 (Chart 3). China woes continue to reverberate throughout the global economy. Potential supply constraints will hurt industrial production, but, more importantly, the weakness in China’s marginal propensity to consume (as measured by the gap between the growth rate of M1 relative to M2) predicts a much greater deterioration in European industrial orders, which means that the demand for European capital goods will slow (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 3Risks To The Downside Chart 4Tightening Financial Conditions European financial conditions are also tightening significantly. The iTraxx Crossover Index is rising swiftly. European high-yield corporate spreads are now above 450bps, levels that coincide with past recessions in the Euro Area (Chart 4). Government bond markets are increasingly under duress too. Italian BTPs now yield close to 200bps above German Bunds (Chart 4, bottom panel), which accentuates the periphery’s pain. Bottom Line: The Eurozone economy is slowing sharply. While Q1 GDP avoided a contraction, soft and hard data indicators suggest that Q2 is likely to record an actual output contraction for the whole Euro bloc. High Inflation, But For How Long? At first glance, European inflation numbers scream for an ECB rate hike, preferably one yesterday. However, the picture is not that clear-cut. Supply factors predominantly drive the Eurozone’s inflation surge. Chart 5 highlights the role of energy, utilities, food, and transportation costs in the HICP and shows that these factors account for more than 80% of the 7.5% HICP rate. Moreover, the fluctuations in energy CPI continue to explain most of the gyration in headline CPI. The close relationship between energy CPI and core CPI highlights an elevated degree of pass-though, the result of higher electricity and transportation costs (Chart 6). Chart 5Energy, Food And Transport Dominate European CPI Chart 6All About Energy Chart 7No Demand Pull-Inflation In Europe Unlike those in the US, Euro Area underlying inflation drivers are weak and inconsistent with demand-pull inflation. Wage growth in Europe stands at a paltry 1.6% annual rate, while in the US, the Atlanta Fed Wage Tracker has jumped to 4.5% (Chart 7, top panel). Moreover, Eurozone rent inflation remains stable at 1.2%, while it is a very elevated 4.5% in the US (Chart 7, bottom panel). The bifurcation in demand-driven inflation reflects vastly different output gaps between the two regions. US nominal GDP stands 2.5% above its 2014-2019 trend, while that of the Eurozone is still 5.3% below it. In the consumer durable goods sector, where the US experienced the greatest demand-supply mismatch – and therefore, the greatest inflation pressures – purchases are 25% above their 2014-2019 trend, while in Europe, they are still 9.5% below that trend (Chart 8) Year-on-year inflation prints should roll over this summer, as highlighted by weakening sequential inflation. Even if it remains elevated, the monthly Trimmed Mean CPI peaked last year. Energy inflation, moreover, is already contracting on a month-to-month basis (Chart 9). Chart 8Mind The Output Gap Chart 9Weakening Sequential Inflation Chart 10A Naive Inflation Forecast Simple simulation exercises also confirm that annual inflation will peak this summer (Chart 10). Monthly headline inflation averaged 0.11% from 2010 to 2019, 0.31% in the first half of 2021, and 0.55% from mid-2021 to January 2022. If we assume that monthly inflation prints remain in line with its most recent average, annual inflation will peak by year-end at 9.1%, before falling to 6.8% by April 2023. However, if monthly inflation falls back to an historically elevated monthly average of 0.31%, annual headline inflation will peak in September and fall back to 3.8% by April 2023. Similarly, if monthly core CPI averages 0.28%, annual core CPI will peak in October before declining to 3.4% by April 2023, but it will fall to 2.1% by April 2023, if monthly core CPI averages an historically elevated 0.17%, or the average observed in the first half of 2021 (Chart 10, bottom two panels). Chart 11A Conditional Inflation Forecast A more sophisticated exercise based on energy prices and the EUR/USD exchange rate also underlines the downside for Euro Area headline inflation. Energy inflation, which drives headline CPI, closely tracks the evolution of brent prices in euro terms and Deutsch natural gas prices. Assuming that natural gas prices average the historically very high level of €100/MWh over the next twelve months, that Brent averages US$95/bbl over that time frame (consistent with BCA’s commodity and energy team forecasts), and that the euro progressively moves back to EUR/USD1.10 by April 2023 (a weaker expectation than BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy team anticipates), then the Eurozone’s energy inflation will collapse to -10% by April 2023 (Chart 11). We can also assume that Russia enacts a full energy embargo on Western Europe if Sweden and Finland apply for NATO membership. In this case, Brent would spike quickly to $140/bbl and natural gas to €250/MWh. In our scenario, prices stay elevated for two months, before they ultimately normalize by early 2023. Under this scenario, energy inflation would experience a spike to 80% (!) in June 2022 before falling back sharply. In all cases, the collapse in energy inflation is consistent with a rapid decline in headline inflation toward 2% in 2023. Bottom Line: European inflation is elevated but remains mainly driven by supply factors, particularly the evolution of energy inflation. Demand-pull inflation is minimal, unlike that in the US. Additionally, both core and headline inflations are set to peak in the coming months based on the evolution of sequential monthly inflation as well as the behavior of the energy market. A July ECB rate hike would constitute a policy mistake for three reasons: (i) the ECB has no control over supply-driven inflation; (ii) Eurozone inflation is set to weaken; and (iii) economic growth will remain poor. Investment Implications Despite the noise made by the hawks, a large amount of uncertainty around the July 2022 meeting’s outcome remains. It is easy to forget that the ECB’s decisions are consensual. Influential members such as Vice-President Luis de Guindos continues to see a July 2022 hike as possible but unlikely. Others, such as Executive Board member Fabio Panetta, are very worried about the Eurozone’s economic slowdown. Moreover, ECB President Christine Lagarde has not endorsed the hawks. In the context of weak growth and a potential top in inflation, achieving consensus about an early summer hike could be difficult. Chart 12Patience Would Be Rewarded The great paradox is that, if the ECB waits before pushing interest rates up, it will have an opportunity to increase rates durably next year. Wage growth is anemic today, but the decline in the Eurozone unemployment rate is consistent with a pickup in salaries in 2023 (Chart 12). Moreover, if energy inflation slows, the relative price-shock that is hurting households and domestic demand will ebb, which will allow consumption to recover. Patience would give Europe strength and the ECB a very strong basis to lift rates sustainably. The hawks will sway the council to their views. Inflation has latency, which means that its inertia may cause HICP to remain elevated beyond this summer. Moreover, the EU’s proposed ban on Russian oil imports along with Sweden’s and Finland’s likely accession-demand to NATO in the upcoming weeks could provoke Russia to strike first by cutting all its energy export to the EU to zero immediately. This would lift inflation for somewhat longer, as we showed in Chart 9. Related Report European Investment StrategyThe Three Forces Hurting European Earnings In response to the significant risk of a rate hike, we continue to recommend investors stay short cyclical stocks relative to defensive ones. Moreover, if the risk of a Russian energy cutoff increases, so does the threat of a severe recession in Europe, as a recent Bundesbank study posits (Chart 13). Capital preservation is paramount in today’s context; thus, we continue to lean on the side of prudence, especially considering Europe’s soft profit outlook. Once risks recede, we will abandon this strategy. This decision, however, would require clarification of Sweden and Finland’s decision about their membership in NATO as well as Russia’s response, a confirmation that the ECB is not hiking rates in July, and a pullback in inflation surprises, which would prove a powerful help for European equities and the cyclicals/defensive split (Chart 14). Chart 13The Russian Embargo Risk Chart 14Wait For Inflation To Turn In fact, our view that inflation will peak leads to direct implications for European markets. The periods that followed the previous four peaks in European core inflation were associated with an outperformance of small-cap stocks and cyclical stocks over the subsequent six and twelve months as well as declines in German yields and narrower credit spreads (Table 1A). The sectoral implications were not as clear, but industrials enjoyed an edge, while healthcare stocks suffered marked declines. Our conviction is strongest that energy CPI will fall. Again, this environment is associated with an outperformance of small-caps stocks and cyclicals over the following six months (Table 1B). Sector-wise, energy names suffer in this climate along with defensives, especially communication services equities. Table 1APeaks In Core CPI & Subsequent European Asset Performance Table 1BPeaks In Energy CPI & Subsequent European Asset Performance Looking at this period of disinflation more broadly rather than just following peaks in inflation, we find similar results. Declining core CPI is associated with an outperformance of cyclicals relative to defensives as well as strength in small-cap equities (Table 2A). This larger sample allows for a clearer view of sectors. Specifically, the performance of industrials and tech relative to the broad market improves markedly, while utilities suffer greatly. We reach roughly similar conclusions when energy CPI is contracting, except that, in this instance, energy stocks also underperform (Table 2B). Interestingly, so do financial companies. This is a surprising result, but previous instances of weaker energy CPI in the sample reflected weaker demand, not an evolving supply shock. Weaker aggregate demand always hurts financials. Table 2ADisinflation & Subsequent European Asset Performance Table 2BEnergy Deflation & Subsequent European Asset Performance Bottom Line: The risk of a policy mistake at the July ECB meeting is elevated. A policy mistake suggests that the current interest rate pricing for June 23 is too aggressive. Buy June 2023 Euribor contract. Moreover, Russian energy exports are still under threat. Accordingly, we continue to emphasize capital preservation and favor defensives over cyclicals. However, a buying opportunity will emerge rapidly once inflation peaks, especially if the ECB follows our base case. At this point, investors should buy small-cap and cyclical stocks. Industrials will beat energy, while all the defensive sectors will suffer. The BoE’s Tough Choice The Bank of England is stuck between a rock and a hard place. UK inflation shares characteristics of that of both the Eurozone and the US. On the one hand, energy inflation is increasing and could push headline CPI into double-digit territory around October 2022, once fuel subsidies fully expire. On the other hand, wage growth is strong as labor supply elasticity declined after Brexit. Demand-pull inflation is also rampant, which has pushed core CPI to a 5.7% annual rate. The UK’s cost push inflation, along with the growth slowdown in Europe and increasing tax rates are likely to cause a recession in the UK over the coming twelve months. The demand-pull inflation, however, will force the BoE to hike interest rates. This accentuates the downside risk to UK economic activity. Chart 15BoE's First Victim: The Pound The obvious victim of this configuration is the pound. Weak growth will prevent the BoE from matching the pace of rate hikes of the Fed and poor economic growth will detract from investments in the UK. As a result, we see further downside in GBP/USD (Chart 15). BCA’s FX strategy team is also selling the pound versus the euro. This position is likely to generate further gains as investors will revise down their views for UK economic activity relative to the Euro Area, since they already hold much more dire expectations for the latter than the former. Bottom Line: EUR/GBP possesses more upside. The growth outlook for the Eurozone is poor, but investors currently overestimate the growth path of the UK relative to that of its southern neighbor. Mathieu Savary, Chief European Strategist Mathieu@bcaresearch.com Tactical Recommendations Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations
Chart 1 Both the US and Global PMIs surprised to the downside this week with the US ISM Manufacturing PMI printing 55.4 vs 57.6 expected. The ISM PMI fell by 1.7 points from 57.1 while its employment sub-component fell by impressive 5 points (from 56 to 50.9). Worse still, the new orders-to-inventories ratio (NOI) remains in the free fall, foreshadowing further weakness in manufacturing activity (see chart). The disappointing NOI ratio is unlikely to be a one-off anomalous print considering a backdrop of the slowing demand for durable goods, falling consumer purchasing power, and surging oil prices. The NOI ratio contraction is also reminiscent of the 2004 episode – one of the few instances when the Fed tightened monetary policy into a slowing economy. Notably, 2004 marked the peak in cyclical/defensive equities for the entire pre-GFC cycle. When it comes to portfolio positioning, weak manufacturing data validates our recent rotation away from cyclical sectors and towards defensives (please see our most recent Strategy Report for a more detailed discussion). Bottom Line: We continue to recommend investors remain cautious and add defensive exposure to reduce portfolio volatility as the global manufacturing cycle slows down.
In lieu of next week’s report, I will be presenting a webcast titled ‘The 5 Big Mispricings In The Markets Right Now, And How To Profit From Them’. I do hope you can join. Executive Summary Just as the railway timetables set in train the First World War, central bank timetables for aggressive rate hikes are setting in train a global recession. Demand is already cool, so aggressive rate hikes will take it to outright cold. The risk is elevated because central banks are desperate to repair their damaged credibility on fighting inflation, and it may be their last chance. Inflationary fears and hawkishness from central banks are weighing on bonds and stocks, and it may take some weeks, or months, for inflation fears to recede. But we could be approaching a turning point. By the summer, core inflation should be receding. Furthermore, the fractal structures of the sell-offs in both the 30-year T-bond and the tech-heavy NASDAQ index are approaching points of extreme fragility that have signalled inflection points. Fractal trading watchlist: 30-year T-bond, NASDAQ, FTSE 100 versus Euro Stoxx 50, Netherlands versus Switzerland, and Petcare (PAWZ). US Inflation Is Hot, But Demand Is Not Bottom Line: Tactically cautious, but long-term investors who do not need to time the market bottom should overweight bonds and overweight long-duration defensive equities versus short-duration cyclical equities – for example, overweight US versus non-US equities. Feature The First World War, the historian AJP Taylor famously argued, was “imposed on the statesmen of Europe by railway timetables.” Taylor proposed that the railways and their timetables were so central to troop mobilisation – and specifically, the German Schlieffen Plan – that a plan once set in motion could not be stopped. “Once started the wagons and carriages must roll remorselessly and inevitably to their predestined goal.” Otherwise, the whole process would unravel, and an opportunity to demonstrate military credibility would be lost that might never come again. Today, could a global recession be imposed upon us by central bank timetables for aggressive rate hikes? Just as it was difficult to unwind the troop mobilisation that led to the Great War, it will be difficult to back down from the aggressive rate hikes that the central banks have timetabled, at least in the near term. Otherwise, an opportunity to demonstrate inflation fighting credibility would be lost that might never come again. Just as the railway timetables set in train the First World War, central bank timetables for aggressive rate hikes may set in train another global recession. Unfortunately, central banks do not have precision weapons. Quite the contrary, monetary tightening is a blunt instrument which works by cooling overall demand. But demand is already cool, as evidenced by the contraction of the US economy in the first quarter. In their zeal to repair their damaged credibility on fighting inflation, the danger is that central banks take the economy from cool to outright cold. Granted, the US economy was dragged down by a drop in inventories and net exports. But even US domestic demand – which strips out inventories and net exports – is barely on its pre-pandemic trend (Chart I-1). Meanwhile, the euro area economy is still 5 percent below its pre-pandemic trend (Chart I-2). To reiterate, by hiking rates aggressively into economies that are at best lukewarm, central banks are risking an outright recession. Chart I-1US Inflation Is Hot, But Demand Is Not Chart I-2Euro Area Inflation Is Hot, But Demand Is Not Our Three-Point Checklist For A Recession Has Three Ticks My colleague Peter Berezin has created a three-point checklist for a recession: The build-up of an imbalance makes the economy vulnerable to downturn. A catalyst exposes this imbalance. Amplifiers exacerbate the downturn. Is there a major imbalance? You bet there is. The post-pandemic 26 percent overspend on durable goods in the US constitutes one of the greatest imbalances in economic history. Other advanced economies also experienced unprecedented binges on durable goods. The catalyst that is exposing this major imbalance is the realisation that durable goods are, well, durable. So, if you overspent on durables in 2020/21, then the risk is that you symmetrically underspend in 2022/23 (Chart I-3). The post-pandemic 26 percent overspend on durable goods in the US constitutes one of the greatest imbalances in economic history. Meanwhile, a future underspend on goods cannot be countered by an overspend on services because the consumption of services is constrained by time, opportunity, and biology. There is a limit to how often you can eat out, go to the movies, or go to the doctor (Chart I-4). Indeed, for certain services, an underspend will persist, because we have made some permanent post-pandemic changes to our lifestyles: for example, hybrid office/home working and more online shopping and online medical care. Chart I-3An Overspend On Goods Can Be Corrected By A Subsequent Underspend... Chart I-4...But An Underspend On Services Cannot Be Corrected By A Subsequent Overspend Finally, the amplifier that will exacerbate the downturn is monetary tightening. If central banks follow their railway timetables for aggressive rate hikes, a goods downturn will magnify into an outright recession. So, in Peter’s three-point checklist, we now have tick, tick, and tick. Inflation Is Hot, But Demand Is Not If economic demand is at best lukewarm, then what caused the post-pandemic inflation that central banks are now fighting? The simple answer is massive fiscal stimulus combined with the equally massive shift in spending to durable goods. Locked at home and flush with government supplied cash, we couldn’t spend it on services, so we spent it on goods. This created a massive shock in the distribution of demand, out of services whose supply could easily adjust downwards, and into goods whose supply could not easily adjust upwards. For example, airlines could cut back their flights, but auto manufacturers couldn’t make more cars. So, airfares didn’t collapse but used car prices went vertical! The causality from stimulus payments to durable goods spending to core inflation is irrefutable. The causality from stimulus payments to durable goods spending to core inflation is irrefutable. The biggest surges in US durable goods spending all coincided with the government’s stimulus checks (Chart I-5). And the three separate surges in month-on-month core inflation all occurred after surges in durable goods demand (Chart I-6). As further proof, core inflation is highest in those economies where the stimulus checks and furlough schemes were the most generous – like the US and the UK. Chart I-5Stimulus Checks Caused The Surges in Durable Goods Spending Chart I-6The Surges In Durable Goods Spending Caused The Surges In Core Inflation What Does All This Mean For Investment Strategy? Our high conviction view is that the pandemic’s inflationary impulse combined with the Ukraine war will turn out to be demand-destructive, and thereby ultimately morph into a deflationary impulse. Yet central banks are all pumped up to demonstrate their inflation fighting credibility. Given that this credibility is badly damaged, it may be their last opportunity to repair it before it is shattered forever. To repeat, just as the railway timetables set in train the First World War, central bank timetables for aggressive rate hikes may set in train another global recession. That said, a recession is not inevitable. The interest rate that matters most for the economy and the markets is not the policy rate that central banks want to hike aggressively, it is the long-duration bond yield. A lower bond yield can underpin both the economy and the financial markets, just as it did during the pandemic in 2020. But to the extent that the bond market is following the real economic data, we are in a dangerous phase. Because, as is typical at an inflection point, the real data will be noisy and ambiguous. Meaning it may take some weeks, or months, for inflation fears to be trumped by growth fears. On March 10th, in Are We In A Slow-Motion Crash? we predicted: “On a tactical (3-month) horizon, the inflationary impulse from soaring energy and food prices combined with the choke on growth from sanctions will weigh on both the global economy and the global stock market. As such, bond yields could nudge higher, the global stock market has yet to reach its crisis bottom, and the US dollar will rally” That prediction proved to be spot on! Recession, or no recession, we are still in a difficult period for markets because inflationary fears and hawkishness from central banks are weighing on bonds and stocks, while buoying the US dollar. As such, tactical caution is still warranted. Fractal structures of the sell-offs in both the 30-year T-bond and the tech-heavy NASDAQ index are approaching points of extreme fragility. But we could be approaching a turning point. By the summer, core inflation should be receding. Furthermore, the fractal structures of the sell-offs in both the 30-year T-bond and the tech-heavy NASDAQ index are approaching points of extreme fragility that have reliably signalled previous inflection points (Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). Chart I-7The Sell-Off In The 30-Year T-Bond Is Approaching Fractal Fragility Chart I-8The Sell-Off In The NASDAQ Is Approaching Fractal Fragility The advice for long-term investors who do not need to time the market bottom is: Bonds will ultimately rally. Overweight the 30-year T-bond and the 30-year Chinese bond. Equities will be conflicted between slowing growth which will weigh on cyclical profits, and falling bond yields which will buoy long-duration valuations. Therefore, overweight long-duration defensive sectors and markets versus short-duration cyclical sectors and markets. For example, overweight US versus non-US equities. Fractal Trading Watchlist As just discussed, the sell-offs in the 30-year T-bond and the NASDAQ are approaching points of fractal fragility that have signalled previous turning points. Hence, we are adding both investments to our watchlist. Also added to our watchlist is the outperformance of the FTSE100 versus Euro Stoxx 50, and the underperformance of Netherlands versus Switzerland, both of which are approaching potential reversals. Our final addition is Petcare (PAWZ). After a stellar 2020, Petcare gave back most of its gains in 2021. But this underperformance is now approaching a point of fragility which might provide a new entry point. There are no new trades this week, but the full watchlist of investments at, or approaching, turning points is available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Watchlist: New Additions A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Vulnerable To Reversal Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Close To Exhaustion Chart 1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart 2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart 3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 4Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing Chart 5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart 6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal Chart 7A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart 8Biotech Is A Major Buy Chart 9CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart 10Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Chart 11Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart 12Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Chart 13BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart 14The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 15The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse Chart 16Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 17US Homebuilders' Underperformance Has Reached A Potential Turning Point Chart 18Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End Chart 19The Rally In USD/EUR Could End Chart 20The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 21A Potential New Entry Point Into Petcare Chart 22FTSE100 Outperformance Vs. Euro Stoxx 50 Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 23Netherlands Underperformance Vs. Switzerland Close To Exhaustion Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations 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
Broadly-defined US technology stocks have been consistently underperforming the S&P 500 since the beginning of the year. Communication Services, Consumer Discretionary, and IT have shed 24%, 20%, and 18% of their value, respectively. Two main headwinds…
Executive Summary Stocks Not Linked To Presidential Approval President Kennedy’s performance in 1962 would be ideal for the Biden administration in this year’s midterm elections – but today the Russian conflict is less likely to help the Democrats. A threat to the homeland could lift President Biden’s job approval. But most likely inflation and foreign crises will weigh on his approval. A contrarian stock rally would not help Biden’s approval but Biden’s attempts to boost his rating could deliver negative surprises for stocks. US “peak polarization” and Democratic Party policies are negative for the stock market and investor risk appetite over the next zero-to-six months. Our quantitative election models suggest Republicans will win the Senate, though uncertainty will rise as a result of the controversy over the Supreme Court and abortion. Democratic odds of keeping the White House in 2024 are 54.6% but eroding. CLOSE Recommendation (Cyclical) CLOSING Level CLOSING Date RETURN Long Municipal Bonds Vs. Duration Matched Treasuries 93.53 2-MAY-22 -1.50% Bottom Line: Overall Biden policies plus global events are neutral or bullish for US Treasuries while neutral or bearish for US stocks over a tactical time horizon (zero-to-six months). Feature President Biden is doubling down on his support for Ukraine and thus adopting the John F. Kennedy foreign policy playbook of confronting Russia ahead of the US’s midterm elections. Related Report US Political StrategyWar Not Helping Biden So Far Biden’s position today is weaker than Kennedy’s in 1962, so his reaction to Russian aggression will create more market hurdles than it removes. Bad news will come before good news, compounding bearish investor sentiment in the near term. Policy uncertainty should decline after the midterm election on November 8, which is positive for equities in 2023. Democrats Scramble Amid Recession Fear The US economy contracted unexpectedly in the first quarter at an annualized 1.4% rate. The underlying data contained some silver lining – personal consumption grew at 2.7%. But the contraction is bad news for the economy and the ruling Democratic Party. Public approval of Biden’s handling of the economy has fallen to -16.2%. The global economy continues to sputter. Risks to growth are high in Europe and China as well (Chart 1). The US policy response will take shape on the monetary and fiscal level but also on the foreign policy level. First, global risks will not dissuade the Federal Reserve from normalizing interest rates. Chairman Jerome Powell signaled on April 21 that he is willing to hike interest rates 50 basis points at a time to combat core PCE inflation at 5.2%. The market currently expects core inflation to peak at 5.2% while the Fed funds rate will hit 3.3% in 2023 before falling in 2024. The implication is that monetary policy will tighten quickly, even as the economy stutters, which is negative for the US equity market and investor sentiment. However, Fed hawkishness is largely priced. US long-duration treasuries are at or near fair value at 3%, according to our US Bond Strategy. Our US Investment Strategy believes that with the S&P500 already down by 13% so far this year, stocks can begin to grind upward, barring other negative surprises. Chart 1US Slows Amid Global Growth Risks Second, the White House will scramble to try to limit the damage to the Democratic Party in the midterms – with the unintentional result that negative surprises could arise from fiscal policy and especially foreign policy. On the fiscal front, congressional Democrats will redesign their budget reconciliation bill to try to gain a legislative victory. They will need to make it as close to deficit-neutral as possible to avoid fanning inflation. The odds of passage are higher than consensus expectations (26% on PredictIt). But the stock market does not want more government spending or higher taxes in a stagflationary environment. Fiscal policy is still a significant source of uncertainty in 2022, if not in 2023. On the foreign policy front, the greatest trouble looms. Russian aggression has prompted the US and its NATO allies to double down on their support for Ukraine, providing additional arms and aid. Biden’s Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said that the US wants to see Ukraine “a democratic country able to protect its sovereign territory … [and] Russia weakened to the point where it can't do things like invade Ukraine.”1 Finland and Sweden are increasingly likely to join NATO, which will antagonize Russia. Russia’s response is not yet known but it has issued aggressive warnings. By cutting off natural gas to Poland and Bulgaria, Moscow is warning that it may cut off natural gas to all Europe. Meanwhile Germany is embracing an oil embargo. A larger energy shock is increasingly likely. Chart 2More Bad News Before Good News Bottom Line: Monetary policy hawkishness is largely priced whereas additional fiscal uncertainty and America’s reactive foreign policy are not fully priced. This news is neutral or bullish for US Treasuries while neutral or bearish for US stocks over a tactical time horizon (zero-to-six months) (Chart 2). Biden Can Hurt Stocks, Stocks Cannot Help Biden Before addressing how Biden will try to boost his job approval, we should ask whether approval ratings have any direct impact on financial markets. The answer is largely no – or fleeting at best. During the Trump administration it was easy to get the impression that the president’s approval rating had a substantive impact on the stock market, or at least benefited stocks relative to bonds. After the first year, a correlation developed between presidential approval and the stock-to-bond ratio (Chart 3A, top panel). The passage of tax cuts juiced corporate profits but also suggested that President Trump could get things done, boosting his approval rating. Oddly, however, the relationship continued even after Republicans lost Congress in 2018. Spurious or not, the correlation persisted until Covid-19 erupted. At that point Trump’s approval tanked while the stock market roared on the back of gargantuan monetary and fiscal stimulus. President Biden’s administration started off the same way, with presidential approval falling (the usual honeymoon ended) while stocks rallied relative to bonds (Chart 3A, bottom panel). But Biden’s passage of the American Rescue Plan Act and the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in 2021 did not boost his approval rating. Going forward, Biden’s approval rating will probably stabilize at a low level in an inflationary or stagflationary context. Stocks may continue to underperform bonds over a tactical time frame but will not underperform bonds over the cyclical time frame as long as the US avoids a recession. Thus there is not likely to be close correlation between Biden’s approval and the stock-to-bond ratio. From the sector and style perspective, there is also no clear relationship with presidential approval. There may be some basis for seeing Trump’s tax cuts as positive for cyclicals relative to defensives. His term coincided with the second half of a business cycle when growth expanded. But ultimately cyclicals vacillated and went sideways. Moreover growth stocks outperformed value stocks, in accordance with President Obama’s term in office. Yet there was no correlation between Trump’s approval and growth stocks relative to value (Chart 3B, top two panels). In Biden’s case, presidential job approval has no clear correlation with cyclicals relative to defensives. There may be some relationship with value relative to growth stocks but it is far from convincing. Most likely the underlying macroeconomic dynamics that favored value stocks (i.e. recovery, inflation) coincided with Biden’s honeymoon period and then outlasted it. However, if Biden passes a reconciliation bill with tax hikes, the implication should be positive both for value versus growth stocks and for his approval rating (Chart 3B, bottom two panels). Chart 3AStocks Not Linked To Presidential Approval Chart 3BStocks Not Linked To Presidential Approval From the above data we can draw a few conclusions. On one hand, the stock-to-bond ratio and cyclicals-versus-defensives could rally again on the back of a resilient global economy and yet Biden’s approval rating could fail to recover. The distribution of wealth means that inflation and rising mortgage rates hit low-to-middle income groups who comprise the bulk of voters. Cyclical assets will rise if the global economy improves relative to the US economy, whereas presidential approval may not. Inflation could subside incrementally with limited benefit to the president. On the other hand, if stocks and cyclical sectors continue to underperform, it will probably be due to even worse economic outcomes that will simultaneously prevent Biden’s approval from recovering. If the economy slows further and inflation remains persistent, disapproval will rise. The problem for investors is that the latter is the likeliest scenario based on the energy supply risks in Europe and China’s difficulties stabilizing growth. The US economy cannot entirely avoid the knock-on effects of slower global growth over the next six months. Bottom Line: There is no stable relationship between presidential approval and the stock market, whether regarding bonds, sectors, or styles. There are occasional correlations that reflect coincidences of macro, market, and political cycles or major policy changes. In today’s context a rebound in cyclical assets may not help the president while a further downturn would hurt him. But the president’s attempts to boost his approval rating could hurt stocks. Inflation And Foreign Wars Tend To Hurt Presidents What can Biden do to boost his approval rating and his party’s odds in the midterm election? Not much. Foreign policy is his best option, though he is limited to a defensive or reactive foreign policy and even then the underlying economy will drive voters the most. Looking at presidential approval over time, upswings occur during periods of economic prosperity and peaks occur amid foreign belligerence that threatens the homeland. Presidential approval has slumped since the subprime mortgage crisis and today it is even lower than under President Obama (Chart 4A). Chart 4APresidential Approval Follows Peace And Prosperity, Not War And Poverty Similarly presidential disapproval rises during recessionary and inflationary periods as well as wars and scandals (Chart 4B). The Obama/Trump era saw a rise in disapproval that could resume due to inflation. Foreign wars that do not present a threat to the homeland can increase disapproval. Chart 4BPresidential Approval Follows Peace And Prosperity, Not War And Poverty The takeaway is that a homeland threat from abroad could temporarily lift the president’s approval but it will not last for long unless the underlying economic malaise is cured. The problem for Biden is that the most immediate foreign policy challenges emanate from oil producers whose reactions exacerbate the inflation problem (Russia, Iran). Biden may or may not keep relations steady with China, where disputes could drive up import prices. Bottom Line: A reactive foreign policy could provoke a threat to the homeland that boosts the president’s job approval. But more likely the weakening economy, high inflation, and foreign crises that add to inflation will hurt the president. Biden And The Kennedy Playbook President Kennedy’s experience in 1962 presents the best case for Democrats but the underlying economic and political context are different and damaging for Biden. Comparing today’s situation to comparable midterm election years, the negative outlook for Biden and the Democrats becomes clear. Comparable midterm elections feature high international tensions, high inflation, or low presidential approval on a net basis. Today the “Misery Index” (unemployment plus inflation) is comparable to the minimum levels in midterm years in the 1970s – and higher than the maximum levels in other midterm years (Table 1). The House and Senate losses during periods of high misery and low presidential approval are substantial. Table 1Misery And Midterms The 1962 midterm election is a notable exception. The Cuban Missile Crisis and Kennedy’s handling of it minimized the Democratic Party’s losses that year, with only four seats lost in the House, plus a gain of three seats in the Senate. Compare this to the typical midterm election, with an average of 27 lost seats in the House (31 for Democrats) and four seats lost in the Senate (five for Democrats) (Table 2). Table 2Kennedy’s Cuban Missile Crisis Midterm, 1962 Kennedy’s net approval averaged 55% that year, whereas Biden’s today stands at -11%. A threat to the homeland could boost Biden’s approval but today’s likeliest conflicts would worsen inflation if they occurred. The Misery Index stands at 11% this year compared to 6% in 1962. Most importantly, in the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Russians recognized that America would always care about Cuba’s status more than Russia because it posed a proximate strategic threat. Americans had more at stake and could take greater risks to prevent Cuba from hosting nuclear arms. Today, while the US is not trying to supply Ukraine or Finland with nuclear weapons, NATO membership would expand the US nuclear umbrella. Americans do not seem prepared to recognize that Russia will always care more about Ukraine’s and Finland’s status than Americans will. Russians have more at stake and can take greater risks. Thus while Biden’s foreign policy could easily provoke a crisis with Russia, Biden may not get the better end of the crisis like Kennedy did. Meanwhile financial markets will suffer from the spike in tensions. Bottom Line: Biden’s doubling down on support for Ukraine and NATO enlargement suggest that he does not have an interest in reducing tensions with Russia ahead of the midterm election. Yet Biden is unlikely to get the better of any reactive foreign policy that escalates tensions – at least not in time for the midterms. This dynamic is negative for US and global stocks and risk assets. Election Quant Model Updates The Philadelphia Federal Reserve released a second update to its state-level coincident indicators in April, enabling us to update our quant models for the Senate election in 2022 and presidential election in 2024. The model still predicts that Democrats will lose two Senate seats, producing a Republican majority of 52-48 (Chart 5). Arizona and Georgia are the two states in which Democrats won Senate seats in 2022 but are expected to flip to the Republican side. Arizona and Pennsylvania remain toss-up states (odds of Democratic victory range from 45%-55%) but are inching downward toward likely Republican victories. Chart 5GOP Tipped To Take The Senate (Quant Election Model, April 2022) Democrats shed probability in all states once again. Odds fell the most in Arizona (-1.08 percentage point since the last update in early April) followed by North Carolina (-1.03ppt) and Pennsylvania (-0.98ppt). In seven states the Democratic odds of victory fell by more than 0.5ppts, including Arizona and Nevada (Chart 6). Overall the probability for Democrats retaining control of the Senate now stands at 48.2% (down 0.2ppt). These odds are higher than consensus even though they agree with the consensus on expecting Republican victory. Online betting markets like PredictIt are pricing in Republican control at around 79%, up 3ppt from our last update. This is overstated and the new controversy over the Supreme Court and abortion will fire up Democratic voters, making the Senate race closer to what our model suggests. Chart 6Democrats Falter Across Senate Races: AZ, PA, NC Looking ahead to 2024, our presidential election model still predicts 308 Electoral College votes for the Democratic Party, a number that has not changed since the 2020 election (Chart 7). Democrats have a 54.6% chance overall of retaining the White House. Chart 7Biden Still Tipped For 2024 (Quant Election Model, April 2022) The trend is negative for the incumbent party. North Carolina slipped out of the toss-up category and into Republican category – i.e. Democrats now have only a 44% chance of winning it. Democrats’ odds of winning Florida moved lower – it is now in toss-up territory at 54%, which comes closer to our subjective judgment that Republicans are favored there. The toss-up states have remained well anchored in the range of 40%-60% since 2020 and will play a pivotal role in future predictions. Generally the trend is for falling odds that Democrats will win these states (PA, FL, NC, AZ, and GA). Both Pennsylvania and Florida account for a combined 49 electoral votes and Florida is probably more Republican-leaning than the model says. If the three critical Rust Belt states (Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan) slip into toss-up territory then the model will be flagging serious trouble for Democrats. But a lot can happen between now and 2024. In the latest update Democrats are shedding probability of winning in all states, although to a lesser degree than the past two updates. Economic data, while still negative for the incumbent party, may be deteriorating less rapidly. Biden’s approval rating improved marginally since our last update and we expect it to stabilize, albeit at a low level. Michigan recorded the largest decline in Democratic odds of victory (-1.07ppt) followed by Minnesota (-0.79ppt) and New Hampshire (-0.78ppt). Democrats shed more than 0.5ppts from their odds of victory in twelve states, nine of which they won in 2022 (Chart 8). Chart 8Democrats Shedding Odds Of Winning States In 2024 Bottom Line: Republicans are favored to take the Senate (as well as the House) in 2022. Democrats are slightly favored to retain the White House in 2024, though the model is optimistic by granting Florida to the Democrats and the election odds look to be razor-thin yet again. Investment Takeaways As we go to press, the unusual leak of a draft opinion of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito has roiled US politics. The draft argues that the landmark court case of Roe Versus Wade should be overturned. This incident reflects our “Peak Polarization” theme – that polarization will remain very disruptive in the short term yet subside over the long term. It also suggests an activist effort to escalate the culture wars ahead of the midterm election, which we have argued would be the case and implies that more unrest will follow from this event. Whether the Supreme Court overturns the landmark Roe versus Wade ruling of 1973, the battle for women voters will help sustain election-year policy uncertainty, as women’s approval for Democrats will start to recover (Chart 9). Investor sentiment will remain bearish in the very near term. A series of hurdles need to be cleared before we close our tactical long DXY trade and defensive sector tilt. We are closing our long municipal bond relative to Treasury trade for a loss of 1.5% (Chart 10). Chart 9Women Are Key Constituencies In The Midterm Chart 10Municipal Trade Fizzled Out Despite Strong Local Government Finance The overall analysis of US politics is neutral or bullish for US Treasuries while neutral or bearish for US stocks over a tactical time horizon (zero-to-six months). If recession is avoided at the critical juncture this year, then 2023 will see a rising stock market as the economy expands and political risks fall. Matt Gertken Senior Vice President Chief US Political Strategist mattg@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Peter Weber, “Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin says U.S. believes Ukraine can win, wants to 'see Russia weakened,'” The Week, April 25, 2022, theweek.com. Strategic View Open Tactical Positions (0-6 Months) Open Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Table A2Political Risk Matrix Table A3US Political Capital Index Chart A1Presidential Election Model Chart A2Senate Election Model Table A4APolitical Capital: White House And Congress Table A4BPolitical Capital: Household And Business Sentiment Table A4CPolitical Capital: The Economy And Markets
Executive Summary More Chinese Households Intend To Save Than To Invest The Politburo meeting last Friday signaled that China is determined to achieve the 5.5% annual growth target set earlier this year. Policymakers vowed to accelerate the implementation of existing pro-growth measures and hinted that they may scale up stimulus due to domestic challenges and external uncertainties. However, Chinese policymakers are facing an “impossible trinity” of eliminating domestic COVID cases and avoiding an overshoot as they stimulate the economy, while trying to achieve a high rate of economic expansion. The Politburo did not mention any plans to boost income and consumption via direct fiscal transfers to households, a sector that has been a weak link in China’s economy in the past two years. China’s consumption growth and demand for housing will not recover any time soon without meaningful aids to shore up household income. Bottom Line: Policy stimulus measures announced so far fall short of what is required to lift the economy. Given constraints on household consumption and the property market, China’s economic growth is set to underwhelm and Chinese stock prices will underperform their global counterparts. China’s top leaders have pledged to provide more support to the economy. The Politburo meeting last week indicated that the 5.5% growth target set for 2022 will be maintained and stimulus measures will be accelerated. Chinese stocks in both on- and offshore markets rebounded sharply following the positive rhetoric. Related Report Emerging Markets StrategyA Whiff Of Stagflation? In our view, however, Chinese authorities are facing an “impossible trinity” as they simultaneously attempt to achieve three goals: (1) pursuing a dynamic zero-Covid policy, (2) delivering decent economic growth, and (3) not resorting to “irrigation-style” massive stimulus. The pro-growth measures announced last week by the government lack the needed elements to generate a quick and strong rebound in the economy, particularly in the household and property sectors. Hence, the rebound in Chinese stock prices will unlikely progress into a cyclical rally (over a 6- to 12-month time span). We maintain our neutral allocation in Chinese onshore stocks and an underweight stance on the MSCI China Index, within a global portfolio. An “Impossible Trinity” The messages from the Politburo meeting highlight policymakers’ determination to shore up the economy. However, the authorities are not backing away from the zero-COVID policy, which is taking a heavy toll as cities are forced into lockdown to contain outbreaks. In addition, the Politburo reiterated the housing policy principle that “housing is for living, not for speculation” and did not mention concrete measures to boost household consumption. Thus, the biggest challenge for China to achieve its growth target this year is how to normalize economic activity without resorting to another round of “irrigation-style” stimulus while keeping domestic COVID cases at bay. In an environment of frequent lockdowns, monetary and fiscal easing have limited effect as the private and household sectors are averse to taking risks. China’s zero-COVID policy comes with hefty economic costs. April’s PMI showed sharp declines in a wide range of business activities due to the prolonged lockdown in Shanghai and several other cities (Chart 1). The new orders, new export orders, and imports subindexes in the manufacturing PMI and services PMI, all fell to their lowest levels since Q1 2020 when COVID first hit China (Chart 2). Chart 1April PMIs Show Widespread Declines In Business Activities Chart 2PMI Subindexes Fell To Lowest Levels Since Q1 2020 Going forward, even if China manages to avoid a Shanghai-style month-long lockdown, the dynamic zero-COVID policy will have devastating ramifications on the economy. Notably, March economic data from the city of Shenzhen, China’s technology center, suggests that even a week-long lockdown has had large impact on the local economic activity. Chart 3Severe Economic Disruptions In Shenzhen Due To A Week-Long City Lockdown In contrast with the extensive outbreak in Shanghai, Shenzhen was able to contain its COVID cases at an early stage and endured a citywide lockdown for only one week in mid-March. However, Shenzhen’s export growth contracted by 12.8% year-on-year (YoY) in March, a stark contrast from the 14.7%YoY increase in exports on a national level. The city’s imports fell by 11.9%YoY, also significantly lower than China’s total import growth, which was flat (Chart 3). Retail sales of consumer goods in Shenzhen shrank by 1.6%YoY in March and home sales plummeted by a stunning 90%YoY during the week of March 13-20. On the national level, the Politburo has called for an acceleration in infrastructure investment through frontloading local government special purpose bonds (SPB) and fast-tracking infrastructure project approvals. However, the lack of details has created questions regarding the magnitude of incremental stimulus, or whether the stepped-up policy effort will involve an increase in SPB or a general bond quota for local governments. Chart 4Construction Activity Started Softening In March, Before Shanghai Lockdown The stringent COVID containment methods will also undermine the effectiveness of China’s pro-growth measures. As expected, China’s construction activity PMI tumbled in April amid the lockdowns, but the new orders and business expectations components in the construction PMI had already started to slide in March (Chart 4, top and middle panels). Moreover, employment in the labor-intensive construction sector also declined substantially in March and April (Chart 4, bottom panel). The deterioration in these indicators is consistent with our view that even short and less draconian lockdowns spark considerable disruptions in business activities. Bottom Line: There is a low likelihood that China will deviate from its existing zero-COVID policy for the rest of this year. As such, boosting the economy via stimulus will be challenging due to frequent interruptions to economic activities. No Bazooka For Consumers China’s household consumption, which accounts for about 40% of the country’s aggregate demand, has been a weak link in the economy during the past two years. Last week’s Politburo meeting pledged to stabilize employment, create new jobs and encourage hiring from small and medium enterprises (SMEs). However, there was no mention of any large-scale fiscal transfer to households via cash or subsidy payments, which suggests that pro-consumer measures are not in the stimulus package. Chart 5Retail Sales In China Have Been The Weak Link In The Economy In The Current Cycle China’s retail sales growth has been muted in the current business cycle, a deviation from past economic recoveries when a revival in the general economy and moderate pro-consumption stimulus helped to lift household spending growth substantially above the rate of nominal GDP expansion (Chart 5). Since the pandemic, however, government stimulus to the household sector has been insufficient to revive consumption, due to the negative impact lockdowns have on both labor market demand and the service sector activities. Compared with the US and Europe, China’s fiscal transfer to the household sector has been very limited since the first wave of COVID in early 2020 (Chart 6). Local governments handed out vouchers in Q2 2020 aimed at boosting consumption, but the amounts were dismal and have had a minimal effect on the sector. Chart 6IMF Fiscal Monitor Database: Fiscal Response To The COVID-19 Pandemic Presently the RMB value in direct payments to the household sector is even smaller: some cities including Shenzhen distributed consumption vouchers ahead of the May holiday week. Nonetheless, the total value of consumption vouchers this year is estimated at around RMB 2billion. The amount, even with a multiplier effect of 3 on consumption, will be less than 0.1% of China’s monthly retail sales in nominal value. Hence, the coupons are unlikely to make any significant difference to the aggregate household spending. Bottom Line: Household consumption will be severely curtailed as lockdowns wreak havoc on the economy and household income, and the government so far has not provided meaningful direct transfers to the public. Rebound In Housing Demand Doubtful The Politburo encouraged local governments to further relax local housing policies, such as lowering mortgage rates and down payment ratios, and easing restrictions on home sales and purchases. However, we do not expect that these policies alone will restore homebuyers’ confidence amid short-term factors such as COVID outbreaks/lockdowns, and longer-term factors like slowing household income growth, high household debt and poor demographics (Chart 7A and 7B). Chart 7AProperty Market Is Challenged By Slower Household Income Growth, High Household Income Debt And Poor Demographics Chart 7BProperty Market Is Challenged By Slower Household Income Growth, High Household Income Debt And Poor Demographics China’s household sector was struggling prior to recent lockdowns. The growth rate of national disposable income per capita slowed by more than two percentage points (in nominal terms) in Q1 this year compared with Q4 2019 (Chart 7A, top panel). In addition, the PBoC’s quarterly urban depositor survey (released before the Shanghai lockdown) in Q1 showed subdued confidence in future household income (Chart 8). Households’ willingness to save hit a record high and is even more elevated than in early 2020; on the other hand, the propensity to invest has dropped to a multi-year low (Chart 9). Chart 8Chinese Households' Subdued Confidence In Future Income Chart 9More Households Intend To Save Than To Invest Chart 10Chinese Households' Declining Appetite For Purchasing Real Estate Assets Despite lower interest rates and easier monetary conditions, Chinese consumers’ medium- to long-term loans continued to trend down in Q1, which indicates a declining appetite for purchasing real estate assets and durable goods (Chart 10). COVID-related restrictions have exacerbated matters and weighed heavily on the demand for housing. Home sales from 30 Chinese cities were down by 56% in April from a year ago (Chart 11). House prices have started to deflate in tier-3 cities. Deflation will likely spread to tier-1 and -2 cities due to a pandemic-driven decline in income and confidence. Furthermore, the unemployment rate has picked up, especially among younger workers (Chart 12). Job and income dynamics normally improve after the overall economic cycle bottoms. Therefore, without any measures to boost household income, the demand for housing will remain a drag on the economy in the near term. Chart 11Home Sales Worsened In April Amid COVID Flareups In Major Cities Chart 12Labor Market Dynamics Deteriorated Rapidly Bottom Line: The real estate market has been vital to business cycle recoveries in China since 2009. However, the property market will not recover anytime soon without a substantial boost to household income and a normalization in social and economic activities. Investment Conclusions The policy rhetoric from the Politburo meeting helped to shore up market confidence last Friday. Nevertheless, we do not think that the stimulus measures will be sufficient to produce a rapid business cycle recovery or a sustainable stock market rally (Chart 13A and 13B). Chart 13AIt Is Too Early To Call A Bottoming In Chinese Stocks Chart 13BIt Is Too Early To Call A Bottoming In Chinese Stocks Given the negative forces from rolling lockdowns and shrinking demand, China’s economy requires a massive government stimulus via direct transfers to households and SMEs. Yet, Beijing is neither ready to abandon its dynamic zero-Covid policy nor provide “irrigation-type” stimulus, especially for households and the property market. The policy stimulus measures announced so far still fall short of what is required to lift the economy. In light of the constraints on household consumption and the property market, economic growth in China is set to underwhelm and stock prices will likely underperform their global counterparts. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations