Financial Markets
BCA continues to recommend that investors underweight EM assets and keep a light touch on cyclical sectors. However, things never happen in a straight line, and our European Investment Strategy service sees an opportunity in industrial commodities. Equity…
The relative performance of emerging Asian stocks versus the global equity benchmark failed to break above important long-term technical resistance lines earlier this year. Both high-yield and investment-grade emerging Asian corporate dollar-denominated…
U.S. bond prices have broken down, and yields have broken out. The bond selloff will continue given strong U.S. growth and mounting inflationary pressures. How will EM financial markets react to a further rise in U.S. bond yields? If EM growth were robust…
Highlights Historically, the dollar exhibits positive seasonality in October and November. Technical and valuation indicators suggest that this year will be no exception. Continuing divergence between U.S. and global growth, rising interest rates, and Italian risks point in this direction as well. However, long positioning in the dollar along with the rebound in the China Play Index are creating non-negligible risks to this bullish dollar view. As a result, investors should overweight dollar exposure in their portfolio, but hedge the above risks by buying NZD/USD and selling EUR/JPY. Feature Through most of September, the dollar traded on the heavy side. However, in the last two trading days of the month, the greenback managed to regain some composure. As October and November have historically been strong months for the DXY (Chart I-1), this week we review if this seasonal pattern will once again hold. The balance of evidence suggests that the historical norm is likely to repeat itself, and that the dollar will continue to rally for the next six months or so, though there are a few risks that should be hedged against. Chart I-1Entering A Seasonally Strong Period For The Dollar Technicals: No Obstacle For A Strong Dollar An argument rooted in seasonality is a reasoning based on technical factors. Currently, technical indicators continue to paint a supportive backdrop for the greenback. First, by the beginning of the summer, based on its 13-week rate-of-change measure, the dollar index had reached overbought levels. Faced with this hurdle, the dollar's rally essentially took a pause, with the DXY rising only 0.5% since June 28, compared to its 6.4% rally between April 10 and June 28. However, through this side-move, the dollar's overbought conditions resolved themselves, and now the greenback's 13-week rate of change is back in neutral territory (Chart I-2, top two panels). Normally, a sideways correction tends to be a sign that a currency's underlying support remains strong. On the other hand, the euro's oversold correction is also now complete, but the euro has remained on a slightly more pronounced downward path over the same period (Chart I-2, bottom two panels). Chart I-2Short-Term Overbought Conditions Have Been Cleared Second, the fractal dimension measure for the trade-weighted dollar shows that despite the recent phase of dollar strength that began in September, the dollar's uptrend is not yet ready to exhaust itself (Chart I-3). The fractal dimension is a measure of groupthink promoted by Dhaval Joshi, head of BCA's European Investment Strategy. It compares the short-term and long-term variance of any asset to gauge if long-term and short-term investors are holding the same positions. If they do, risks are high that a paucity of buyers (or sellers in bear markets) may develop, resulting in a trend reversal as all investors are already similarly positioned. This fractal dimension flagged a yellow card for the dollar in June, but it was only followed by the sideways move described above. Now that the dollar is gaining some vigor, the recent pickup in this indicator suggests that this rally can run further. Chart I-3No Groupthink In The Dollar Third, while the dollar needed to digest some short-term overbought conditions, cyclical indicators like the Coppock Oscillator are still nowhere near overbought (Chart I-4, top two panels). By the spring of 2018, the dollar had reached massively oversold territory on a cyclical basis, and it is now in the midst of a powerful rebound. If history is any guide, once the Coppock Oscillator turns, it is likely to move much more than it has so far, indicating that the dollar rally has legs. However, the euro's Coppock Oscillator looks like it still possesses ample downside, as downdrafts never end at the current level of readings (Chart I-4, bottom two panels). Chart I-4Cyclical Oscillators Still Favor The USD Bottom Line: Technical indicators are currently not arguing against the normal seasonal strength in the USD. The short-term overbought conditions present at the beginning of the summer have evaporated, the dollar's trading action does not show meaningful evidences of groupthink, and a key cyclical momentum measure has further upside. Short-Term Valuations: No Obstacle Here Either An additional factor that might prevent the dollar's normal seasonal strength from realizing itself is the current valuation picture. Here again, there is little to worry about. As Chart I-5 illustrates, our Fundamental Intermediate Term Model and our Intermediate-Term Timing Model do not show any mispricing in the USD. The dollar is trading in line with our two augmented interest rate parity valuation metrics - two indicators that have historically been useful in spotting potential periods of USD risk. Chart I-5No Evident Mispricing In The Dollar Economic And Financial Market Developments Still Support The Dollar With no danger for the dollar from a technical and valuation standpoint, economic and financial market developments will likely hold the key to the dollar's outlook. First, economic divergences remains fully at play. As Chart I-6 illustrates, the U.S. economy is handily outperforming the rest of the world as the ISM Manufacturing Index has not been dragged down by the weakness observed outside the U.S. Historically, the gap between the ISM and the world's PMI leads the dollar's gyrations as the greenback is ultimately the factor forcing U.S. and global growth to converge. This time around, the growth gap suggests that the dollar has a few more months of strength ahead of itself. Moreover, Arthur Budaghyan writes in BCA's Emerging Market Strategy service that China's deleveraging campaign will continue to hinder global export growth (Chart I-7) - a sector of the economy with little weight in the U.S. This means that the growth gap between the U.S. and the rest of the world may widen further. Chart I-6Economic Divergences Support The Dollar Chart I-7China Deleveraging Points To Weaker Trade Second, the U.S.'s economic strength may be a problem for a large swath of the global economy. It is often assumed that strong U.S. growth lifts global demand through exports, undoing some of China's negative impact in the process. However, this does not take into account that U.S. rates determine the global cost of capital. The U.S. economy is currently much stronger than the rest of the world, and the U.S. private sector is not as burdened by debt as is the case outside the U.S. (Chart I-8). This makes the U.S. more capable of handling higher interest rates than the rest of the world. As a result, this year, the rise in both 10-year Treasury yields and TIPS yields has been met with pain in assets levered to global growth, like the German DAX and EM stock prices, as well as EM and commodity currencies (Chart I-9). Chart I-8The U.S. Has A More Robust Balance Sheet Chart I-9Higher U.S. Yields Hurt Assets Levered To Global Growth This is in sharp contrast with the U.S. The market and the Federal Reserve are coming to grips with the reality that the U.S. neutral rate is increasing, courtesy of robust household balance sheets, strong capex intentions, rising inflationary pressures and a large dose of fiscal stimulus. Thus, despite the rise in interest rates, the U.S. yield curve has started to steepen anew, even as global asset markets have been suffering (Chart I-10). Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has even given his subtle acquiescence to this move. Indeed, last week he argued that the Fed's policy might still be quite accommodative as the neutral rate may be sitting well above the current level of the fed funds rate. Chart I-10The U.S. Yield Curve Is Steepening Anew Third is the question of Italy. Italian yields continue to rise both in absolute terms and relative to German bunds. Some of this reflects the stress created by higher global real yields, which hurt the outlook for Italian growth and hence point toward a worsening debt load, which requires a higher risk premium in BTPs. But there is more to the widening in Italian spreads. Italy is setting its budget for next year, and is engaging in a war of words with Brussels. The Five Star Movement / Lega Nord Coalition wants to set a 2.4% of GDP deficit for 2019, much more than the previously agreed 0.8% penciled by the previous government this past spring. This is still within the 3% limit of the EU's Growth and Stability pact, but the European Commission and investors are concerned as Italy's public debt-to-GDP is already 133% - and this 2.4% deficit rests on extremely rosy growth assumptions. As a result, markets are punishing Italian bonds. This is a problem because when Italian yields rise, Italian banks suffer. Dhaval Joshi has argued in BCA's European Investment Strategy that a move in BTP yields to 4% could render the whole Italian banking system insolvent, as it would wipe out excess capital of EUR30 billion.1 Since the entire German, French, Spanish, Dutch, Austrian, Belgian, Greek, Irish and Portuguese banking systems still have low capital reserves, their combined EUR 479 billion exposure to Italy is fast becoming a Sword of Damocles. As a result, a war of words between Rome and Brussels - one that could last until December - could cause further tumult in European bank shares, and force the European Central Bank to stay on the defensive longer than it wishes to. This would hurt the euro and by symmetry, help the dollar. Bottom Line: Economic and financial market developments still support the dollar. The outperformance of U.S. growth relative to the rest of the world is likely to continue to be felt in the form of a stronger dollar in the coming months, especially as global exports remains negatively affected by China's deleveraging. Moreover, rising U.S. borrowing costs are so far having a limited impact on U.S. growth, but generating potent headwinds for activity outside the U.S. Finally, Italy is likely to remain a sore spot for Europe over the next two to three months, one that may weigh on the ECB's ability to provide any hawkish guidance this year. Risks To The View The view that the dollar can continue to rally is not without impediments. The first and most obvious one is that speculators have already aggressively bought the dollar (Chart I-11, top panel). This makes the greenback vulnerable to any unexpected improvement in global growth. Chart I-11Risks For The Dollar The second impediment is that a temporary reprieve in the global growth slowdown could well be materializing as we speak. G10 economic surprises have regain some vigor, and the diffusion index of BCA's Global Leading Economic Indicator has been rebounding (Chart I-11, bottom two panels). The third risk is that the China Play Index we introduced 10 weeks ago is rebounding (Chart I-12). This indicator, based on AUD/JPY, Swedish industrial stocks denominated in dollars, iron ore prices, Brazilian stocks and EM high-yield bonds, is very sensitive to Chinese reflation, or at the very least to how investors expect Chinese reflation to evolve going forward. This may reflect the fact that the People's Bank of China has injected liquidity into the banking system by cutting the Reserve Requirement Ratio four times this year, or that local government borrowings have increased. Chart I-12Investors May Be Betting On Chinese Reflation However, these three factors remain risks, not our base case. After all, net speculative positions in the dollar can stay elevated for extended periods, and the Chinese stimulus that is helping the China Play Index and maybe even the G10 surprise index still pales in comparison to the size of the aggregate deleveraging that is causing total social financing to weaken. Another risk to monitor is Fed Chairman Powell. The likelihood that he dials down his hawkish rhetoric on the elevated neutral fed funds rate in the coming weeks is significant. This could cause a temporary setback in Treasury yields and global rates - one that is likely to be welcomed by global risk assets but that may cause temporary indigestion for the dollar. Bottom Line: Three key risks could invalidate our thesis that the dollar strengthens this fall. They are: the large overhang of speculative longs in the greenback, a potential temporary stabilization in global growth, and markets pricing in Chinese stimulus. Additionally, Fed Chairman Powell may walk back some of his hawkish comments from last week, which would impact global bond yields and help global risk assets, but weigh on the dollar. Investment Implications Faced with this outlook, what should investors do? We continue to recommend holding a cyclically bullish dollar stance. Long DXY makes sense at this juncture, with upside toward 102 by Q1 2019, Implying a fall in EUR/USD below 1.10. However, the risks highlighted above are also non-negligible. This means that holding some hedges makes perfect sense. This summer, we recommended selling USD/CAD. As Chart I-13 illustrates, the loonie has been the best performing G10 currency - the only one that managed to eke out a gain against the greenback this summer (top panel of Chart I-13). This means that mean-reversion is not likely to be the CAD's friend going forward. It may thus not be the best instrument anymore to hedge against USD weakness. Instead, Chart I-13 proposes that the three currencies best placed to benefit from any mean reversion if the USD weakens are the SEK, the AUD, and especially the NZD. The NZD is extremely oversold now, which suggests that it could benefit greatly if the dollar were to experience any period of weakness. Moreover, the NZD has traditionally been highly levered to EM asset prices and Asian growth conditions. As a result, if the rebound in the China Play Index ends up hurting the USD, the NZD is likely to be the prime beneficiary. Chart I-13G10 Currency Returns Moreover, the kiwi money markets are currently pricing in a 12% probability of interest rate cuts by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand over the coming four months. While a lack of inflation means that the environment is not propitious for the RBNZ to increase rates, a rate cuts seems farfetched: the Official Cash Rate remains well below the average level of growth experienced over the past three years, whether in nominal or real terms. In other words, monetary policy remains extremely accommodative, despite the fact that the output gap is closed and the unemployment rate stands below full employment (Chart I-14). Chart I-14The RBNZ Will Not Cut Rates Finally, shorting EUR/JPY may well prove to be the best protection if the Fed's leadership guides bond yields lower. As Chart I-15 shows, EUR/JPY performs well when bond yield rise, which explains why this cross has managed to strengthen despite the recent weakness in EM asset prices this year. Hence, if a dollar correction is not driven by global growth converging upward toward the U.S., but instead is driven by the Fed backtracking from its recent hawkish rhetoric, then EUR/JPY will suffer considerably. Chart I-15Short EUR/JPY: A Hedge Against Falling Bond Yields As a result, we recommend investors with long USD exposure hedge their bets by taking on a bit of long NZD/USD exposure and some short EUR/JPY exposure as well. Bottom Line: Since the seasonal and cyclical outlook is favorable to the greenback, it makes sense for investors to maintain a dollar-bullish bias in their portfolio. However, the tactical risks to the dollar created by a potential rebound in non-U.S. growth or a potentially dovish Fed are meaningful. As a result, some hedges should be maintained to mitigate net positive exposure to the dollar. We recommend buying NZD/USD and selling EUR/JPY in order to achieve optimal protection from these risk factors. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Italy, Bond Vigilantes, And Bubbles", dated October 4, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: The unemployment rate surprised positively, coming in at 3.7%. Moreover, initial jobless claims also surprised positively, coming in at 207 thousand. However, while nonfarm payrolls underperformed expectations, coming in at 134 thousand, this miss was compensated by important positive revisions to 270 thousand for August. DXY has risen by roughly 1.4% this week. Overall, we continue to be positive on the dollar, given that inflationary pressures in the U.S. will continue to put upward pressure on interest rates. Moreover, China is tightening monetary conditions, which will continue to act as a drag on global growth. This environment will benefit the green back until at least the beginning of 2019. Report Links: Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 The Dollar And Risk Assets Are Beholden To China's Stimulus - August 3, 2018 Rhetoric Is Not Always Policy - July 27, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area has been mixed: Retail sales yearly growth surprised to the upside, coming in at 1.8%. However, core inflation underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.9%. Finally, both the composite and manufacturing Markit PMI, also surprised negatively, coming in at 54.1 and 53.2 respectively. Rising U.S. yields as well as renewed concerns about Italy have lowered EUR/USD by roughly 2% this past couple of weeks. We are negative on the euro on a cyclical basis, given that euro area inflationary dynamics are tightly linked to global economic activity, which will likely be armed by China's monetary tightening. Thus, inflation, and consequently rates, will stay low in the euro area for the time being. Report Links: Will Rising Wages Cause An Imminent Change In Policy Direction In Europe And Japan? - October 5, 2018 Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 Time To Pause And Breathe - July 6, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been positive: Machinery orders yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 12.6%. Moreover, the leading economic Index also surprised to the upside, coming in at 104.4. Finally, overall household spending yearly growth also surprised to the upside, coming in at 2.8%. USD/JPY has been falling for the past week and a half. We are negative on the yen on a cyclical basis, given that YCC is likely to stay in place for the foreseeable. After all, Japanese inflation expectations remain moribund. Moreover, the expected negative fiscal shock next year will also weigh on aggregate demand. All of these factors, combined with slowing global growth will continue to widen rate differentials, which will create upside in USD/JPY. Report Links: Will Rising Wages Cause An Imminent Change In Policy Direction In Europe And Japan? - October 5, 2018 Rhetoric Is Not Always Policy - July 27, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Manufacturing production yearly growth surprised to the upside, coming in at 1.3%. However, Halifax house prices yearly growth underperformed expectations, coming in at 2.5%. Finally, Markit Services PMI underperformed expectations, coming in at 53.9. GBP/USD has been flat since the middle of September. The European Union has been much more conciliatory than anticipated, causing the pound to rally. However, we will continue to watch the negotiations closely, given that very little geopolitical risk is currently priced into the pound at the moment, which means it will continue to be whipshawed with inevitable setbacks in the negotiations. We remain long GBP vol. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Inflation Is In The Price - June 15, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD/USD has fallen by roughly 2.5% over the past couple of weeks, mostly due to the spike in U.S. real yields and the fall in emerging market assets. We continue to be bearish on the Australian dollar, as the Australian economy is the most sensitive G10 currency to policy tightening in China. Moreover, the Australian economy has a very indebted household sectors, which makes it difficult for the RBA to hike rates in the current environment. Investors who wish to express this bearish view on the AUD can do so by shorting AUD/CAD, as the CAD will likely benefit from rising oil prices. Report Links: Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 What Is Good For China Doesn't Always Help The World - June 29, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD/USD has fallen by nearly 3%. Overall, we are bearish the kiwi, as continued tightening by both the fed and Chinese authorities will keep putting pressure on risk assets like the NZD. Moreover, the momentum in volatility continues to be a negative sign for high yield currencies like NZD. That being said, once volatility momentum becomes negative high carry trades like NZD/CHF will prove to be attractive. Moreover, investors looking to hedge their long dollar positions should look to buy the NZD, as rate expectations in New Zealand have likely hit a bottom. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada has been mixed: While the net change in employment outperformed expectations significantly, coming in at 63.3 thousand, the devil was in the detail; full time employment contracted by 17 thousand jobs. On the other hand, the participation rate also surprised to the upside, coming in at 65.4%. However, housing starts surprised negatively, coming in at 189 thousand. USD/CAD has gone up by roughly 1.2% the past 2 weeks. We are closing our short USD/CAD trade this week, as we think the tactical upside for the CAD is now limited. Investors looking to hedge their long dollar exposure should instead look to buy the kiwi. That being said we continue to be positive on the Canadian dollar against the Australian dollar, as oil will further outperform base metals. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Inflation Is In The Price - June 15, 2018 Rome Is Burning: Is It The End? - June 1, 2018 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland has been negative: Headline inflation underperformed expectations, coming in at 1%. Moreover, the SVMW Purchasing manager's Index also surprised negatively, coming in at 59.7. Finally, real retail sales yearly growth also underperformed expectations, coming in at 0.3%. EUR/CHF has risen by roughly 1.7% this past two weeks. Overall, we are bearish on the franc on a long-term basis, as inflationary forces are too tepid in Switzerland for the SNB to move away from its ultra-dovish monetary policy. Moreover, the strength in the franc over the past few months will likely drive prices down, adding further fuel to the SNB's easy money campaign. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been mixed: Headline and core inflation both outperformed expectations, coming in at 3.4% and 1.9% respectively. Moreover, manufacturing output growth also surprised to the upside, coming in at -0.1%. However, register unemployment surprised negatively, ticking up to 2.3%. USD/NOK has risen by roughly 1% the past couple of weeks, in spite of rising oil prices. We have long argued that USD/NOK is more sensitive to real rate differentials than to oil prices. Given that we expect real U.S. rates to have additional upside, we continue to be bullish on this cross. That being said, the NOK could outperform other commodity currencies like the AUD and the NZD, as the relative performance of oil in the commodity space will provide a cyclical lift to the NOK against these currencies. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden has been mixed: Retail sales yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 2%. Moreover, consumer confidence also surprised to the upside, coming in at 103.6. However, manufacturing PMI underperformed expectations, coming in at 55.2. USD/SEK has risen by roughly 2.7% the past couple of weeks. Overall, we are bullish on the krona on a long term basis, as monetary policy is too easy in Sweden given Sweden's current inflationary backdrop, which means that the path of least resistance for rates is up. Nevertheless, the policy tightening by Chinese authorities could continue to weigh on global growth. This means that the SEK could have some downside on a 3 to 6 month horizon. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Please note that a Special Alert titled "Brazil: A Regime Shift?" discussing investment implications of the weekend elections was published on Tuesday. Highlights The combination of rising U.S. bond yields and slumping growth in EM/China heralds further downside in EM risk assets and currencies. Watch for a breakdown in Asian risk assets and currencies. As a market-neutral trade for the next several months, we recommend going long Latin American and short emerging Asian stocks in common currency terms. We are downgrading Hong Kong stocks from neutral to underweight within an Asian or EM equity portfolio. Feature U.S. bond prices have broken down, and yields have broken out (Chart I-1). The bond selloff will continue as U.S. growth is very strong and inflationary pressures are accumulating. Chart I-1U.S. Bond Yields Have Broken Out, More Upside How will EM financial markets react to a further rise in U.S. bond yields? If EM growth were robust and fundamentals healthy, financial markets in developing countries would have no problem digesting higher U.S. interest rates. However, the fact is that EM fundamentals are poor and growth is weakening. Consequently, financial markets in the developing world are very vulnerable to higher U.S. bond yields. For now, U.S. bond yields will continue to rise, the U.S. dollar will strengthen further, and the EM bear market will endure. Stay short/underweight EM risk assets. Understanding The Nexus Between EM Assets And U.S. Bonds Rising U.S. bond yields pose a threat to EM risk assets if the former leads to a stronger U.S. dollar and by extension weaker EM currencies. Notably, risks to EM share prices will magnify if dollar borrowing costs for EM (corporate and sovereign bond yields) increase further (Chart I-2). In short, if rising U.S. bond yields are not offset by narrowing EM credit spreads, EM dollar bond yields will climb. This in turn will weigh on EM share prices. Chart I-2Rising Dollar Borrowing Costs: A Bad Omen For EM Stocks Chart I-3 highlights that the divergence between U.S. and EM share prices this year can be attributed to the decoupling in their credit spreads. Chart I-3Diverging Credit Spreads Between EM & U.S Credit spreads, meanwhile, are steered by EM exchange rates (Chart I-4). When EM currencies depreciate, debtors' ability to service U.S. dollar debt worsens, and credit spreads widen to reflect higher risk. The opposite also holds true. Chart I-4EM Credit Spreads Are A Function Of EM Currencies Overall, getting EM exchange rates right is of paramount importance. Hence, a vital question: Do EM currencies always depreciate when U.S. bond yields are rising or the Federal Reserve is tightening? Chart I-5 suggests not. Before 2013, EM currencies appreciated with rising U.S. bond yields. Since 2013, the correlation has been mixed. Chart I-5No Stable Relationship Between U.S. Bond Yields & EM Currencies The key difference between these periods is the performance of EM/Chinese economies. When EM/China growth is robust or accelerating, financial markets in developing economies have no trouble digesting higher U.S. interest rates and their currencies tend to appreciate. By contrast, when EM/China growth is weak or slumping, EM asset prices and currencies tumble regardless of the trajectory of U.S. interest rates. A pertinent question at the moment is why robust U.S. growth is not helping EM weather higher U.S. interest rates. The caveat is that EM as a whole is more exposed to the Chinese economy than the American one. Hence, barring a meaningful improvement in Chinese growth, higher U.S. bond yields will be overwhelming for EM financial markets. This is why we have been focusing on China's growth dynamics. Bottom Line: Desynchronization between the U.S. and Chinese economies will persist. The resulting combination of rising U.S. bond yields, a stronger greenback and depreciating EM currencies foreshadows further downside in EM risk assets. Emerging Asia: Do Not Catch A Falling Knife The latest export data from Korea and Taiwan point to a continued slowdown in their exports (Chart I-6). Corroborating the deepening slump in Asian growth and global trade, emerging Asian equity and credit markets are plunging. In particular: Chart I-6Global Trade Is Slowing The relative performance of emerging Asian stocks versus the global equity benchmark failed to break above important technical long-term resistance lines earlier this year, and will likely breach below their early 2016 lows (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Emerging Asian Equities Vs. Global: Further Underperformance Ahead Both high-yield and investment-grade emerging Asian corporate dollar-denominated bond yields continue to climb - a worrisome development for emerging Asian share prices (high-yield corporate bond yields are shown inverted in Chart I-8). Chart I-8Rising Corporate Bond Yields In Emerging Asia = Lower Stock Prices The equity selloff in emerging Asia is broad-based. Chart I-9 shows that the emerging Asian small-cap equity index is in freefall. Chart I-9Emerging Asian Small Caps Are In Freefall Net earnings revisions in China, Korea and Taiwan have dropped into negative territory (Chart I-10). Chart I-10Net Earnings Revisions Are Negative In China, Korea And Taiwan The Chinese MSCI All-Share Index - all stocks listed on the mainland and offshore (worldwide) - has plunged close to its early 2016 lows (Chart I-11). Chart I-11Chinese Broad Equity Index Is Back To Its 2016 Lows In China, the property market and construction remain at substantial risk. The budding slump in the real estate market will likely offset the government spending stimulus on infrastructure investment. Plunging share prices of property developers listed in both onshore and in Hong Kong point to a looming major downtrend in real estate market (Chart I-12). Chart I-12An Imminent Slump In Chinese Real Estate? For Asian equity portfolio managers whose mandate is to make a decision on Hong Kong and Singapore stocks, we recommend downgrading Hong Kong equities from neutral to underweight while maintaining Singapore at neutral within an Asian and overall EM equity portfolio. Our basis is that rising interest rates in the U.S. will translate into higher borrowing costs in Hong Kong due to the currency peg (Chart I-13). Simultaneously, Hong Kong's economy will suffer from a slowdown in China. Hence, a combination of weaker growth and rising borrowing costs will spell trouble for this interest rate-sensitive bourse. Chart I-13Higher U.S. Rates = Higher Hong Kong Rates Bottom Line: Equity and credit markets in emerging Asia are trading extremely poorly, and further downside is very likely. This week, we are downgrading allocations to Hong Kong stocks from neutral to underweight within an Asian or EM equity portfolio. A Relative Equity Trade: Short Asia / Long Latin America Common currency relative performance of emerging Asian versus Latin American stocks has broken down (Chart I-14). We reckon emerging Asian equities are set to underperform their Latin American peers for the next several months. Chart I-14Long Latin American / Short Emerging Asian Stocks The main culprit will likely be further depreciation in the RMB and an intensifying economic downturn in Asia, which will propel emerging Asian currencies and share prices lower. In regard to Latin America, elections in Mexico and Colombia have produced governments that will on the margin be positive for their respective economies. In Brazil too, first round election results are pointing to a market friendly result. We have been shifting our country equity allocation in favor of Latin America at the expense of Asia since late last year. In particular, we downgraded Chinese stocks in December 2017, Indonesian equities this past May and the Indian bourse last week. At the same time, we have been raising our equity allocation to Latin America by upgrading Mexico to overweight in April 2018, Colombia last week and Brazil earlier this week.1 Given we are also overweight Chilean stocks, our fully invested EM equity model portfolio noticeably overweights Latin America versus Asia. Notwithstanding our broad underweight in emerging Asia, we are still overweight Korea, Taiwan and Thailand within an EM equity portfolio. However, these overweights are paltry relative to both the size of the Asian equity universe and our overweights in Latin America. Bottom Line: Go long Latin American and short emerging Asian stocks in common currency terms as a trade for the next several months. Our Fully-Invested Equity Model Portfolio Chart I-15 demonstrates the performance of our fully invested EM equity portfolio versus the EM MSCI benchmark. This portfolio is constructed based on our country recommendations. Hence, it is a measure of alpha that clients could derive from our country calls and geographical equity allocations. Chart I-15EMS's Fully-Invested Model Equity Portfolio Performance We make explicit country equity recommendations (overweight, underweight and neutral) based on qualitative assessments of all relevant variables - the business cycle, liquidity, currency risks, policy, politics, valuations, and the structural backdrop among other things - for each country. This model portfolio is not a quantitative black box, but rather a combination of several factors: macro themes on the overall EM space, in-depth research on each individual country and various quantitative indicators. The table with our recommended country equity allocation is published at the end of our weekly reports (please refer to page 11). This fully invested equity model portfolio has outperformed the MSCI EM equity benchmark by about 65% with very low volatility since its initiation in May 2008. This translates into 500-basis-points of compounded outperformance per year. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report "EM: Staring At A Grey Swan?" dated October 4, 2018 and Emerging Markets Strategy Special Alert "Brazil: A Regime Shift?" dated October 9, 2018; links are available on page 11. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
The S&P utilities sector yields 3.5% but when the yield offered by the competing risk free asset nears 3.2% and is rising, investors prefer to shed riskier high-yielding equities and park the proceeds in U.S. Treasurys. While arguably most of the bad…
Against such a backdrop, the coming quarters should see sectors that benefit from rising interest rates and that also serve as inflation hedges outperform. This means we favor "FIT" stocks, which refers to financials, industrials and selected technology…
It turns out that what matters for implied volatility of oil is the slope of the crude futures curve. A futures curve in contango, where long-dated futures trade at a higher price than short-dated futures, tends to be associated with high implied volatility.…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy A playable sector rotation opportunity has emerged, as we first argued at the recent BCA investment conference: Financials, industrials and select tech subgroups will lead the next phase of the market advance, a result of the bond market selloff gaining steam into year-end and beyond. In contrast, rising interest rates, a vibrant U.S. economy, softening operating metrics and high indebtedness signal that it is time to shed utility stocks. Recent Changes Trim the S&P Utilities sector to underweight today. Table 1 Feature On the eve of earnings season, the SPX remains close to an all-time high. The most recent spate of investor optimism was driven by President Trump cementing another deal last week, this time with Canada. While the renaming of NAFTA to USMCA is a step in the right direction (i.e. a deal was struck), a deal with China remains the elephant in the room. On that front, U.S. hawkish trade rhetoric should remain in vogue and any deal will have to wait until at least after the election, if not until Q1/2019. Up to now Trump's trade hawkishness has not infiltrated U.S. profits, but we continue to closely monitor IBES reported profit growth expectations. Following up from last week, the rest of the world is bearing the brunt of the U.S. trade-related rhetoric according to our profit growth models, a message sell-side analysts' forecasts also corroborate (we use forward EBITDA in order to gauge trend profit growth and filter out the tax-induced jump in U.S. EPS, Chart 1). Meanwhile, at the margin, seasonality can prop up stocks. While September - a historically negative return month, but not this year - is behind us, stock market crash-prone October is upon us, and thus a pick-up in volatility would not come as a surprise. Beyond October's dreaded crash history, the Presidential cycle has piqued our interest, especially years two and three. Building on our sister Geopolitical Strategy publication's research,1 and given the upcoming midterm elections, we created a cycle-on-cycle profile of SPX returns during these two middle Presidential cycle years (Chart 2). Chart 1U.S. Has The Upper Hand Chart 2Seasonality Boost Until Midyear 2019? In more detail, we analyzed 17 cycles starting in 1950 using S&P 500 daily data (reconstructed S&P 500 prior to 1957). During these iterations, only two two-year periods ended in the red, 1974/75 and 2002/03. The first coincided with a recession and the second took place in the aftermath of the dotcom bust. In addition, two other cycles produced roughly 5% two-year returns, 1962/63 and 1966/67. Finally, 1954/55 was the outlier when the SPX went parabolic and nearly doubled. While every cycle is different, it is clear from Chart 2 that the Presidential cycle should continue to underpin the SPX, if history is an accurate guide, especially given our forecast of no recession in the coming 9-to-12 months. In fact, the S&P could rise another 10%, in line with our 2019 expectation, predicated upon a 10% increase in profits and a lateral multiple move. Interestingly, according to the median Presidential cycle-on-cycle roadmap, while the back half of 2019 is likely to prove more challenging, the first half of next year should enjoy most of the returns (Chart 2). An assessment of recent data releases in the U.S. and abroad is also revealing. Chart 3 shows that the domestic economy is firing on all cylinders. Consumer confidence and sentiment hit multi-decade highs recently. Similarly, the job market remains vibrant and small business euphoria reigns supreme. Not only are small business owners optimistic on all employment-related subcomponents of the NFIB survey, but SME capex intentions are also as good as they get. The ISM manufacturing survey ticked down from the August peak, but remains close to 60. Its close sibling, the ISM services survey, vaulted into uncharted territory. All of this is reflected in the still-growing U.S. leading economic indicator and signals that the U.S. equity market remains on a solid footing. Outside U.S. shores, the bearish narrative is well established with EMs, especially the U.S. dollar debt-saddled fragile five that have to contend with twin deficits, sinking in a bear market. China's debt load is also coming under intense scrutiny as U.S. tariffs are all but certain to weigh on Chinese output growth. Nonetheless, there is a chance that the EMs have depreciated their currencies by enough to engineer a modest rebound (bottom panel, Chart 4). In other words, absent the currency peg straightjacket that dominated the region in the late-1990s, free-floating FX devaluations may serve as a relief valve in order to boost exports. The latest Korean MARKIT manufacturing PMI spiked above the boom/bust line to a multi-year high signaling that already humming Korean factories (industrial production is accelerating) will likely remain busy in the coming months. Other hard economic data also confirm these greenshoots: Korean manufacturing exports are expanding smartly. In particular, exports to China are soaring. Reaccelerating manufacturing selling prices also corroborate this budding Korean recovery (third panel, Chart 4). Chart 3U.S. Is On Fire Chart 4Reflationary Impulse? While it is premature to call an end to the EM carnage, most of the bad news on global export volumes and prices may be nearing an end and the EMs may even export some of their inflation to the U.S. Play The Sector Rotation Into Financials And Industrials... In recent research, we have been highlighting that inflation is slowly rearing its ugly head and there are high odds that the selloff in the bond market gains steam into year-end and beyond2 (as a reminder BCA's fixed income publications continue to recommend below-benchmark portfolio duration). Against such a backdrop, sectors that benefit from rising interest rates and that serve as inflation hedges should outperform in the coming quarters. The "FIT" market refers to financials, industrials and select technology stocks. In more detail, we expect a sector rotation, especially into financials and industrials that have been laggards and remain compellingly valued (Chart 5). With regard to financials, Chart 6 shows that this early cyclical sector enjoys a positive correlation with interest rates and inflation expectations, and a catch up phase in relative share prices looms in the coming quarters. Chart 5Rotate Into Financials... Chart 6...And Industrials Industrials stocks also benefit from rising inflation and interest rates as large parts of this deep cyclical sector are levered to the commodity cycle (Chart 7). In other words, industrials stocks are an indirect inflation hedge and trouble surfaces only when capital goods producers cannot pass rising input costs down the supply chain or to the consumer. But, we are not there yet. Keep in mind that during the last cycle, relative (and absolute) industrials performance peaked prior to relative energy stock prices. Similarly, the relative industrials stock price ratio troughed in early 2009 before their deep cyclical brethren put in a (temporary) bottom a year later (Chart 8). Chart 7Industrials Lead Chart 8Undervalued True, energy stocks are also going to perform well if our thesis of higher interest rates/inflation pans out in the coming quarters and especially if BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service's view of a looming oil price spike materializes (Chart 9). Thus, we sustain the high-conviction overweight stance in the broad sector and reaffirm our recent upgrade to an above benchmark allocation in the S&P oil & gas exploration & production (E&P) subgroup.3 We also reiterate our recent market-neutral and intra-commodity pair trade: long S&P oil & gas E&P / short global gold miners.4 This trade is off to a great start up 10.3% since inception and will benefit further from an inflationary impulse. Chart 9Energy Remains A High-Conviction Overweight While tech stocks have really delivered and led the market advance year-to-date, a bifurcated tech market should remain in place with capex levered S&P software and S&P tech hardware, storage & peripherals indexes (both are high-conviction overweights) outperforming early cyclical tech groups, semi and semi equipment stocks (we remain underweight both semi subindexes). Bottom Line: A playable rotation into financials and industrials is in the offing especially if the selloff in the bond market accelerates on the back of an inflationary whim. We continue to recommend an overweight allocation to both the S&P financials and S&P industrials sectors. ...But Lights Are Out For Utilities Utilities stocks are the ultimate loser from a backup in interest rates as they serve as premier fixed income proxies in the equity space and we are compelled to trim exposure to below benchmark. The niche S&P utilities sector yields 3.5% and when the competing risk free asset is near 3.2% and rising, investors prefer to shed, at the margin, riskier high-yielding equities and park the proceeds in U.S. Treasurys (Chart 10). While arguably most of the bad news is already reflected in washed out technicals and bombed out short and even long-term profit expectations (Chart 11), the selling will only accelerate into yearend and 2019. Chart 10Higher Yields Bite Chart 11Oversold And Unloved... Apart from the tight inverse correlation utilities have with interest rates, they are also a defensive sector that outperforms the broad market when the economy is in retreat. Currently a plethora of recent economic releases are signaling that the U.S. economy is overheating. Chart 12 illustrates the safe haven status of utility stocks (ISM surveys shown inverted). On the operating front, despite the upbeat economic data, electricity capacity utilization remains anemic. Capacity growth is likely responsible for this weak resource utilization signal as utilities construction continues unabated (private construction shown inverted, top panel, Chart 13). Adding insult to injury, inventory accumulation is also weighing on the sector (turbine inventories shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 13). Chart 12...But More Pain Looms Chart 13Weak Operating Metrics Worrisomely, all these expansion plans have been financed with debt. While this is not typically an issue for stable cash flow generating utilities, the sector's net debt-to-EBITDA profile has gone parabolic, nearly doubling since the GFC and even overtaking the early 2000s when a California deregulation wave first led to exuberance and then an electricity crisis (Chart 14). Any letdown in cash flow growth will be disruptive, especially given that the sector has no valuation cushion (bottom panel, Chart 14). Nevertheless, there are some risks that could put our underweight position offside. Natural gas prices have spiked of late and given that they are the marginal price setter for the sector they could boost utility pricing power and thus profits (top & middle panels, Chart 15). As the U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders, electricity demand should remain brisk and provide an offset to the otherwise weakening utility operating backdrop (bottom panel, Chart 15). Chart 14Heavily Indebted And Pricey Chart 15Risks To Underweight View Netting it all out, rising interest rates, a vibrant U.S. economy, softening operating metrics and high indebtedness signal that the time is ripe to sell utility stocks. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P utilities sector to underweight. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Fade The Midterms, Not Iraq Or Brexit," dated September 12, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Deflation - Reflation - Inflation," dated August 20, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Soldiering On," dated July 16, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Deflation - Reflation - Inflation," dated August 20, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps