Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Corporate

The most important question investors need to answer is whether this is the right time to shift the portfolio to a more aggressive and cyclical stance now that the end of the hiking cycle is in sight. To answer this question, we review the most recent macroeconomic, geopolitical, and equity market developments, and do our best to separate facts and data from sentiment and conjecture. We conclude that there are many challenges ahead and equities are not in a clear yet. We recommend investors add small positions in areas of the market that benefit from rate stabilization while maintaining an overall defensive stance.

Heading into a black hole, you pass a point of no return known as the ‘event horizon’ after which your impending oblivion is sealed. US recessions also have an event horizon, which we are fast approaching. We reveal a leading indicator of this event horizon, and what it means for investment strategy.

Today we are publishing a charts-only report focused on the key macroeconomic data as well as each GICS1 S&P 500 sector. Many of the charts are self-explanatory; to some we have added a short commentary. The charts cover macro, valuations, fundamentals, technicals, and the uses of cash. Our goal is to equip you with all the data you need to make investment decisions in these sectors.

Special Report

We explore the eight major themes that will define economic and market trends for Europe next year.

Special Report

Long-term deflationary forces in Japan are weakening, setting the stage for inflation to make a comeback over the remainder of the decade. Investors should prepare to structurally reduce exposure to Japanese bonds starting early next year. Higher Japanese bond yields will lift an extremely undervalued yen. To the extent that global growth should surprise on the upside over the next 12 months, Japanese equities could see some modest outperformance.

The messages from the deteriorating fundamental backdrop (tight monetary policy, slowing global growth) and improved credit valuation (elevated 12-month breakeven spreads) are giving conflicting signals on corporate bond strategy. We are putting more weight on the fundamentals and are staying with an overall underweight stance on global investment grade corporates, with a slight bias towards Europe given more attractive spread valuations. At the same time, we see selective opportunities in sectors where risk-adjusted spreads are wide as signaled by our individual country sector valuation models, like US Energy and euro area Financials.

While there is much variability in company profitability, earnings contractions have commenced and appear to be broad-based. We expect earnings growth to deteriorate further into year-end. Companies are reporting concerns about the trajectory of future economic growth and the uncertainty that it brings. Consumer spending on goods has slowed sharply, while spending on discretionary services has surprised on the upside. Business-to-business spending is still strong.

Executive Summary Assessing the future scenarios discounted in asset prices is always a challenge, but investors need a consensus baseline so they can formulate their own investment strategy decisions. The conversations we had at BCA’s annual investment conference last week reinforced our view that investors are overly pessimistic about corporate earnings prospects. Fears about runaway compensation growth are unfounded. The money markets, on the other hand, appear to be overly blasé about the fed funds rate. We think terminal rate expectations will have to be revised higher and that investors will have to wait longer for rate cuts than the OIS curve currently projects. Margins Have Peaked, But They're Still High Bottom Line: We remain more optimistic than the consensus over the immediate term and continue to recommend a risk-friendly tilt in multi-asset portfolios over the next six months. We are more cautious about the twelve-month outlook and recommend neutral positioning over that timeframe. Feature BCA held its first in-person conference in three years last week at The Plaza Hotel in New York. The agenda offered attendees a smorgasbord of thought-provoking discussions with recognized experts inside and outside of BCA. We enjoyed the programmed content as well as the impromptu interactions with speakers, attendees, our colleagues and the financial media. Again and again, our unplanned conversations homed in on questions about the expectations embedded in stock prices and bond yields. The future scenarios that securities prices are discounting cannot be directly observed and therefore can never be known definitively in real time. If investors do not continuously approximate them, however, they will be unable to evaluate the likelihood that actual outcomes will be better or worse than expected. Our view that markets and the economy can surprise on the upside has been built on the idea that expectations are overly gloomy. That is still our view on balance, as we think the S&P 500 is pricing in a worse near-term earnings outlook than is likely to occur, though we expect the Fed to surprise markets hawkishly before this rate hiking cycle ends. The combination of positive earnings surprises over the next few quarters and a negative monetary policy surprise coming sometime by the second half of next year leaves us optimistic about risk assets over the next six months but wary of them over the next twelve months and beyond. Earnings The analyst consensus currently estimates that S&P 500 earnings per share over the next four quarters will exceed the second quarter’s annualized run rate by just 0.3% and the trailing four quarters by 5.5% (Table 1). Modest as those expectations may be, we do not sense that investors are counting on them. Financial media reports and our discussions with clients and colleagues suggest that investors are braced for peak-to-trough earnings declines in the double digits, consistent with past recessions (Chart 1). Those bandying about estimates of a 10-20% decline are not necessarily calling for them to occur in the next four quarters, but we think it is clear that the forward S&P 500 whisper number is below the official I/B/E/S consensus. Table 1The Official Bar Is Low, The Whisper Bar Is Lower Chart 1Recessions Are Hard On Earnings For nominal earnings growth to miss such meager expectations while inflation is high, profit margins will have to contract sharply, but we would also expect declining revenues to play a major role, as in the 2001 and 2007-2009 recessions (Chart 2). That expectation follows from our view that nominal GDP growth is a solid proxy for S&P 500 sales growth (Chart 3), with nominal GDP explaining 41% of the variation in S&P 500 sales since 1997 (64% correlation). Nominal GDP grew at close to a 10% clip in the first half, and if inflation is around 6% in the second half, we would expect 8% growth over the next two quarters and about 6% growth in the first half of next year.1 Chart 2Sales Fall In Downturns, Too Chart 3As Goes GDP, So Go Corporate Revenues Despite the revenue buffer provided by 7% nominal GDP growth, we expect S&P 500 profit margins will extend their decline from the 2Q21 peak (Chart 4). Investors nearly unanimously expect that margins are imperiled, but we are more sanguine about the pace of the decline than the consensus and suspect the difference comes down to the pace of wage growth. Compensation is the largest expense category by a wide margin and has the capacity to move the aggregate margin needle on its own. Just as the US growth outlook may rest on consumption, compensation may be the key to margins’ future path. Chart 4A Slower-Than-Expected Decline Much has been made of the shortage of available workers and its impact on wages, which are rising at the fastest pace in decades (Chart 5). In real terms, however, wage growth has been deeply negative ever since frontline workers stopped receiving hazard pay early in the pandemic (Chart 6). Real wages should find a footing as inflation cools and may eventually break into positive territory, but rampant talk of a wage-price spiral suggests that the consensus is factoring in much more. We think the prospects of a wage-price spiral like the one in the late seventies are being dramatically overestimated. Chart 5The Nominal Gains Have Been Great ...​​​​​ Chart 6... But They're Way Behind Consumer Prices​​​​​ We will not revisit the rationale for our wage-price spiral view in detail, but it is founded on the notion that workers’ current advantage, even if it were to persist for the rest of the Biden administration’s term, will not be sufficient to offset four decades of employers’ structural gains. Labor surely has the upper hand from a cyclical perspective – demand for workers exceeds supply – but we do not think it can convert its near-term advantage into durable gains. Private sector union membership has dwindled from over 30% at its mid-sixties peak to less than 7% today, leaving workers badly outgunned when trying to assemble a sellers’ cartel to counter the formidable buyers’ cartel enabled by 40 years of lax anti-trust enforcement. Even the “most pro-labor president leading the most pro-labor administration you’ve ever seen” isn’t likely to be able to counter several decades of weakened state-level labor protections.2 History says that employers will take as hard a line with their employees as is socially acceptable and what is deemed kosher has moved so far in their favor since President Reagan crushed the air traffic controllers’ union early in his first term that the seventies template does not apply. Monetary Policy If the earnings mood is unduly glum, however, it would seem to be offset by what strikes us as unfounded expectations that the Fed will stand down from its inflation fight before too long. Perhaps BCA strategists are a bit too credulous, but we are inclined to take the Fed at its word that, as former Vice Chair Richard Clarida put it at the conference, “failure [to subdue inflation] is not an option.” While we side with the consensus in our expectation that inflation will soon recede to 4% of its own accord as COVID bottlenecks are cleared, we judge that monetary and fiscal policymakers overstimulated aggregate demand in their efforts to shelter the economy from the pandemic. As a result, we expect that the Fed will have to administer much harsher monetary medicine to achieve its inflation mandate than markets are currently discounting. We have two objections to the money market’s fed funds rate expectations as derived from the overnight index swap curve (Chart 7). We think the fed funds rate will peak well north of 4% in this hiking cycle and there is almost no chance that the Fed will cut rates at any point in 2023. While markets have gotten more realistic about the monetary policy path than they were after the FOMC’s July meeting, we think they are still clinging to a vain hope. All financial assets will have to be repriced once it is snuffed out, and that repricing represents a significant risk to our constructive six-month view if it occurs before underweight asset managers are forced back into risk assets to protect their funds’ relative performance. Chart 7Magical Thinking The wide range of views about the neutral, or equilibrium, rate that demarcates the line where the fed funds rate flips from accommodative to restrictive explains the terminal rate uncertainty. The neutral rate cannot be directly observed and everyone from investors to central bankers is left to infer its location from the variables that they can see. We think the neutral rate is north of 4%, possibly as high as 4.5-5%, especially given our view that inflation will likely linger at 4%. New York Fed president John Williams suggested in a Wall Street Journal interview two weeks ago that it may be in the mid-3s. “We need to get the interest rate, relative to where inflation is expected to be over the next year, into a positive space and probably even higher.” The article said Williams expects inflation to range between 2.5 and 3% next year, suggesting that the real funds rate is on course to turn positive this fall. Melting one-year inflation expectations as implied by TIPS break-evens suggest that it’s been rising in sizable chunks week after week since the FOMC’s July meeting (Chart 8). We would take the over on Thursday’s 1.71% close if only it were available on New York’s newly legalized online sports books but someone who does expect sub-2% inflation next year might logically conclude that the Fed will be cutting rates soon. Chart 8Garbage In, Garbage Out Investment Implications Our conversations at the conference and its margins left us essentially where we began. We think investors are underestimating the economy’s ability to grow at a rate that will support continued corporate earnings growth over the next four quarters, albeit at a decelerating rate. On the other hand, we think markets face a reckoning when they are forced to price in a longer and more extensive rate hiking campaign than they currently expect. We square the circle from an investment strategy perspective by conditioning our views on investor timeframes. Because we think the earnings whisper numbers will be meaningfully revised higher before monetary policy expectations are reset more hawkishly, we remain tactically bullish. If rate expectations were to reset sooner than we currently expect (sometime early next year), our tactical call would be at significant risk and we would likely become as cautious over the six-month timeframe as we are over the twelve-month timeframe. As it stands now, we continue to recommend overweighting equities in balanced portfolios over the next six months while pursuing neutral risk asset positioning over timeframes of twelve months or more.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Our nominal growth expectations assume the US economy maintains real growth at close to its 2% trend level, as consumption is supported by households’ considerable excess savings, but we do not repeat our case here. 2     The weather is fine, and the Saturday football unmatched, but it is flimsy labor protections that drew Boeing’s Dreamliner assembly work and a slew of foreign automakers to the Southeastern Conference’s legacy Deep South footprint and the other states competing for good factory jobs have taken notice.
Special Report Dear Client, This week, the US Bond Strategy service is hosting its Quarterly Webcast (August 16 at 10:00 AM EDT, 15:00 PM BST, 16:00 PM CEST). In addition, we are sending this Quarterly Chartpack that provides a recap of our key recommendations and some charts related to those recommendations and other areas of interest for US bond investors. Please tune in to the Webcast and browse the Chartpack at your leisure, and do let us know if you have any questions or other feedback. To view the Quarterly Chartpack PDF please click here. Best regards, Ryan Swift, US Bond Strategist Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns
Special Report Executive Summary Iron Ore & Steel Prices: Facing Downward Pressure Global iron ore and steel supply is likely to grow faster than demand over the next six months. As a result, the prices of both metals will likely fall. Chinese steel output will likely rebound moderately in the absence of government-mandated steel production cutbacks. In the meantime, mainland steel demand will continue to contract because of its crumbling property sector. Global steel output excluding China will contract over the next six months on the back of weakening industrial demand for steel. Even though Chinese iron ore consumption may rise moderately over the next six months, its imports will not improve much because of robust growth in domestic iron ore production. Furthermore, global iron ore demand excluding China will decline as steel demand and output contract. In the intervening six months, global iron ore production growth will rise. This will lead to an oversupplied iron ore market.  Bottom Line: Both iron ore and steel prices will likely deflate over the next several months. Therefore, Chinese steel share prices as well as global mining and steel stocks have more downside.   China’s demand for iron ore and steel are key to their respective price outlooks because these metals account for about 70% of global iron ore imports and over 50% of global steel consumption. Considerable reduction in Chinese steel output (hence, demand for iron ore) and rising domestic iron ore supply have resulted in a contraction in Chinese iron ore imports since last June. In the meantime, domestic steel demand weakened sharply, primarily because of plunging property construction. The upshot has been lower domestic steel prices (Chart 1). This report evaluates the direction of iron ore and steel prices over the next six months. Chart 1Crumbling Property Sector: Lower Steel Demand Ahead Chart 2Iron Ore & Steel Prices: Facing Downward Pressure We expect Chinese steel output to rise in the absence of government-mandated production cuts and on positive profit margins. This will lift Chinese iron ore imports. In the meantime, Chinese steel demand will likely continue to contract. Thus, steel prices will continue falling over the next several months (Chart 2, top panel). For iron ore, an increase in Chinese imports will not be enough to offset contracting global demand. As a result, the price of iron ore will face downward pressure over the coming months (Chart 2, bottom panel). From The Chinese Steel Market… The Chinese steel market may experience an increasing oversupply over the next six months. Chinese Steel Supply Chinese steel production is likely to rise moderately in the next six months.  First, there are no government-mandated cuts in steel production currently in place. Chart 3Mandated Steel Output Cuts In 2021: Unlikely Repeat In 2022H2 Last June, Chinese authorities ordered steel mills to cut output from record levels in a bid to restrain carbon emissions. This resulted in a 15% year-on-year drop in Chinese crude steel1 output and a 10% year-on-year decline in Chinese steel products production during 2021H2 (Chart 3). In 2022Q1, to ensure smog-free skies in February as China hosted the 2022 Winter Olympic Games, some steel producers were again ordered to cut their production. As a result, the year-on-year decline of Chinese steel output and steel product output for 2022Q1 were at 10% and 5%, respectively. In 2022Q2, however, the picture is more of a mixed bad. While many small firms increased volumes, medium and large sized steel producers voluntarily chose to reduce their output. As a result, China’s steel output is remains in contraction. Further, tightness in electricity supply over the summer curbed any potential recovery in steel output. Over the next six months, we expect decreasing voluntary cuts and easing electricity supply will lift steel output moderately. Chart 4Steelmakers' Profit Margins: Low, Albeit Still Positive Second, overall profit margins for Chinese steel producers are still positive, albeit at a low level (Chart 4). Even at a very low profit margin, steel producers in China still tend to produce steel as much as they can to cover their very large fixed costs. In other words, if they do not produce, they will experience greater losses.  In addition, given deteriorating employment conditions in the broader economy, maintaining employment has become a major focus of local governments. The latter will guide state-owned enterprises (SOEs) – many steel mills are SOEs or government-affiliated – to raise output and employment. For now, the government has simply asked steel producers to cut their production voluntarily, rather than mandating cuts as authorities did last year and earlier this year. In brief, in the absence of government-mandated steel output reduction, some producers will opt to increase their output to cover their fixed costs and maintain/increase employment. Will the Chinese government demand mandated cuts again later this year? We believe the odds are low. Last year, the mandated cuts were the result of more aggressive emissions reduction targets, with a deadline at the end of 2025 for the Chinese steel sector. In February of this year, the authorities extended this deadline to 2030 to grant its steel sector the ability to reach peak emissions. This will allow a gradual output reduction instead of a sharp reduction in mills with high-emission steel-producing capacity. With such a deadline extension already in place, the government is unlikely to implement mandated steel output cuts again. Chinese Steel Demand Chinese steel consumption will likely continue to contract over the next six months. Chart 5 shows that 58% of Chinese steel consumption is from building and construction, which mainly comprises the property sector and the infrastructure sector. Based on our estimate, Chinese steel demand will decline about 3.8% over the next six months, mainly dragged down by the shattered property market (Table 1). Chart 5Chinese Steel Consumption Composition Table 1Chinese Steel Demand Growth Estimates Chart 6Property Market is in a Crisis The property sector is the largest steel consumer, accounting for about 35% of Chinese steel consumption. This sector is going through a crisis, and there are no signs of improvement yet. Property sales, new construction, and completion are all in a deep and unprecedented contraction (Chart 6, panels 1, 2, and 3). Even the commodity building floor space under construction entered contraction for the first time in at least the past two decades (Chart 6, bottom panel). Both central and local governments have implemented policies to revive the property sector since late last year. Following a wave of mortgage boycotts, the July 28 Central Politburo meeting demanded local governments to ensure those sold-but-unfinished housing projects to be completed. However, due to the extreme shortage of funding faced by real estate developers and the fragmented nature of this industry in China, it will take time to get the current property sector crisis resolved. Nonetheless, we expect supportive policies will work to some extent. We expect the year-on-year contraction in property construction to narrow to 10% over the next six months from about 13% in the past six months. Chart 7Infrastructure Sector: The Main Supportive Force for Chinese Steel Demand The infrastructure sector is another major source for Chinese steel demand (Chart 7). The sector contributes about 23% of Chinese steel consumption. Although the traditional infrastructure investment shows a solid 10% growth, we only assume 7% of growth in the sector’s steel demand. This is because, within the traditional infrastructure sector, two heavy steel consuming subsectors –railway and highway constructions – will register slower growth in their respective investments than overall infrastructure. Chart 8Steel Demand In the Machinery Sector: Likely to Remain In Contraction The 2016-2019 Boom: Only Sales Excavators And Cranes Hit A New High... Machinery production, the third largest steel consuming sector, will remain in contraction because of the depressed property market. Sales of major construction equipment – excavators, loaders, and cranes – have declined 36%, 23%, and 50% year-on-year in 2022H1 (Chart 8). With continuing weakness in the property market, we expect steel demand from machinery producers to be in a similar contraction (10%) over the next six months. Autos and electric appliances together account for about 7.3% of Chinese steel consumption. Weekly data shows Chinese auto sales are in a recovery phase (Chart 9). We expect the sector’s steel use to increase by 8% year-on-year over the next six months based on our projections from our research on the auto industry. Affected by the faltering domestic property market, the outlook for electric appliances is also dismal. The output of air conditioners, freezers, refrigerators, and washing machines is contracting (Chart 10). The expected contraction in global demand for consumer goods will ensure a continuous drop in their production in China, the largest world producer of white goods. We expect these sectors' steel consumption growth to improve from a 9% contraction in 2022H1 to a 5% contraction over the next six months. Chart 9Steel Demand From Auto Sales is Recovering Chart 10Steel Demand by Electric Appliances: Smaller Contraction Ahead Chart 11Steel Demand in Other Sectors: Will Likely Stay in Contraction Other sectors that consume steel include many industrial goods, such as civil steel ships and containers. The shipping industry has boomed during the past two years because of a global increase in goods demand. This also significantly increased demand for metal containers, and to a lesser extent, civil steel ships between 2020 and 2021 (Chart 11). As global trade volumes contract over the next six months, we expect steel consumption in these other sectors to contract by 3% over the same period. What about external demand for Chinese steel? Chinese steel products exports, which account for about 5% of the country’s steel products output, will grow moderately in the next six months. Historically, the Chinese government had provided a VAT rebate of around 13% to encourage steel exports. Last year, it removed such export tax rebates on various steel products in a bid to slow domestic carbon emissions. Chart 12Chinese Steel Exports: Moderate Growth Ahead However, this has not considerably reduced Chinese steel exports. Chinese exports of steel products only had a year-on-year contraction from January to April 2022, largely because of COVID-related shutdowns, and then experienced considerable growth during May-July of the same year (Chart 12). At the same time, Chinese imports of steel products have been contracting since last May. This pattern shows the strong global competitiveness of Chinese steel products. We expect moderate growth in Chinese steel products exports over the next six months, which will be much lower than last year’s growth. In 2021, Chinese steel products exports surged by 25% year-on-year, as steel exporters rushed to export their products to take advantage of the rebates before its removal. Bottom Line: Chinese steel supply is likely to exceed demand over the next six months. This will result in an oversupplied steel market in China, exerting downward pressure on steel prices. …To The Global Iron Ore Market Chart 13Chinese Steel Production: Largely Determines the Country's Iron Ore Imports Iron ore is mainly used in the steel-making process. Limited iron ore supplies within China mean that about 80% of the country’s iron ore demand are satisfied by imports. As a result, variations in Chinese steel production largely determine swings in Chinese iron ore imports (Chart 13). Based on our expectations of the Chinese steel market, we can provide our supply-demand analysis for the global iron ore market. Global Iron Ore Demand While rebounding Chinese steel output will lift the nation’s iron ore consumption, iron ore demand from the rest of the world will shrink materially. Net-net, global iron ore demand will weaken, albeit only marginally over the next six months. Steel production is declining in the world outside China. We expect such contraction will continue into early 2023, as the pandemic-triggered overspending on goods ex-autos reverses (Chart 14). In addition, in Europe, energy rationing and sky-high energy prices will likely lead to defunct mills as a response to reducing their output; hence, their iron ore consumption will tank. Given that Europe accounts for about 10% of world steel production and nearly 50% of its steel production is using electric furnaces,2 this will reduce global iron ore demand. Last year, global steel production excluding China increased by 13% year-on-year, the highest growth since 2011 (Chart 15). This is much higher than the average 2% growth during 2017-2019, reflecting the overconsumption of goods by advanced economies in 2021. Indeed, steel production has already declined for four consecutive months. We expect a year-on-year contraction of about 5% global steel production in the world excluding China over the next six months. Chart 14The World Outside China: Steel Output Will Continue Declining Chart 15Falling DM PMI Signals Weaker Steel Output in the World Outside China Scrap steel is one substitute for iron ore in the steel-making process, but, this time, there will be limited replacement from scrap steel in China. Tight supply of scrap steel and relatively high scrap steel prices will make iron ore more appealing than scrap steel as feedstock for Chinese steel producers over the next several months. Scrap prices are currently high relative to both steel product prices and imported iron ore prices (Chart 16). Chart 16Iron Ore Substitute in China: Limited Scrap Steel Demand in 2022H2 Chart 17China: Domestic Iron Ore Output is Rising Global Iron Ore Supply Global iron ore supply will rise slightly over the next six months. Chinese iron ore output is set to continue increasing as well (Chart 17, top panel). The authorities plan to boost domestic iron ore output by 6.5% per year until 2025. Profit margins for Chinese producers are currently at a multi-year high (Chart 17, bottom panel). This will encourage domestic iron ore production over the next six months.  Currencies in global major iron ore producing countries (Brazil, Australia and South Africa) have depreciated considerably. As a result, iron ore prices in these countries in local currency terms are currently still elevated. This will incentivize more iron ore production and exports by producers in these countries. Bottom Line: Global iron ore supply will increase slightly, while demand will contract slightly over the next six months. This will be negative for iron ore prices. Investment Implications Chart 18Global Mining Stocks and Steelmaker Stock Prices: More Downside Ahead Avoid Global Steel And Mining Stocks For Now Both iron ore and steel prices will likely deflate over the next six months. Hence, global mining stocks and steelmakers stock prices will experience more downside in the coming months (Chart 18). Global ex-China steel producers have benefited from strong steel demand in DM and from surging steel prices (Chart 15 above). As we expect that DM demand for consumer goods will contract over the next six months, steel prices will drop, weighing on global steelmakers’ share prices.  Concerning equity valuations, global mining and steel stocks trade at very low trailing P/E ratios. However, for highly cyclical stocks, such a low trailing P/E ratio is often a sign of peak profits. At peaks of cycles, share prices drop first, while EPS remains elevated, as it is a backward-looking variable. In fact, more often than not, buying these stocks when the P/E ratio is very high and selling them when the P/E ratio is very low has been a very profitable strategy. In short, a low P/E ratio for mining share prices and steel producers is not a reason to be long these stocks. The direction of both the global industrial cycle and steel and iron ore prices is what matters. On both counts, the outlook remains downbeat for now.   Ellen JingYuan He Associate Vice President ellenj@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1     According to the World Steel Association, crude steel is defined as steel in its first solid (or usable) form, including ingots, semi-finished products (billets, blooms, slabs), and liquid steel for castings. 2     The electric furnace is using electricity and scrap steel to produce crude steel. As Europe is facing energy constraint, this will likely affect European steel output greatly. Strategic Themes Cyclical Recommendations