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President Joe Biden’s average monthly approval rating appears to have stabilized, albeit at low levels. The Roe v Wade saga, the rally around the flag amid the Taiwan crisis, and the killing of al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri have all contributed to this…
BCA Research’s US Investment Strategy service expects American households to continue to dip into savings to maintain trend consumption, but inflation has eaten up some of the dry powder. The savings rate has declined considerably so far in 2022,…
S&P 500 Chart 1Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 2Profitability Chart 3Valuations And Technicals Chart 4Uses Of Cash Cyclicals Vs Defensives Chart 5Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 6Profitability Chart 7Valuation And Technicals Chart 8Uses Of Cash Growth Vs Value  Chart 9Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 10Profitability Chart 11Valuations And Technicals Chart 12Uses Of Cash Small Vs Large Chart 13Macroeconomic Backdrop Chart 14Profitability Chart 15Valuations and Technicals Chart 16Uses Of Cash Table 1Performance Table 2Valuations And Forward Earnings Growth Recommended Allocation  
Executive Summary The constructive economic view that has us at odds with the consensus rests on three premises: excess pandemic savings will allow consumption to grow at trend, despite inflation; inflation will soon peak, moving to around 4% by year end; and inflation expectations will remain well anchored, keeping the Fed from moving immediately to stifle the economy. Our consumption thesis remains intact. Real consumption has kept pace despite falling real incomes, thanks to a steady, modest drawdown of excess savings. Though our calls for an inflation peak have been consistently premature, recent data suggest that inflation pressures are abating. Gasoline prices have been falling for seven weeks; the fever has broken in ISM survey price measures; and the labor market, notwithstanding July's potent employment report, is becoming less tight. Longer-run inflation expectations have resisted becoming unmoored despite soaring measured inflation and a breakout does not appear to be imminent. A Mighty Savings Cushion Bottom Line: We continue to expect the economy will be surprisingly resilient, allowing equities to rally further before the Fed squashes the expansion. We doubt the rally will persist very far into 2023, however, so we are reducing equities to equal weight over a twelve-month timeframe. Feature We will be holding our quarterly webcast next Monday, August 15th at 9:00 a.m. Eastern time in lieu of publishing a Weekly Report. Please join us with your questions to make it a fully interactive event. We will resume our regular publication schedule on the 22nd. Last week, an investor we were meeting for the first time asked us how anyone could have published on a weekly basis this year. “Things are so uncertain and they’re moving so fast, how do you keep up? What have you been writing about?” At long last, we felt seen. Feeding the weekly beast is not easy under the best of circumstances and investors know that this year has been far from ideal. Related Report  US Investment StrategyThe High Bar For Getting Worse Once the warm glow of unexpected empathy receded, we replied that we’ve been doing our best to anticipate how the key macro issues will impact financial markets over our cyclical 3-to-12-month timeframe, paying particular attention to consumers, inflation and the Fed. The outlook for consumption has been our primary focus from a growth perspective; we’ve been trying to assess how representative the key drivers of inflation are and how persistent they’ll be; and we’ve continuously monitored longer-run inflation expectations to determine if inflation has gotten far enough into economic agents’ heads to become self-reinforcing and compel the Fed to dislodge it, no matter the near-term economic cost. We review what we see on all three fronts in today’s report, and how events are unfolding relative to our expectations. The direction remains especially uncertain, but our theses remain intact, and we are sticking with our constructive outlook on risk assets and the economy for the rest of the year. We are pulling in our horns on our twelve-month optimism, however, in line with the BCA house view and the dawning realization that twelve months of equity outperformance is overly ambitious. We continue to believe the recession will arrive too late for the gloomy consensus of investors judged by their quarterly performance, forcing them back into risk assets, but the rebound may not persist beyond the FOMC’s first 2023 meeting at the beginning of February. The Consumer’s Staying Power Since CARES Act transfer payments began driving a surge in personal savings, we have viewed them as dry powder to support consumption once households regained the freedom to spend as they see fit. When the payments stopped flowing and the pandemic continued to delay a return to normal, that view came under some fire. We are of the mind that households merely deferred much of the services demand they would otherwise have slaked in 2020 and 2021; others argue that consumption deferred is consumption destroyed, as households will be reluctant to spend windfall transfers that they’d mentally sorted as savings. While it will take a while for data to confirm either thesis, we are encouraged by what we’ve seen so far. The savings rate has declined considerably so far in 2022, supporting the view that households would be willing to reach into their savings to maintain trend consumption (Chart 1). It dipped to 5.2% in the second quarter from 5.6% in the first quarter, well below February 2020’s 8.3% pre-pandemic level and 2011 to 2019’s 7.4% quarterly mean (Chart 2). Based on the series’ stability over the previous nine years, 2020’s and 2021’s forced savings rates amounted to 11- and 6-sigma post-crisis events and this year’s approximately -2.5-sigma drawdown suggests the pendulum has further to swing in the direction of dissaving. We disagree with knee-jerk conclusions that spending in excess of income is unsustainable – it’s plenty sustainable for households who socked away a mountain of savings over the previous eight quarters while bars, restaurants, stadiums, concert venues and resorts were idled. Chart 1Right On Target Chart 22020 And 2021 Savings Were Enormous The estimates of excess savings that we’ve been calculating every month since the summer of 2020 peaked just above $2.3 trillion last August and remained around that level before embarking on a steady decline in the first half to reach our current estimate above $2 trillion (Chart 3, bottom panel). Quoting that figure has been nagging at us lately, however, as one of the two assumptions we used to calculate households’ no-pandemic savings baseline – annualized disposable income growth of 4% – took 2% annual inflation as given, a condition that no longer applies after a twelve-month stretch in which year-over-year CPI inflation has averaged 7.1%. Chart 3Nominal Excess Savings To determine how much households' purchasing power has eroded, we deflated our monthly excess savings estimates to a level equating to 2% annualized inflation (Chart 4, top panel). The adjustment knocked $450 billion off our current estimate, trimming it to $1.6 trillion (Chart 4, bottom panel). Perhaps more importantly for the outlook, our adjustment doubled the year-to-date burn rate to $500 billion. We have always worked with the (deliberately conservative) assumption that households would spend half of their excess savings; if inflation doesn’t decelerate soon, their cushion may not last very far beyond the end of the year. Chart 4Adjusted Excess Savings Bottom Line: Households have been willing to dip into savings to maintain trend consumption so far this year, in line with our hypothesis. We expect they will continue to do so, and the savings rate will remain around 5% or fall even lower, but inflation has eaten up some of their dry powder. Will Inflation Ever Peak? Shredding widely shared expectations that inflation would peak sometime in the first half, the year-over-year increase in headline CPI has kept climbing, all the way to 9% in June. July should finally provide some relief, as the average national retail gasoline price has fallen for seven consecutive weeks and ended July 13% below its June 30 level (Chart 5). Last week’s ISM manufacturing and services PMIs also suggested that inflation has begun to ease its grip somewhat, with the manufacturing input prices series plunging by nearly 20 points to its two-decade mean (Chart 6, top panel) and the services prices component cooling by 8 points, though it remains quite high (Chart 6, bottom panel). Chart 5Four Bucks A Gallon Is High, But Not Unfamiliar Chart 6The Fever May Have Broken ...​​​​​​ Chart 7... Though The Job Market Is Still Quite Hot​​​​​ The tight-as-a-drum labor market has been a fertile source of inflation worries, but there are signs that it is becoming less tight. Job openings remain 40% above their pre-COVID high but declined by 600,000 in June and are 10% off of March’s all-time peak (Chart 7). Elevated quits reveal that it's still easy to get a job, but the net share of small businesses in the NFIB survey planning to hire in the next three months is down 40% from its peak last summer (Chart 8). The July employment report challenged the under-the-radar indicators’ implication that the labor market is cooling, as net payroll expansion reaccelerated along with average hourly earnings growth (Chart 9). We are confident that net payroll growth will slow but compensation clearly has the cyclical wind at its back, and it is not certain that labor’s structural headwind will largely offset it, as per our thesis.   Chart 8Hiring Intentions Are Back To More Normal Levels ... Chart 9... But Wage Growth Remains Elevated Inflation Expectations Longer-run inflation expectations are a critical piece of the puzzle because they are the pathway for rising inflation to become self-reinforcing. If they expect persistently higher inflation, workers will negotiate more fiercely for larger compensation increases to stay ahead of it; businesses will push more vigorously to pass on their increased costs to preserve profit margins; lenders and bond investors will demand higher interest rates to protect their real returns; and consumers will seek to buy more now to get the most from their dwindling purchasing power, exacerbating supply-demand imbalances and keeping the heat on near-term inflation readings. We are therefore closely watching inflation expectations. Market-based measures like TIPS break-evens and CPI swaps shed some light on investor and business expectations, while the monthly University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey offers insight into households’ views. Market-based measures remain well-anchored: intermediate-term expectations as implied by TIPS break-evens are just nosing above the top of the Fed’s preferred 2.3-2.5% range (Chart 10, middle panel) while long-term expectations remain below it, as they have for most of the year (Chart 10, bottom panel). Intermediate- and long-term expectations derived from CPI swaps remain 20 to 30 basis points higher but are in the same position relative to their year-to-date path (Chart 11, bottom two panels). Chart 10Market-Based Inflation Expectations ...​​​​​​ Chart 11... Are Not Problematic​​​​​​ Chart 12Just Say No (To Bottleneck Prices) The Michigan survey doesn’t betray any pressing long-run concerns. The preliminary 3.3% June reading hinting at a breakout turned out to be a false alarm, as June’s final figure was 3.1% and July’s was 2.9%. Survey respondents continue to shun big-ticket purchases because they expect prices will fall from their current levels (Chart 12). 2-year TIPS and swaps price in an optimistic near-term outlook that is likely to be disappointed, as we think inflation will prove to be sticky around the 4% level, and that disappointment could bleed into higher longer-run expectations. While expectations are not problematic now, investors will need to watch them carefully going forward. Investment Implications It was policy, monetary and fiscal, that inspired our bullish turn in 2020 once we digested the COVID shock. We thought the macro backdrop would come down to policymakers versus the virus and our money was on the former. We remained bullish across 2021 on the idea that monetary and fiscal support would remain in place well after they ceased to be necessary. Mindful that there is no such thing as a free lunch, we expected that the emergency pandemic measures would ultimately have the effect of overstimulating demand, but we entered 2022 thinking that equities and credit would enjoy one more year of sizable excess returns over Treasuries and cash before the overstimulation manifested itself. Overweighting (underweighting) equities in a multi-asset portfolio is our default position when monetary policy is easy (tight), though we will override that default when appropriate. We have no appetite for overriding it once it becomes clear that market expectations for 2023 rate cuts are going to be disappointed and tight policy is just around the bend. Given our view that inflation will linger around 4% after easing smartly over the rest of this year, we expect that the Fed will impose restrictive monetary policy settings by the second half of 2023 in its quest to drive inflation back down to its 2% target. Markets’ overly rosy Fed expectations look sure to be disappointed and they could face a reckoning after the FOMC’s January 31-February 1 meeting. Chart 13Consolidation Now, 10%+ By The End Of The Year That meeting could herald an inflection for risk assets’ relative performance and we are therefore joining our colleagues in adopting a neutral 12-month view on equities. We continue to differ from the BCA consensus, however, in expecting a meaningful equity rally before year end. While we expect technical resistance at 4,200 will restrain the S&P 500 in the immediate term (Chart 13), we think it will find its way back into the mid-to-high 4,000s before the Fed signals that it will take the funds rate to 4% or above, dashing hopes for a February peak around 3.5%. We still want to overweight equities in multi-asset portfolios, but only until year-end or 4,500 to 4,600, whichever comes first.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com  
The US Employment Report sent a robust signal about US economic conditions. US nonfarm payroll employment surged by 528 thousand in July – more than twice the amount expected – from an upwardly-revised 398 thousand in June. Job gains were widespread and…
Although US total nonfarm payroll employment and the unemployment rate recovered to their pre-pandemic levels in July (see The Numbers), the participation rate remains 1.3 ppt below where it stood in February 2020. Results from the BLS Household Survey…
The US labor market is extremely tight. There are 1.8 job openings for every unemployed worker. This is a source of upside pressure on inflation as it boosts workers’ bargaining power and ultimately wages and firms’ labor costs. Indeed, the latest employment…
BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service is neutral on the dollar over the next three-to-six months. The drivers of dollar downside have been clear. First, long-term interest rates in the US have fallen substantially. The US 10-year Treasury yield…
Listen to a short summary of this report.     Executive Summary The Euro And The Chinese Credit Impulse The US dollar has bounced off its 50-day moving average. In the recent past, that had led to a period of cyclical strength. The yen rally can be explained by the decline in Treasury yields and the fall in energy prices. Where next for the yen will depend on the time horizon. For investors trying to time the bottom, the euro is not yet a buy, but the common currency is incredibly cheap. Much depends on global/Chinese growth (Feature Chart). One of the key drivers of the dollar is volatility, and the correlation with the MOVE index. Less uncertainty will ease safe-haven demand. Stay short EUR/JPY and CHF/JPY. Remain long EUR/GBP. Maintain a limit sell on CHF/SEK at 10.76. RECOMMENDATIONS inception date RETURN Short EUR/JPY 2022-07-21 3.68 Bottom Line: We are tactically neutral the dollar but will be sellers on strength. Questions And Answers Chart 1Currencies And Yield Differentials It is rare that we receive clients in our Montreal office. This has obviously been doubly the case due to the pandemic and the general hassle of travel nowadays. But when we do, it is a delight. In this week’s report, we got asked a few difficult questions on a tea date. The most important was not surprisingly the dollar view, but also our highest conviction trades in FX markets. We enjoyed the conversation and the intellectual debate, so we thought we would share this with our clients. Hopefully, this answers some of the most pressing questions. We have sliced this into as brief and concise a conversation as we could. Question: It is hard not to notice the steep decline in the dollar over the last few weeks. Should we fade this decline or lean into it? That is a tough question, but our educated guess is to fade it for now. That said, longer-term asset allocators should really be looking at buying extremely cheap G10 currencies on any declines. The drivers of dollar downside have been clear. First, long-term interest rates in the US have fallen substantially. The US 10-year Treasury yield has fallen from 3.5% to 2.7%. In real terms, they have also declined. The 10-year TIPS yield has fallen from 0.85% to 0.23%. On a relative basis, the market is also pricing in that the Fed will cut interest rates next year much faster than other central banks. More simply put, 2-year real bond yields in the US are rolling over, relative to the euro area and Japan, the biggest components of the DXY index (Chart 1). Related Report  Foreign Exchange StrategyHow Deep A Recession Is The Dollar Pricing In? Specific to Japan and the euro area, there has also been another critical factor – the decline in energy import costs. Germany’s trade balance improved markedly in June (Chart 2). This has been the first genuine improvement in a year. There is also discussion to extend the life of existing nuclear power plants, which will help assuage energy import costs. In Japan, trade balance data comes out on Monday next week, so we will see what it reveals. But what has been clear is a political drive to restart nuclear power and wean the Japanese economy off its dependence on oil and gas (Chart 3). Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida has been very vocal about this in recent speeches. Chart 2Euro Area And Japanese Trade Balances Are Improving Chart 3A Nuclear Renaissance In Japan? Turning to the more important part of your question, should we fade the decline or lean into it? We are of two minds on this to be honest, and here is why. The DXY has bounced off its 50-day moving average, which has been a sign in the past that the rally is not over (Chart 4). Our Geopolitical and Commodity & Energy colleagues are telling us not to trust the decline in oil prices. Our bond strategists think US yields are heading higher, with a whisper floor of 2.5%. Chart 4The DXY Has Support At The 50-Day Moving Average Given these crosscurrents, there are many better opportunities that exist in FX at the crosses, rather than playing the dollar outright. But of course, the dollar call is critical. We would be neutral over the next three-to-six months but be incremental sellers of the dollar on strength. Question: Okay, neutral dollar for now, but bearish long term. We tend to consider longer-term investments as well, and we are confused about the euro, but even more so about the yen. Would you buy the yen today? If so, why? Our starting point for many currencies is valuation. On this basis, the yen is incredibly cheap. So, if you have a five-to-ten-year horizon, you can unlock incredible value in Japan, simply on a buy-and-hold basis. Our in-house curated model shows that the yen is at a multi-general low in value terms (Chart 5). Currencies mean-revert. Consider this for a minute – we are not equity experts, but Toyota trades at a P/E of 10.75, while Tesla trades at a P/E of 109.15. And yes, Toyota has electric cars. Chart 5The Japense Yen Is Incredibly Cheap Chart 6The Yen Is A Favorite Short It is true that a winner-takes-all mantra can be attributed to Tesla’s valuation over Toyota, but our colleagues in the Global Investment Strategy are telling us this era is over. As such, at a 40% discount, the yen is a long-term buy in our books. Interestingly, nobody likes the yen, at least by our preferred measure – net speculative positions. It is one of the most shorted G10 currencies (Chart 6). A cheap currency that is the most shorted ranks quite well in our evaluation of bargains in currency markets. Given my discussion above about the dollar, we have played the yen at the crosses. We are short EUR/JPY and CHF/JPY. On the euro, Japanese car manufacturers are simply becoming more competitive than their eurozone or US counterparts. This is not only related to the car industry, but according to the OECD, EUR/JPY is expensive on a purchasing power parity basis (Chart 7). Meanwhile, a short EUR/JPY trade is a perfect hedge for a pro-cyclical portfolio. The DXY index has historically traded in perfect inverse correlation to the euro-yen exchange rate (Chart 8). This suggests the collapse in the yen, relative to the euro, is very much overdone. In a risk-off environment, EUR/JPY will sell off. Meanwhile, there are also fundamental reasons to suggest that the yen should trade higher vis-à-vis the euro. Chart 7Remain Short ##br##EUR/JPY Chart 8The DXY And EUR/JPY Usually Track Each Other Question: Okay, let’s switch to the euro. I know you are short EUR/JPY, which has been working out well in the last few days. But the euro touched parity and I get a sense that it has bottomed. You have often mentioned that the euro has priced in one of the deepest recessions in the eurozone. I am surprised you are not trumpeting this currency and a once-in-a-lifetime buying opportunity. We agree somewhat with your conclusion but not the premise. Let’s consider the narrative over the last few months in the media. The first was that eurozone inflation will never catch up to the US, because the economy was structurally weak. Well, it did, albeit due to an exogenous shock.  So, among a ranking of stagflationary candidates, the euro area is a top contender. If you believe in the idea that currencies are driven by real interest rates, rising inflation, and falling growth are an anathema for the exchange rate. When we typically have doubts about the euro area economy, and the outlook for its financial markets, we consult with our European Investment Strategy colleagues. We did just that and Mathieu Savary, who heads the service, mentioned two things: one – Chinese import volumes are imploding. For net creditor nations, this is a negative as their source of income is waning. The euro area falls into that category. The second thing to consider is that the dollar is a momentum currency. So is the euro. We mentioned earlier that the dollar bounced off its 50-day moving average, which explains euro weakness in recent trading days. In the end, Mathieu and the FX team did not really disagree, but I highlighted two charts to track. The euro tracks the Chinese credit impulse due to the importance of Chinese import demand for the euro area. It looks like our measure of that impulse has bottomed (Chart 9). If it has, you buy the euro on a long-term view. Relatedly, financial conditions are easing in China. As the Chinese bond market becomes more open and liberalized, bond yields become a financial conditions valve. That has been the case and has perfectly tracked the propensity for imports in the last few years (Chart 10). Chart 9The Euro And The Chinese Credit Impulse Chart 10Financial Conditions Are Easing In China In short, we will buy the euro if it touches parity, and even more so below parity with a 5–10-year view, but we think EUR/USD could touch 0.95 in the near term. I guess what we are saying is that a 5%-7% move is big in FX markets, but a 26% move (the undervaluation of the euro) is a whale. We do not see the catalyst for a whale in our current compass. Question: We have talked about the yen and the euro. I do not want to get into the pound, Australian dollar, and other currencies as you have told me your team has upcoming reports on those. But the Chinese yuan is very important in my investment portfolio. Any ideas on its next move? USD/CNY topped out near 6.8 in May. Since then, it has been in a trading range despite the DXY breaking to multi-decade highs (Chart 11). When a pattern like this emerges, it is always useful to revisit fundamentals. Those fundamentals are real interest rate differentials. We care about the yuan because China is a big trading partner of the US. As such, it is also a huge weight in the broad trade-weighted dollar index. China has huge problems, especially related to the property market, which need to be resolved. Bond yields have also collapsed. But the real interest rate in China is very attractive (Chart 12). It is also important to consider that if the dollar is the global safe haven, that means that the yuan could be becoming the haven in Asia. So, yuan downside is not a big risk for our long-term dollar bearish call. That said, we will be short CNY versus the yen, but not the dollar. Chart 11The RMB Has Been Relatively Resilient Chart 12The RMB Has Undershot Real Rate Differentials Question: I think I could sit with you all morning to discuss other aspects of FX,  but I respect you have a tight stop due to the BLU meeting. Any concluding thoughts? I have one. Very often, we debate with our colleagues about capital flows. The dollar rises (in general), as capital inflows accelerate into the US and vice versa. It is often said that getting the dollar call right gets everything else right. So, if you can predict the path of the dollar, the performance of, say, US versus non-US equities becomes easy. Chart 13The Dollar And Earnings Revisions We agree that the dollar is a real-time indicator of relative fundamentals. But here is one important observation: relative earnings revisions are deteriorating in the US vis-à-vis other countries (Chart 13). That has historically had an impact on exchange rates, as it affects equity capital flows. If the Federal Reserve also cut rates next year as the market is predicting, that will also be a negative for bond inflows. We think the global economy will avoid a deep recession, and that will allow growth to pick up outside the US. When the euro area and China bottom, then the dollar will truly peak, as capital flows to these economies will accelerate. So we are watching relative earnings and bond yield differentials closely.   Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Forecast Summary
The Bank of England hiked interest rates by 50bps on Thursday, lifting the bank rate to 1.75% with the majority (8-1) of the MPC voting in favor of the outsized increase. Revisions to the forecast indicate that the central bank is facing a challenging task.…