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  The BCA Research Global Asset Allocation (GAA) Forum will take place online on May 18th. We have put together a great lineup of speakers to discuss issues of importance to CIOs and asset allocators. These include the latest thinking on portfolio construction, factor investing, alternatives, and ESG. Our keynote speaker will be Keith Ambachtsheer, founder of KPA Advisory and author of many books on investment management including "The Future of Pension Management: Integrating Design, Governance and Investing" (2016). His presentation will be followed by a panel discussion of top CIOs including Maxime Aucoin of CDPQ, James Davis of OPTrust, and Catherine Ulozas of the Drexel University Endowment. The event is complimentary for all GAA subscribers, who can see a full agenda and register here. Others can sign up here. We hope you can join us on May 18th for what should be a stimulating and informative day of ideas and discussion. Highlights Recommended Allocation Global growth will rebound later this year, fueled by an end of lockdowns and generous fiscal stimulus. Despite that, central banks will not move towards tightening until 2023 at the earliest. This remains a very positive environment for risk assets like equities, though the upside is inevitably limited given stretched valuations. We continue to recommend a risk-on position, with overweights in equities and higher-risk corporate bonds. It is unlikely that long-term rates will rise much further over the coming months. But there is a risk that they could, and so we become more wary on interest-sensitive assets. Accordingly, we cut our overweight on the IT sector to neutral, and go overweight Financials. We continue to prefer cyclical sectors, and stay overweight Industrials and Energy. Chinese growth is slowing and so we cut our recommendation on Chinese equities to underweight. Some Emerging Markets will suffer from tighter US financial conditions, so we would be selective in our positions in both EM equity and debt. We stay firmly underweight government bonds, and recommend an underweight on duration, and favor linkers. Within alternatives, we raise Private Equity to overweight. The return to normality will give PE funds a wider range of opportunities, and allow them to pick up distressed assets at attractive valuations. Overview What Higher Rates Mean For Asset Allocation The past few months have seen a sharp rise in long-term interest rates everywhere (Chart 1). These have reflected better growth prospects, but also a greater appreciation of the risk of inflation over the next few years (Chart 2). Our main message in this Quarterly Portfolio Outlook is that we do not expect long-term rates to rise much further over the coming months, but that there is a risk that they could. This would be unlikely to undermine the positive case for risk assets overall, but it would affect asset allocation towards interest-rate sensitive assets such as growth stocks and Emerging Markets, and could have an impact on the US dollar. Chart 1Rates Are Rising Everywhere Chart 2...Because Of Both Growth And Inflation Expectations     We accordingly keep our recommendation for an overweight on equities and riskier corporate credit on the 12-month investment horizon, but are tweaking some of our other allocation recommendations. The macro environment for the rest of the year continues to look favorable. Pent-up consumer demand will be released once lockdowns end. In the US, this should be mid-July by when, at the current rate, the US will have vaccinated enough people to achieve herd immunity (Chart 3). Excess household savings in the major developed economies have reached almost $3 trillion (Chart 4). At least a part of that will be spent when consumers can go out for entertainment and travel again. Chart 3US On Track To Hit Herd Immunity By July Chart 4Global Excess Savings Total Trillion     Fiscal stimulus remains generous, especially in the US after the passing of the $1.9 trillion package in March (with another $2 trillion dedicated towards infrastructure spending likely to be approved within the next six months). The OECD estimates that the recent US stimulus alone will boost US GDP growth by almost 3 percentage points in the first full year and have a significant knock-on effect on other economies (Chart 5). Central banks, too, remain wary of the uneven and fragile nature of the recovery and so will not move towards tightening in the next 12 months. The Fed is not signalling a rate hike before 2024 – and it is likely to be the first major central bank to raise rates. In this environment, it is not surprising that long-term rates have risen. We showed in March’s Monthly Portfolio Update that, since 1990, equities have almost always performed strongly when rates are rising. This is likely to continue unless there is either (1) an inflation scare, or (2) the Fed turns more hawkish than the market believes is appropriate. Inflation could spike temporarily over the coming months, which might spook markets (see What Our Clients Are Asking on page 9 for more discussion of this). But sustained inflation is improbable until the labor market recovers to a level where significant wage increases come through (Chart 6). This is unlikely before 2023 at the earliest. Chart 5US Fiscal Stimulus Will Help Everyone Chart 6Labor Market Still Well Away From Full Employment   BCA Research’s fixed-income strategists do not see the US 10-year Treasury yield rising much above 1.8% this year.1 Inflation expectations should settle down around the current level (shown in Chart 2, panel 2) which is consistent with the Fed achieving its 2% PCE inflation target on average over the cycle. Treasury yields are largely driven by whether the Fed turns out to be more or less hawkish than the market expects (Chart 7). The market is already pricing in the first Fed rate hike in Q3 2022 (Chart 8). We think it unlikely that the market will start to price in an earlier hike than that. Chart 7The Fed Unlikely To Hike Ahead Of What Market Expects... Chart 8...Since This Is As Early As Q3 2022 How much would a further rise in rates hurt the economy and stock market? Rates are still well below a level that would trigger problems. First, long-term rates are considerably below trend nominal GDP growth, which is around 3.5% (Chart 9). Second, short-term real rates are well below r* – hard though that is to measure at the moment given the volatility of the economy in the past 12 months (Chart 10). Finally, one of the best indicators of economic pressure is a decline in cyclical sectors (consumer spending on durables, corporate capex, and residential investment) as a percentage of GDP (Chart 11). This is because these are the most interest-rate sensitive parts of the economy. But, at the moment, consumers are so cashed up they do not need to borrow to spend. The same is true of corporates, which raised huge amounts of cash last year. The only potential problem is real estate, buoyed last year by low rates which are now reversing (Chart 12). But mortgage rates are still very low and this is not a big enough sector to derail the broader economy. Chart 9Long-Term Rates Well Below Damaging Levels... Chart 10...Such As The R-Star   Chart 11Interest-Rate Sensitive Sectors Are Robust... Chart 12...With The Possible Exception Of Housing   Chart 13Debt Levels Are High In Emerging Markets... Chart 14...Which Makes Them Vulnerable To Tightening Financial Conditions         This sanguine view may not apply to Emerging Markets, however. Given the amount of foreign-currency debt they have built up in the past decade (Chart 13), they are very sensitive to US financial conditions, particularly a rise in rates and an appreciation of the US dollar (Chart 14). Accordingly, we have become more cautious on the outlook for both EM equity and debt over the next 6-12 months.   Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com   What Our Clients Are Asking What will happen to inflation? How can we tell if it is trending up? Chart 15Watch The Trimmed Mean Inflation Measure How much inflation rises will be a key driver of asset performance over the next 12-18 months. Too much inflation will push up long-term rates and undermine the case for risk assets. But the picture is likely to be complicated. US inflation will rise sharply in year-on-year terms in March and April because of the base effect (comparison with the worst period of the pandemic in 2020), pricier gasoline, rising import prices due to the weaker dollar, and supply-chain bottlenecks that are pushing up manufacturing costs. Core PCE inflation could get close to 2.5% year-on-year (Chart 15, panel 1). In the second half, too, an end to lockdowns could push up service-sector inflation – which has unsurprisingly been weak in the past nine months – as consumers rush out to restaurants and on vacation (panel 3). The Fed has signalled that it will view these as temporary effects. But they may spook the market for a while. Next year, however, it would be surprising to see strong underlying inflation unless employment makes a miraculous recovery. Payrolls would have to increase by 420,000 a month to get back to “maximum employment” by end-2022.2 Absent that, wage growth is likely to stay muted. Conventional inflation gauges may not be very useful at indicating underlying inflation pressures, in a world where consumers switch their spending depending on what is currently allowed under pandemic regulations. The Dallas Fed’s Trimmed Mean Inflation indicator (which excludes the 31% of the 178 items in the consumer basket with the highest price rises each month, and the 24% with the lowest) may be the best true measure. Research shows that historically it has been closer to trend headline PCE inflation in the long run than the core inflation measure, and predicts future inflation better (panel 4). Currently it is at 1.6% year-on-year and trending down. Investors should focus on this measure to see whether rising inflation is becoming a risk.   How can investors best protect against rising inflation? In May 2019 we released a report describing how to best to hedge against inflation.3 In that report, we analyzed every period of rising inflation dating back to the 1970s. Our conclusions were the following: The level of inflation will determine how rising inflation affects assets. When inflation goes from 1% to 2%, the macro environment is entirely different from when it goes from 5% to 6%. Thus, inflation hedging should not be thought of as a static exercise but a dynamic one (Table 1). Table 1Winners During Different Inflationary Regimes As long as the annual inflation rate is below about 3%, equities tend to be the best performing asset during high inflation periods, surpassing even commodities. This is because monetary policy tends to stay accommodative and cost pressures remain benign for most companies. However, as inflation passes this threshold, things start to change. Central banks start to become restrictive as they seek to curb inflation. This rise in policy rates starts to choke off the bull market. Meanwhile cost pressures become more significant and, as a result, equities begin to suffer. It is at this time when commodities – particularly oil and industrial metals – and US TIPS become a much better asset to hold. Finally, if the central bank fails to quash inflation, inflation expectations become unanchored, creating a toxic cocktail of rising prices and poor growth. During such periods, the best strategy is to hold the most defensive securities in each asset class, such as Health Care or Utilities within the equity market, or gold within commodities.   Can the shift to renewables drive a new commodities supercycle? Chart 16The Shift To Renewables Is Likely To Be A Tailwind For Metal Prices... The rise in commodity prices in H2 2020 has made investors ask whether we are on the verge of a new commodities “supercycle” (Chart 16). Our Commodity & Energy strategists argue that the fundamental drivers of each commodities segment differ. Here we focus on industrial metals – particularly those pertaining to renewable energy and transport electrification. Prices of metals used in electric vehicles (EVs) have risen by an average 53% since July 2020, reflecting strong demand that is outstripping supply (Chart 16). In the short-term, metals markets are likely to be in deficit, especially as demand recovers after the pandemic. Modelling longer-term demand is tricky since it relies on assumptions for the emergence of new technologies, metals’ efficiency, recycling rates, and the share of renewables. A study by the Institute for Sustainable Futures showed that, in the most positive scenarios, demand for some metals will exceed available resources and reserves (Table 2).4 The most pessimistic scenarios – which, for example, assume no major electrification of the transport system – show demand at approximately half of available resources. It is likely that demand will lay somewhere between those scenarios. Table 2...As Future Demand Exceeds Supply Supply is concentrated in a handful of countries: For example, the DR Congo is responsible for more than 65% of cobalt production and 50% of the world’s reserves;5 Australia supplies almost 50% of the world’s lithium and has 22% of its reserves.6 Production bottlenecks could therefore put significant upside pressures on prices. Factoring in supply/demand dynamics, as well as an assessment of future technological advancements, we conclude that industrial metals might be posed for a bull market over the upcoming years.   How can we add alpha in the bond bear market? Chart 17Government Bond Yield Sensitivities To USTs For a portfolio benchmarked to the global Treasury index, one way to add alpha is through country allocation. BCA’s Fixed Income Strategy recommends overweighting low yield-beta countries (Germany, France, and Japan) and underweighting high yield-beta countries (Canada, Australia, and the UK).7 The yield beta is defined as the sensitivity of a country’s yield change to changes in the US 10-year Treasury yield, as shown in Chart 17. BCA’s view is that the Fed will be the first major central bank to lift interest rate, therefore investors' underweights should be concentrated in the US Treasury index. It’s worth noting, however, that yield beta is influenced by many factors, and can change over time. When applying this approach, it’s important to pay attention to key factors in each country, especially those that are critical to central bank policy decisions (Table 3). Table 3A Watch List For Bond Investors Global Economy Chart 18US Growth Already Looks Strong... Overview: Growth continues to recover from the pandemic, although the pace varies. Manufacturing has rebounded strongly, as consumers spend their fiscal handouts on computer and household equipment, but services remain very weak, especially in Europe and Japan. Successful vaccination programs and the end of lockdowns in many countries should lead to strong growth in H2, as consumers spend their accumulated savings and companies increase capex to meet this demand. Perhaps the biggest risk to growth is premature tightening in China, but the authorities there are very aware of this risk and so it is unlikely to drag much on global growth. US: Although the big upside surprises to economic growth are over (Chart 18, panel 1), the US continues to expand more strongly than other major economies, due to its relatively limited lockdowns and large fiscal stimulus (which last year and this combined reached 25% of GDP, with another $2 trillion package in the works). Fed NowCasts suggest that Q1 GDP will come in at around 5-6% quarter-on-quarter annualized, with the OECD’s full-year GDP growth forecast as high as 6.5%. Nonetheless, there is still some way to go: Consumer expenditure and capex remain weak by historical standards, and new jobless claims in March still averaged 727,000 a week. Euro Area: More stringent pandemic regulations and slow vaccine rollout mean that the European service sector has been slow to recover. The services PMI in March was still only 48.4, though manufacturing has rebounded strongly to 64.2 (Chart 19, panel 1). Fiscal stimulus is also much smaller than in the US, with the EUR750 billion approved in December to be spent mostly on infrastructure over a period of years. Growth should rebound in H2 if lockdowns end and the vaccination program accelerates. But the OECD forecasts full-year GDP growth of only 3.9%. Chart 19...But Chinese Growth Has Probably Peaked Japan has seen the weakest rebound among the major economies, slightly puzzlingly so given its heavy weight in manufacturing and large exposure to the Chinese economy. Industrial production still shrank 3% year-on-year in February (Chart 19, panel 2), exports were down 4.5% YoY in February, and the manufacturing PMI is barely above 50. The main culprit remains domestic consumption, with confidence very weak and wages still declining, leading to a 2.4% YoY decline in retail sales in January. The OECD full-year GDP growth forecast is just 2.4%. Emerging Markets: The Chinese authorities have been moderately tightening policy for six months and this is starting to impact growth. Both the manufacturing and services PMIs have peaked, though they remain above 50 (panel 3). The policy tightening is likely to be only moderate and so growth this year should not slow drastically. Nonetheless, there remains the risk of a policy mistake. Elsewhere, many EM central banks are struggling with the dilemma of whether to cut rates to boost growth, or raise rates to defend a weakening currency. Real policy rates range from over 2% in Indonesia to below -2% in Brazil and the Philippines. This will add to volatility in the EM universe. Interest Rates: Policy rates in developed economies will not rise any time soon. The Fed is signalling no rise until 2024 (although the futures are now pricing in the first hike in Q3 2022). Other major central banks are likely to wait even longer. A crucial question is whether long-term rates will rise further, after the jump in the US 10-year Treasury yield to a high of 1.73%, from 0.92% at the start of the year. We see only limited upside in yields over the next nine months, as underlying inflation pressures should remain weak and central banks will remain highly reluctant to bring forward the pace of monetary policy normalization.   Global Equities Chart 20Has The Equity Market Priced In All The Earnings Growth? The global equities index eked out a 4% gain in Q1 2021, completely driven by a rebound in the profit outlook, since the forward PE multiple slightly contracted by 4%. Forward EPS has now recovered to the pre-pandemic level, while both the index level and PE multiple are 52% and 43% higher than at the end of March 2020 (Chart 20). While BCA’s global earnings model points to nearly 20% earnings growth over the next 12 months and analysts are still revising up earnings forecasts, the key question in our mind is whether the equity market has priced in all the earnings growth. Equity valuations are still not cheap by historical standards despite the small contraction in PEs in Q1. In addition, the VIX index has come down to 19.6, right at its historical average since January 1990, and profit margins in both EM and DM have come under pressure. As an asset class, however, stocks are still attractively valued compared to bonds (panel 5). Given our long-held approach of taking risk where risk will most likely be rewarded, we remain overweight equities versus bonds at the asset-class level, but we are taking some risk off the table in our country and sector allocations by downgrading China to underweight (from overweight) and upgrading the UK to overweight (from neutral), and by taking profits in our Tech overweight and upgrading Financials to overweight (see next two pages). To sum up, we are overweight the US and UK, underweight Japan, the euro area, and China, while neutral on Canada, Australia, and non-China EM. Sector-wise, we are overweight Industrials, Financials, Energy, and Health Care; underweight Consumer Staples, Utilities, and Real Estate; and neutral on Tech, Consumer Discretionary, Communication Services, and Materials.   Country Allocation: Downgrade China To Underweight From Overweight Chart 21China Is Risking Overtightening We started to separate the overall EM into China and Other EM in the January Monthly Portfolio Update this year. We initiated China with an Overweight and “Other EM” with a Neutral weighting in the global equity portfolio. The key rationale was that Chinese growth would remain strong in H1 2021 due to its earlier stimulus, while some EM countries would benefit from Chinese growth but others were still suffering from structural issues. In Q1, China underperformed the global benchmark by 4.5%, while the other EM markets underperformed slightly. China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) indicated that Chinese policymakers will gradually pull back policy support this year. BCA’s China Investment Strategists think that fiscal thrust will be neutral in 2021 while credit expansion will be at a lower rate compared to 2020. The Chinese economy should remain strong in H1 but will slow to a benign and managed growth rate afterwards. Therefore, the risk of policy overtightening is not trivial and could threaten China’s economic growth and corporate profit outlook. The outperformance of Chinese stocks since the end of 2019 has been largely driven by multiple expansion (Chart 21, panel 1), but the slowdown in the credit impulse implies that the recent underperformance of Chinese equities has not run its course because multiple contraction will likely have to catch up and will therefore put more downward pressure on price (panels 2 and 3). We remain neutral on the non-China EM countries, implying an underweight for the overall EM universe. We use the proceeds to fund an upgrade of the UK to Overweight from Neutral because the UK index is comprised largely of globally exposed companies and because we have upgraded GBP to overweight (see page 21).   Sector Allocation: Upgrade Financials To Overweight By Downgrading Tech To Neutral Chart 22Financials And Tech: Trading Places One year ago, we upgraded Tech to overweight and downgraded Financials to neutral given our views on the impact of the pandemic and interest rates.8 This position has netted out an alpha of 1123 basis points in one year. BCA Research’s House View now calls for somewhat higher global interest rates and steeper yield curves (especially in the US) over the next 9-12 months. Accordingly, we are downgrading Tech to neutral and upgrading Financials to overweight. Financials have outperformed the broad market by about 20% since September 2020 after global yields bottomed in July 2020. We do not expect yields to rise significantly from the current level, nor do we expect Tech earnings growth to slow significantly (Chart 22, panel 5). So why do we make such shift between Financials and Tech? There are three key reasons: First, the Tech sector is a long-duration asset with high sensitivity to changes in the discount rate. In contrast, Financials’ earnings benefit from steepening yield curves. If history is any guide, we should see more aggressive analyst earnings revisions going forward in favor of Financials (Chart 22, panel 3). Second, the performance of Financials relative to Tech has been on a long-term structural downtrend since the Global Financial Crisis. A countertrend rebound to the neutral zone from the currently very oversold level would imply further upside (Chart 22, panel 1). Last, Financials are trading at an extremely large discount to the Tech sector (Chart 22, panel 2). In an environment where overall equity valuations are stretched by historical standards, it is prudent to rotate into an extremely cheap sector from an extremely expensive sector.   Government Bonds Chart 23Policy Mix Is Bond-Bearish Maintain Below-Benchmark Duration. Global bond yields have climbed sharply in Q1, supported by strong economic growth, mostly smooth rollout of vaccination and the Biden Administration’s very stimulative fiscal package of USD1.9 trillion. The US stimulus package changes the trajectory of the 2021 US fiscal impulse from a $0.8 trillion contraction to a $0.3 trillion expansion, according to estimates from the US Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. Going forward, the path of least resistance for global yields is still up, though the upside will be limited given the resolve of central banks to maintain accommodative monetary policies (Chart 23). Chart 24Stay Long TIPS Still Favor Linkers Vs. Nominal Bonds. Our overweight position in inflation-linked bonds relative to nominal bonds has panned out well so far this year, as has our positioning for a flattening inflation-protection curve. Even though inflation expectations have run up quickly, the 5 year-5 year forward inflation breakeven rate is still below 2.3-2.5%, the range that is consistent with core PCE reaching the Fed’s 2% target in a sustainable fashion (Chart 24). The US TIPS 5/10-year curve is inverted already, but our fixed income strategists are still reluctant to exit the curve-flattening position for two key reasons: 1) The Fed has indicated that it will tolerate core PCE overshooting the 2% target because it will try to hit the target from above rather than from below; and 2) the short end of the inflation expectation curve is more sensitive to actual inflation than the long end. There are signs (core producer prices, prices paid in the ISM manufacturing survey, and NFIB reported prices are all rising) that core PCE will reach 2% in the next 12 months.   Corporate Bonds Chart 25High-Yield Offers Best Value In Fixed Income Since the beginning of the year, investment-grade bonds have outperformed duration-matched Treasurys by 62 basis points, while high-yield bonds have outperformed duration-marched Treasurys by 232 basis points. In the current reflationary environment, we believe that the best strategy within fixed-income portfolios is to overweight low-duration assets and maximize credit exposure where the spread makes a large portion of the yield. Thus, we remain overweight high-yield bonds. We believe that high yield offers much better value than higher quality credits. Currently spreads for high-yield bonds are in the middle of their historical distribution – a stark contrast from their investment-grade counterparts, which are trading at very expensive levels (Chart 25, panel 1). Moreover, the reopening of the economy should help the more cyclical sectors of the bond market, where the lower credit qualities are concentrated. But could a rise in yields start hurting sub-investment-grade companies and increase their borrowing costs? We do not think this is likely for now. Most of the bonds in the US high-yield index mature in more than three years, which means that high-risk corporates will not have to finance themselves with higher rates yet (Chart 25, panel 2). On the other hand, we remain underweight investment-grade credit. Not only are these bonds expensive, but they offer very little upside in any scenario. On the one hand, these bonds should underperform further if raise continue to rise – a result of their high duration. On the other hand, if a severe recession were to hit, spreads would most likely widen, which will also result in underperformance.   Commodities Chart 26Limited Upside For Oil From Here Energy (Overweight): Despite the recent mid-March selloff, which was most likely triggered by profit taking, oil prices are still up 25% since the beginning of the year. This happened on the back of the restoration of some economic activity, the OPEC 2.0 coalition maintaining production discipline and therefore keeping supply in check, and the recovery in crude demand drawing down inventory. However, earlier forecasts of the 2021 oil demand recovery were a bit too optimistic amid continuing pandemic uncertainty. There is now, therefore, only limited upside for the oil price, at least this year. Our Commodity & Energy strategists expect the Brent crude price to average $65/bbl this year (Chart 26, panels 1 & 2). Industrial Metals (Neutral): We have previously highlighted that Chinese restocking activity in 2020 was a big factor behind the rally in industrial metals prices. As this eases, and Chinese growth slows, commodity prices might correct somewhat in the short term. However, fundamental changes in demand for alternative energy makes us ask whether we are now entering a new commodities “supercycle” for certain metals (for more analysis of this, see What Our Clients Are Asking on page 11). If history is any guide, however, the commodities bear market may have a little longer to run. Historically, commodity bear cycles lasted 17 years on average and we are only 10 years into this one (panel 3). On balance, therefore, we remain neutral on industrial metals for now. Precious Metals (Neutral): After peaking last August, the gold price has continued to tumble, down almost 19% since and 11% since the beginning of the year. We have been wary of the metal’s lofty valuation – the real price of gold remains near a historical high. The recent rise in real rates put more downside pressure on gold. However, the pullback in prices should provide investors who see gold as a long-term inflation hedge and do not buy the metal with a view to strong absolute performance over the next 12 months, with an attractive entry point. We maintain a slight overweight position to hedge against inflation and unexpected tail risks (panel 4).   Currencies US Dollar Chart 27Vaccinations will help USD and GBP in 2021 While we still believe that the dollar is in a major bear market, the current environment could see a significant dollar countertrend. Thanks to its gargantuan fiscal stimulus as well as its relatively fast vaccination campaign, the US is likely to grow faster than the rest of the world during 2021 (Chart 27, panel 1). This dynamic should put further upward pressure on US real rates relative to the rest of the world, helping the dollar in the process. To hedge this risk, we are upgrading the US dollar from underweight to neutral in our currency portfolio. Euro The euro should experience a temporary pullback. Economic activity in Europe, particularly in the service sector is lagging the US – a consequence of Europe’s slow vaccination campaign. This sluggishness in economic activity will translate into a worse real rate differential vis-a-vis the US, dragging the euro lower in the process. Thus, we are downgrading the euro from overweight to neutral. British Pound One currency that might perform well in this environment is the British pound. Consumer spending in the UK was particularly hard hit during the pandemic, since such a high share of it is geared towards social activities like restaurants and hotels (Chart 27, panel 2). However, thanks to Britain’s successful vaccination campaign, UK consumption is likely to experience a sharp snapback. As growth expectations improve, real rates should grind higher vis-à-vis the rest of the world, pushing the pound higher. Moreover, valuations for this currency are attractive: The pound currently trades at a 10% discount to purchasing power parity fair value. As a result, we are upgrading the GBP from neutral to overweight.   Alternatives Chart 28Turning More Positive On Private Equity Return Enhancers: In last October’s Quarterly Outlook, we advised investors to prepare for new opportunities in Private Equity (PE) as fund managers look to deploy record high dry power. A gradual return to normality is likely to provide PE funds with a wider range of opportunities, while still allowing them to pick up distressed assets at attractive valuations. This is illustrated by the annualized quarterly returns of PE funds in Q2 and Q3 2020, which reached 43% and 56% respectively. PE funds raised in recession and early-cycle years tend to have a higher median net IRR than those raised in the latter stages of bull markets. This suggests that returns from the 2020 and 2021 vintages should be strong. In recent years, capital flows have increasingly gone to the longer established and larger funds, which tend to have better access to the most attractive deals and therefore record the strongest returns. This trend is likely to continue. Given the time it takes to shift allocations in private assets, we increase our recommended allocation in PE to overweight. Inflation Hedges: It is not clear that inflation will come roaring back in the next couple of years. But what is certain is that market participants are concerned about this risk, which should give a boost to inflation-hedge assets. Given this backdrop, we continue to favor commodity futures (Chart 28, panel 2). In other circumstances, real estate would also have been a beneficiary in this environment. But the slowdown in commercial real estate, as many corporate tenants review whether they need expensive city-center space, makes us remain cautious on real estate. Volatility Dampeners: We continue to favor farmland and timberland over structured products, particularly mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Farmland offers attractive yields and should continue to provide the best portfolio protection in the event of any market distress (Chart 28, panel 3).   Risks To Our View The main risks to our central view are to the downside. Because global equities have risen by 55% over the past 12 months, and with the forward PE of the MSCI ACWI index at 19.5x (Chart 29), the room for price appreciation over the next 12 months is inevitably limited. There are several things that could undermine the economic recovery and equity bull market. The COVID-19 pandemic remains the greatest unknown. The vaccination rollout has been very uneven (Chart 30). New strains, especially the one first identified in Brazil, are highly contagious and people who previously had COVID-19 do not seem to have immunity against them. Behavior once COVID cases decline is also hard to predict. Will people be happy again to fly, attend events in large stadiums, and socialize in crowded bars, or will many remain wary for years? This would undermine the case for a strong rebound in consumption. Chart 29Is Perfection Priced In? Chart 30Vaccination Has Been Spotty Vaccination Has Been Spotty   Chart 31China Slowing Again? As often, a slowdown in China is a risk. The authorities there have signalled a pullback in stimulus, and the credit impulse has begun to slow (Chart 31). Our China strategists think the authorities will be careful not to tighten too drastically (with the fiscal thrust expected to be neutral this year), and that growth will slow only to a benign and moderate rate in the second half.9 But there is a lot of room for policy error. Finally, inflation. As we argue elsewhere in this Quarterly, it will inevitably pick up for technical reasons in March and April, and then again in late 2021 as renewed consumer demand for services (especially travel and entertainment) pushes up prices. The Fed has emphasized that these phenomena are temporary and that underlying inflation will not emerge until the economy returns to full employment. But the market might get spooked for a while when inflation jumps, pushing up long-term interest rates and triggering an equity market correction. Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward,” dated March 23, 2021. 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Report, “The Fed Looks Backward While Markets Look Forward,” dated March 23, 2021, 3 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, “Investors’ Guide To Inflation Hedging: How To Invest When Inflation Rises,” dated May 22, 2019. 4 Dominish, E., Florin, N. and Teske, S., 2019, Responsible Minerals Sourcing for Renewable Energy. Report prepared for Earthworks by the Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology Sydney. The optimistic scenario is referred to as “total metals demand” scenario, which assumed current materials intensity and market share continues into the future without recycling or efficiency improvements. This study is based on 2018 production levels and therefore expansion of future production may vary results. 5US Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity Summaries 2021. 6 Chile is estimated to have the largest reserve of lithium. 7 Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Report, “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger,” dated March 16, 2021. 8 Please see Global Asset Allocation, “Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: Playing The Optionality,” dated April 1, 2020. 9 Please see China Investment Strategy Report, “National People’s Congress Sets Tone For 2021 Growth,” dated March 17, 2021. GAA Asset Allocation  
Highlights Underweighting T-bonds, tech versus the market, growth versus value, new economy versus old economy, and US versus the euro area are all just one massive correlated trade. Get the direction of the T-bond yield right, and you will get the whole correlated trade right. The rise in the 10-year T-bond yield will meet resistance much closer to 2 percent than to 3 percent… …because the level of the yield is already starting to weigh on the stock market, the financial system, and the real economy. Hence, on a 6-month horizon, fade the massive correlated trade. When allocating to stock markets, don’t confuse a ‘stock effect’ for a ‘country effect’. Fractal trade shortlist: European autos and European personal products. The Pareto Principle Of Investment Chart of the WeekCorrelated Trade: Tech And The US One of the guiding principles of investment is that: Investment is complex, but it is not complicated. The words complex and complicated are often used synonymously, but they mean different things. Complex means something that is not fully predictable or analysable. Complicated means something that is made up of many parts. Investment is not complicated because a few parts drive the relative prices of everything. This is also known as the Pareto Principle, or the 20:80 rule. Just 20 percent of the input determines 80 percent of the output.1 Right now, the 20 that is determining the 80 is the bond yield. Higher bond yields are hurting high-flying tech stocks. This is because the ‘net present value’ of cashflows that are weighted deep into the future are highly sensitive to rising yields. Therefore, underweighting T-bonds means underweighting tech versus the market. Which extends to growth versus value, new economy versus old economy, US versus the euro area, and so on. In effect, all these positions have become one massive correlated trade (Chart of the Week, Chart I-2, and Chart I-3). Chart I-2Correlated Trade: T-Bond, And Growth Vs. Value Chart I-3Correlated Trade: Growth Vs. Value, ##br##And Tech Get the direction of the bond yield right and your whole investment strategy will be right. You will be a hero. Get the direction of the bond yield wrong and your whole investment strategy will be wrong. You will be a zero. Get the direction of the bond yield right and your whole investment strategy will be right. The hero/zero decision for investors is: from the current level of 1.7 percent, at what level will the 10-year T-bond yield peak and reverse? If the answer is, say, 3 percent, then the recent direction of this correlated trade has much further to go, and investors should stay on the ride. But if the answer is, say, 2 percent, then this correlated trade does not have much further to go, and it will soon be time to get off. To repeat, investment is not complicated, but it is complex. The evolution of the bond yield is not fully analysable or predictable. Still, our assessment is that the rise in the 10-year T-bond yield will meet resistance much closer to 2 percent than to 3 percent. This is because the level of yields is already starting to weigh on the stock market, the financial system, and the real economy. Specifically: The global stock market rally has stalled since mid-February because high-flying growth stocks have been reined back by rising bond yields. Recent margin calls and liquidations in the hedge fund space presage points of fragility in the financial system. Note, there is never just one cockroach. US mortgage applications for home purchases and building permits for new housebuilding appear to be rolling over (Chart I-4). Admittedly, these are just straws in the wind. But straws in the wind can be the first sign of a brewing storm. Chart I-4Are Higher Bond Yields Starting To Weigh On The Housing Market? On a 6-month horizon, fade the underweighting to bonds, tech versus the market, growth versus value, new economy versus old economy, and US versus the euro area correlated trade. Sectors Still Rule The Stock Market World The evolution of the pandemic, the pace of vaccination roll-outs, and the size of fiscal stimuluses have become polarised by region and country, with clear leaders and laggards. This raises the question: are the regions and countries that are winning against the pandemic the investment winners too? For the major stock markets, the answer is an emphatic no. Compared with the US, the euro area is experiencing an aggressive third wave of infections, is lagging in its vaccination roll-outs, and is unleashing much less fiscal stimulus. Yet euro area equities have not been underperforming US equities. Proving that the outperformance and underperformance of the major stock markets has very little to do with what is going on in the local economy. The outperformance and underperformance of the major stock markets has very little to do with what is going on in the local economy. By far the biggest driver of euro area versus US stock market performance is the euro area’s massive underweighting to tech stocks vis-à-vis the US. Hence, the tech sector’s recent travails have boosted the euro area stock market’s relative performance. Similar types of sector skews explain the relative performance of all the major stock markets (Table I-1). For example, developed markets (DM) versus emerging markets (EM) is nothing more than healthcare versus basic resources (Chart I-5). Table I-1The Sector Fingerprints Of The Major Stock Markets Chart I-5DM Vs. EM Is Nothing More Than Healthcare Vs. Basic Resources Exchange rates can also have a bearing on stock market relative performance – though the main transmission mechanism is not through competitiveness, but through the so-called ‘currency translation effect.’ Specifically, the multinationals that dominate the major stock markets have their cost bases diversified across multiple currencies. Hence, for a euro-listed multinational company, a weaker euro doesn’t boost its competitiveness. But it does boost the translation of its multi-currency profits into euros, the currency of its stock market listing. Thereby, the weaker euro boosts its stock price. Don’t Confuse A ‘Stock Effect’ For A ‘Country Effect’ Many people think that there is also a strong ‘country effect’ in stock market selection. For example, if US tech hardware outperforms euro area tech hardware, then this is clearly not a sector effect. It must be to do with a difference between the US and the euro area, meaning a country effect. The truth is more nuanced. Many sectors are now highly concentrated in one or two dominant stocks. US tech hardware is concentrated in Apple while euro area tech hardware is concentrated in ASML. Hence, if US tech hardware is outperforming euro area tech hardware, it is because Apple is outperforming ASML (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Is US Tech Vs. Euro Area Tech A 'Country Effect' Or A 'Stock Effect'? Likewise, if euro area pharma is outperforming UK pharma, it is because the dominant euro area pharma stock, Sanofi, is outperforming the dominant UK pharma stock, AstraZeneca (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Is Euro Area Pharma Vs. UK Pharma A 'Country Effect' Or A 'Stock Effect'? So, if US tech hardware is outperforming euro area tech hardware, and euro area pharma is outperforming UK pharma, are these ‘country effects’, or are they ‘stock effects’? We would argue that, in truth, they are stock effects. Meaning they have little to do with what is happening in the country of listing, and much more to do with the specifics of the company. For example, if UK pharma is underperforming, it is because AstraZeneca is underperforming. And if AstraZeneca is underperforming, it is more likely to do with the performance of its Covid-19 vaccine than the performance of the UK economy. The problem is that most performance attributions will incorrectly count what are stock effects as country effects. And the more concentrated that sectors become, the more pronounced this error becomes. Yet nowadays, extreme concentration in one or two stocks per sector is the norm rather than the exception. Hence, what appears to be a country effect is, in most cases, a stock effect. What appears to be a country effect is, in most cases, a stock effect. The important lesson is that when allocating to the major stock markets, do not think in terms of regions or countries because the country effect is, in truth, negligible. Think in terms of the sectors and the dominant stocks that you want to own, and the regional and country allocation will resolve itself automatically. On this basis our high-conviction structural position to be overweight DM versus EM simply follows from our high-conviction structural position to be overweight healthcare versus basic resources. In the DM versus EM decision, everything else is largely irrelevant. Candidates For Countertrend Reversals This week’s candidates for countertrend reversal are European autos, and European personal products. The euphoria towards electric vehicles (EVs) has taken European auto stocks to a technically overbought extreme (Chart I-8). Chart I-8European Autos Are Overbought Conversely, the euphoria towards economic reopening plays has taken European personal products stocks to a technically oversold extreme (Chart I-9). Chart I-9European Personal Products Are Oversold Our recommended trade is overweight European personal products versus European autos (Chart I-10), setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 15 percent. Chart I-10Overweight European Personal Products Versus European Autos   Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The exact numbers 20 and 80 are simply indicative of the Pareto Principle rather than set in stone, they could also be 5 and 95, or indeed 5 and 99 as they do not need to sum to 100. Fractal Trading System 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Euro Area Chart II-2Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Asia Chart II-4Other Developed   Interest Rate Chart II-5Expectations Chart II-6Expectations Chart II_7Expectations Chart II-8Expectations ​​​​
Dear Client, We are sending you our Strategy Outlook today, where we outline our thoughts on the macro landscape and the direction of financial markets for the rest of 2021 and beyond. Next week, please join me for a webcast on Thursday, April 1 at 10:00 AM EDT (3:00 PM BST, 4:00 PM CEST, 10:00 PM HKT) where I will discuss the outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Growth outlook: The global economy will rebound over the course of the year, with momentum rotating from the US to the rest of the world. Inflation: Structurally higher inflation is not a near-term risk, even in the US, but could become a major problem by the middle of the decade. Global asset allocation: Investors should continue to overweight equities on a 12-month horizon. Unlike in the year 2000, the equity earnings yield is still well above the bond yield. Equities: Value stocks will maintain their recent outperformance. Investors should favor banks and economically-sensitive cyclical sectors, while overweighting stock markets outside the US. Fixed income: Continue to maintain below average interest-rate duration exposure. Spread product will outperform safe government bonds. Favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds. Currencies: While the dollar could strengthen in the near term, it will weaken over a 12-month period. Large budget deficits, a deteriorating balance of payments profile, and an accommodative Fed are all dollar bearish. Commodities: Tight supply conditions and a cyclical recovery in oil demand will support crude prices. Strong Chinese growth will continue to buoy the metals complex. I. Macroeconomic Outlook Global Growth: The US Leads The Way… For Now The global economy should rebound from the pandemic over the remainder of the year. So far, however, it has been a two-speed recovery. Whereas the Bloomberg consensus has US real GDP growing by 4.8% in the first quarter, analysts expect the economies in the Euro area, UK, and Japan to contract by 3.6%, 13.3%, and 5%, respectively. Chart 1Dismantling Of Lockdown Measures Occurring At Varying Pace Chart 2US Is Among The Vaccination Leaders Two things explain US growth outperformance. First, the successful launch of the US vaccination campaign has allowed state governments to begin dismantling lockdown measures (Chart 1). Currently, the US has administered 40 vaccine shots for every 100 inhabitants. Among the major economies, only the UK has performed better on the vaccination front (Chart 2). In contrast, parts of continental Europe are still battling a new wave of Covid infections, prompting policymakers there to further tighten social distancing rules. Second, US fiscal policy has been more stimulative than elsewhere (Chart 3). On March 11, President Biden signed the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act into law. Among other things, the Act provides direct payments to lower- and middle-class households, extends and expands unemployment benefits, and offers aid to state and local governments (Chart 4). Unlike President Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the Democrats’ legislation will raise the incomes of the poor much more than the rich (Chart 5). Chart 3The US Tops The Stimulus Race We expect growth leadership to shift from the US to the rest of the world in the second half of the year. Nevertheless, US real GDP in Q4 of 2021 will probably end up 7% above the level of Q4 of 2020, enough to close the output gap. In Section II of this report, we discuss whether this could cause inflation to take off on a sustained basis. We conclude that such an outcome is unlikely for the next two years. However, materially higher inflation is indeed a risk over a longer-term horizon. Chart 4Composition Of The American Rescue Plan Act Chart 5Biden’s Package Will Boost The Income Of The Poor More Than The Rich   The EU: Recovery After Lockdown The EU will benefit from a cyclical recovery later this year as the vaccination campaign picks up steam. The recent weakness in Europe was concentrated in services (Chart 6). The latest European PMI data shows that the service sector may have turned the corner. As in the US, European households have accumulated significant excess savings. The unleashing of pent-up demand should drive consumption over the remainder of the year (Chart 7). Chart 6For Now, The Service Sector Is Doing Better In The US Than The Euro Area Chart 7European Households Have Accumulated Excess Savings Meanwhile, the manufacturing sector continues to do well, with the Euro area manufacturing PMI hitting all-time highs in March. Sentiment indices such as the Sentix and ZEW surveys point to further upside for manufacturing activity (Chart 8).   Chart 8Positive Outlook For Euro Area Manufacturing Activity Fiscal policy should also turn modestly more expansionary. The EU recovery fund will begin disbursing aid in the second quarter. This should allow the southern European economies to maintain more generous levels of fiscal support. It also looks increasingly likely that the Green Party will either lead or join the coalition government in Germany, which could translate into greater spending. UK: Recovering From A One-Two Punch The UK had to shutter its economy late last year due to the emergence of a new, more contagious, strain of the virus. The resulting hit to the economy came on top of a decline in exports to the EU following Brexit. The economic picture will improve over the coming months. Thanks to the speedy vaccination campaign, the government plans to lift the “stay at home” rules on March 29. Most retail, dining, and hospitality businesses are scheduled to reopen on April 12. A strong housing market and the extension of both the furlough schemes and tax holidays should also sustain demand. Japan: More Fiscal Support Needed Like many other countries, Japan had to introduce new lockdown measures in late 2020 after suffering its worst wave of the pandemic. While the number of new cases has dropped dramatically since then, they have edged up again over the past two weeks. Japanese regulations require that vaccines be tested on Japanese people. Prime Minster Yoshihide Suga has promised that vaccine shots will be available to the country’s 36 million seniors by the end of June. However, with less than 1% of the population vaccinated so far, strict social distancing will persist well into the summer. The Japanese government passed a JPY 73 trillion (13.5% of GDP) supplementary budget in December. However, only 40 trillion of that has been allocated for direct spending. Due to negative bond yields, the Japanese government earns more interest than it pays on its debt. It should be running much more expansionary fiscal policy. China: Policy Normalization, Not Deleveraging Chart 9China: Tailwind For Easier Monetary And Fiscal Policies Will Fade Over The Remainder Of The Year China’s combined credit/fiscal impulse peaked late last year (Chart 9). The impulse leads growth by about six months, implying that the tailwind from easier monetary and fiscal policies will fade over the rest of the year. Nevertheless, we doubt that China’s economy will experience much of a slowdown. First and foremost, the shock from the pandemic should fade, helping to revive consumer and business confidence. Second, the Chinese authorities are likely to pursue policy normalization, rather than outright deleveraging. Jing Sima, BCA’s chief China strategist, expects the general government deficit to remain broadly stable at 8% of GDP this year. She also thinks that the rate of credit expansion will fall by only 2-to-3 percentage points in 2021, bringing credit growth back in line with projected nominal GDP growth of 8%. Total credit was 290% of GDP at end-2020. Thus, credit growth of 8% would still generate 290%*8%=23% of GDP of net credit formation, providing more than enough support to the economy. II. Feature: Will The US Economy Overheat? As of February, US households were sitting on around $1.7 trillion in excess savings. About two-thirds of those savings can be chalked up to reduced spending during the pandemic, with the remaining one-third arising from increased transfer payments (Chart 10). The recently passed stimulus bill will boost household savings by an additional $300 billion, bringing the stock of excess savings to $2 trillion by April. This cash hoard will support spending. Already, real-time measures of economic activity have hooked up. Traffic congestion in many US cities is approaching pre-pandemic levels. OpenTable’s measure of restaurant occupancy is progressing back to where it was before the pandemic (Chart 11). J.P. Morgan reported that spending using its credit cards rose 23% year-over-year in the 9-day period through to March 19 as stimulus payments reached bank accounts. Anecdotally, airlines and cruise line companies have been expressing optimism on the back of a surge in bookings. Chart 10Lower Spending And Higher Income Led To Mounting Excess Savings Chart 11Real-Time Measures Of Economic Activity Have Hooked Up   Meanwhile, the supply side of the economy could face temporary constraints. Under the stimulus bill, close to half of jobless workers will receive more income through to September from extended unemployment benefits than they did from working. This could curtail labor supply at a time when firms are trying to step up the pace of hiring. The Fed Versus The Markets In the latest Summary of Economic Projections released last week, the median “dot” for the fed funds rate remained stuck at zero through to end-2023. The bond market, in contrast, expects the Fed to start raising rates next year. Why is there a gap between the Fed and market expectations? Part of the answer is that the “dots” and market expectations measure different things. Whereas the dots reflect a modal, or “most likely” estimate of where short-term rates will be over the next few years, market expectations reflect a probability-weighted average. The fact that rates cannot fall deeply into negative territory – but can potentially rise a lot in a high-inflation scenario – has skewed market rate expectations to the upside. That said, there is another, more fundamental, reason at work: The Fed simply does not think that a negative output gap will lead to materially higher inflation. The “dots” assume that core PCE inflation will barely rise above 2% over the next two years, even though, by the Fed’s own admission, the unemployment rate will fall firmly below NAIRU in 2023 (Chart 12). Chart 12The Fed Sees Faster Recovery, Same Rate Path Chart 13Just Like It Did In 2011, The Fed Will Disregard What It Sees As Transitory Price Shocks Is the Federal Reserve’s relaxed view towards inflation risk justified? The Fed knows full well that headline inflation could temporarily reach 4% over the next two months due to base effects from last year’s deflationary shock, lingering supply chain disruptions, the rebound in gasoline prices, and the lagged effect from dollar weakness. However, as it did in late 2011, when headline inflation nearly hit 4% and producer price inflation briefly topped 10%, the Fed is inclined to regard these price shocks as transitory (Chart 13). The Fed believes that PCE inflation will tick up to 2.4% this year but then settle back down to 2% by the end of next year as supply disruptions dissipate and most fiscal stimulus measures roll off. Our bet is that the Fed will be right about inflation in the near term, but wrong in the long term. That is to say, we think that core inflation will probably remain subdued for the next two years, as the Fed expects. However, inflation is poised to rise significantly towards the middle of the decade, an outcome that is likely to surprise both the Fed and market participants. War-Time Inflation, But Which War? In some respects, the Fed sees the current environment as resembling a war, except this time the battle is against an invisible enemy: Covid-19. Chart 14 shows what happened to US inflation during WWI, WWII, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. In the first three of those four wars, inflation rose but then fell back down after the war had concluded. That is what the Fed is counting on. What about the possibility that the coming years could resemble the period around the Vietnam War, where inflation continued to rise even though the number of US military personnel engaged in the conflict peaked in 1968?   Chart 14Inflation During Wartime: Which War Is Most Relevant For Today? Chart 15Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s In the near term, this does not appear to be a major risk. In 1966, when the war effort was ramping up, the US unemployment rate was two percentage points below NAIRU (Chart 15). As of February, US employment was still more than 5% below pre-pandemic levels.   Chart 16Employment Has Been Weak And Edging Lower At The Bottom Quartile Of The Wage Distribution We estimate that the US output gap currently stands at around 5%-to-6% of GDP. Among the bottom quartile of the wage distribution, employment is 20% below pre-pandemic levels, and has been edging lower, not higher, since last October (Chart 16). Thus, for now, hyperbolic talk of how fiscal stimulus is crowding out private-sector spending is unwarranted. Inflation Nation Looking further out, the parallels between today and the late sixties are more striking. As we discussed in a report titled 1970s-Style Inflation: Yes, It Could Happen Again, much of what investors believe about how inflation emerged during the late 1960s is either based on myths, or at best, half-truths. To the extent that there are differences between today and that era, they don’t necessarily point to lower inflation in the coming years. For example, in the late sixties, the baby boomers were entering the labour force, supplying the economy with a steady stream of new workers. This helped to temper wage pressures. Today, baby boomers are leaving the labour force. They accumulated a lot of wealth over the past 50 years – so much so that they now control more than half of all US wealth (Chart 17). Over the coming two decades, they will run down that wealth, implying that household savings rates could drop. By definition, a lower savings rate implies more spending in relation to output, which is inflationary. Chart 17Baby Boomers Have Accumulated A Lot Of Wealth III. Financial Markets A. Portfolio Strategy Overweight Stocks Versus Bonds Stocks usually outperform bonds when economic growth is strong and money is cheap (Chart 18). The end of the pandemic and ongoing fiscal stimulus should support growth over the next 12-to-18 months, allowing the bull market in equities to continue. With inflation slow to rise, monetary policy will remain accommodative over this period. Chart 18AStocks Usually Outperform Bonds When Economic Growth Is Strong... Chart 18B... And Money Is Cheap The recent back-up in long-term bond yields could destabilize stocks for a month or two. However, our research has shown that as long as bond yields do not rise enough to trigger a recession, stocks will shrug off the effect of higher yields (Chart 19 and Table 1). Indeed, there is a self-limiting aspect to how high bond yields can rise, and stocks can fall, in a setting where inflation remains subdued. Higher bond yields lead to tighter financial conditions. Tighter financial conditions, in turn, lead to weaker growth, which justifies an even longer period of low rates. It is only when inflation rises to a level that central banks find uncomfortable that tighter financial conditions become desirable. We are far from that level today. Chart 19What Happens To Equities When Treasury Yields Rise?   Table 1As Long As Bond Yields Don’t Rise Into Restrictive Territory, Stocks Will Recover   It’s Not 2000 In recent months, many analysts have drawn comparisons between the year 2000 and the present day. While there are plenty of similarities, ranging from euphoric retail participation to the proliferation of dubious SPACs and IPOs, there is one critical difference: The forward earnings yield today is above the real bond yield, whereas in 2000 the earnings yield was below the bond yield (Chart 20). The US yield curve inverted in February 2000, with the 10-year Treasury yield peaking a month earlier at 6.79%. An inverted yield curve is one of the most reliable recession predictors. We are a far cry from such a predicament today. By the same token, the S&P 500 dividend yield was well below the bond yield in 2000. Today, they are roughly the same. Even if one were to pessimistically assume that US companies are unable to raise nominal dividend payments at all for the next decade, the S&P 500 would need to fall by 20% in real terms for equities to underperform bonds. Many other stock markets would have to decline by an even greater magnitude (Chart 21). Chart 20Relative To Bonds, Stocks Are More Favorably Valued Now Than In 2000 Chart 21Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds   Protecting Against Long-Term Inflation Risk The bull market in stocks will end when central banks begin to fret over rising inflation. In the past, central banks have used forecasts of inflation to decide when to raise rates. The Federal Reserve’s revised monetary policy framework, which focuses on actual rather than forecasted inflation, almost guarantees that inflation will overshoot the Fed’s target. This is because monetary policy fully affects the economy with a lag of 12-to-18 months. By the time the Fed decides to clamp down on inflation, it will have already gotten too high. Investors looking to hedge long-term inflation risk should reduce duration exposure in fixed-income portfolios, favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds, and own more “real assets” such as property. In fact, one of the best inflation hedges is simply to buy a nice house financed with a high loan-to-value fixed-rate mortgage. In a few decades, you will still own the nice house, but the value of the mortgage will be greatly reduced in real terms. Gold Versus Cryptos Historically, gold has offered protection against inflation. Increasingly, many investors have come to believe that cryptocurrencies are a better choice. We disagree. As we recently discussed in a report titled Bitcoin: A Solution In Search Of A Problem, not only are cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin highly inefficient mediums of exchange, they are also likely to turn out to be poor stores of value. Bitcoin’s annual electricity consumption now exceeds that of Pakistan and its 217 million inhabitants (Chart 22). About 70% of Bitcoin mining currently takes place in China, mainly using electricity generated by burning coal. Much of the rest of the mining takes place in countries such as Russia and Belarus with dubious governance records. Bitcoin and ESG are heading for a clash. We suspect ESG will win out. Chart 22Bitcoin Is Not Your Eco-Currency B. Equities Favor Cyclicals, Value, And Non-US Stocks Chart 23Cyclicals And Ex-US Stocks Do Best When Global Growth Is On The Upswing The vast majority of stock market capitalization today is concentrated in large multinational companies that are more leveraged to global growth rather than to the growth rate of countries in which they happen to be domiciled. Thus, while country-specific factors are not irrelevant, regional equity allocation often boils down to figuring out which stock markets will gain or lose from various global trends. The end of the pandemic will prop up global growth. In general, cyclical sectors outperform when global growth is on the upswing (Chart 23). As Table 2 illustrates, stock markets outside the US have more exposure to classically cyclical sectors such as industrials, energy, materials, and consumer discretionary that usually shine coming out of a downturn. This leads us to favor Europe, Japan, and emerging markets. We place banks in the cyclical category because faster economic growth tends to reduce bad loans, while also placing upward pressure on bond yields. Chart 24 shows that there is a very close correlation between the relative performance of bank shares and long-term bond yields. As government yields trend higher, banks will benefit. Table 2Financials Are Overrepresented In Ex-US Indices, While Tech Dominates The US Market Chart 24Close Correlation Between Relative Performance Of Banks And Long-Term Bond Yields Banks and most other cyclical sectors dominate value indices (Table 3). Not only is value still exceptionally cheap in relation to growth, but traditional value sectors have seen stronger upward earnings revisions than tech stocks since the start of the year (Chart 25). The likelihood that global bond yields put in a secular bottom last year, coupled with the emergence of a new bull market in commodities, makes us think that the nascent outperformance of value stocks has years to run.   Table 3Breaking Down Growth And Value By Sector Chart 25AValue Is Attractive On Multiple Levels (I) Chart 25BValue Is Attractive On Multiple Levels (II) US Corporate Tax Hikes Coming Finally, there is one country-specific factor worth mentioning, which reinforces our view of favoring non-US, cyclical, and value stocks: US corporate taxes are heading higher. BCA’s geopolitical strategists expect the Biden Administration and the Democrat-controlled Congress to raise the statutory corporate tax rate from 21% to as high as 28% later this year in order to fund, among other things, a major infrastructure investment program. Capital gains taxes will also rise. While tax hikes are unlikely to bring down the whole US stock market, they will detract from the relative performance of US stocks compared with their international peers. Cyclical sectors will benefit from the infrastructure spending. To the extent that such spending boosts growth and leads to a steeper yield curve, it should also benefit banks. In contrast, tech companies outside the clean energy sector will lag, especially if the bill introduces a minimum corporate tax on book income and raises taxes on overseas profits, as President Biden pledged to do during his campaign. C. Fixed Income Expect More US Curve Steepening As discussed above, inflation in the US and elsewhere will be slow to take off. However, when inflation does rise later this decade, it could do so significantly. Investors currently expect the Fed to start raising rates in December 2022, bringing the funds rate to 1.5% by the end of 2024 (Chart 26). In contrast, we think that a liftoff in the second half of 2023, preceded by a 6-to-12 month period of asset purchase tapering, is more likely. This implies a modest downside for short-dated US bond yields. Chart 26The Market Sees The Fed Rate Hike Cycle Kicking Off In Late 2022 Chart 27Long-Term US Real Yield Expectations Have Recovered But Remain Below Pre-Pandemic Levels In contrast, long-term yields will face upward pressure first from strong growth, and later from higher inflation. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS yield currently stands at 0.35%, which is still below pre-pandemic levels (Chart 27). Given structurally looser fiscal policy, the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS yield should be at least 50 basis points higher, which would translate into a 10-year Treasury yield of a bit over 2%. Regional Bond Allocation While the Fed will be slow out of the gate to raise rates, most other central banks will be even slower. The sole exception among developed market central banks is the Norges bank, which has indicated its intention to hike rates in the second half of this year. Conceivably, Canada could start tightening monetary policy fairly soon, given strong jobs growth and a bubbly housing market. While the Bank of Canada is eager to begin tapering asset purchases later this year, our global fixed-income strategists suspect that the BoC will wait for the Fed to raise rates first. An early start to rate hikes by the Bank of Canada could significantly push up the value of the loonie, which is something the BoC wants to avoid. New Zealand will also hike rates shortly after the Fed, followed by Australia. Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has downplayed the recent rise in gilt yields. Nevertheless, the desire to maintain currency competitiveness in the post-Brexit era will prevent the BoE from hiking rates until 2024. Among the major central banks, the ECB and the BoJ will be the last major central banks to raise rates. Putting it all together, our fixed-income strategists advocate maintaining a below-benchmark stance on overall duration. Comparing the likely path for rate hikes with market pricing region by region, they recommend overweighting the Euro area and Japan, assigning a neutral allocation to the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, and an underweight on the US. Credit: Stick With US High Yield Corporates Corporate spreads have narrowed substantially since last March. Nevertheless, in an environment of strong economic growth, it still makes sense to favor riskier corporate credit over safe government bonds. Within corporate credit, we favor high yield over investment grade. Geographically, we prefer US corporate bonds over Euro area bonds. The former trade with a higher yield and spread than the latter (Chart 28). CHART 28Favor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade And US Corporates Over Euro Area (I) Chart 28Favor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade And US Corporates Over Euro Area (II) One way to gauge the attractiveness of credit is to look at the percentile rankings of 12-month breakeven spreads. The 12-month breakeven spread is the amount of credit spread widening that can occur before a credit-sensitive asset starts to underperform a duration-matched, risk-free government bond over a one-year horizon. For US investment-grade corporates, the breakeven spread is currently in the bottom decile of its historic range, which is rather unattractive from a risk-adjusted perspective. In contrast, the US high-yield breakeven spread is currently in the middle of the distribution. In the UK, high-yield debt is more appealing than investment grade, although not quite to the same extent as in the US. In the Euro area, both high-yield and investment-grade credit are fairly unattractive (Chart 29). Chart 29US High-Yield Stands Out The Most D. Currencies Faster US Growth Should Support The Dollar In The Near Term… Chart 30US Has A Smaller Share Of Manufacturing Than Most Other Developed Economies The US has a “low beta” economy. Compared to most other economies, the US has a bigger service sector and a smaller manufacturing base (Chart 30). The US economy is also highly diversified on both a regional and sectoral level. This tends to make US growth less volatile than growth abroad. The relatively low cyclicality of the US economy has important implications for the US dollar. While the US benefits from stronger global growth, the rest of the world usually benefits even more. Thus, when global growth accelerates, capital tends to flow from the US to other economies, dragging down the value of the dollar. This relationship broke down this year. Rather than lagging other economies, the US economy has led the charge thanks to bountiful fiscal stimulus and a successful vaccination campaign. As growth estimates for the US have been marked up, the dollar has caught a temporary bid (Chart 31). Chart 31US Growth Outperformance Could Be A Near-Term Tailwind For The Dollar … But Underlying Fundamentals Are Dollar Bearish As discussed earlier in the report, growth momentum should swing back towards the rest of the world later this year. This should weigh on the dollar in the second half of the year. To make matters worse for the greenback, the US trade deficit has ballooned in recent quarters. The current account deficit, a broad measure of net foreign income flows, rose by nearly 35% to $647 billion in 2020. At 3.1% of GDP, it was the largest shortfall in 12 years (Chart 32). Consistent with the weak balance of payments picture, the dollar remains overvalued by about 10% on a purchasing power parity basis (Chart 33). Chart 32The Widening US External Gap Chart 33The Dollar Is Expensive Based On Its PPP Fair Value Historically, the dollar has weakened whenever fiscal policy has been eased in excess of what is needed to close the output gap (Chart 34). Foreigners have been net sellers of Treasurys this year. It is equity inflows that have supported the dollar (Chart 35). However, if non-US stock markets begin to outperform, foreign flows into US stocks could reverse. Chart 34The Greenback Tends To Weaken When Fiscal Policy Is Eased Relative To What The Economy Needs Chart 35Equity Inflows Supported The Dollar This Year (I) Chart 35Equity Inflows Supported The Dollar This Year (II) Meanwhile, stronger US growth has pushed long-term real interest rate differentials only modestly in favor of the US. At the short end of the curve, real rate differentials have actually widened against the US since the start of the year, reflecting rising US inflation expectations and the Fed’s determination to keep rates near zero for an extended period of time (Chart 36). Chart 36Real Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar At The Long End Of The Curve, But Not At The Short End (I) Chart 36Real Rate Differentials Have Moved In Favor Of The Dollar At The Long End Of The Curve, But Not At The Short End (II) On balance, while the dollar could strengthen a bit more over the next month or so, the greenback will weaken over a 12-month horizon. Chester Ntonifor, BCA’s chief currency strategist, expects the dollar to fall the most against the Norwegian krone, Swedish krona, Australian dollar, and British pound over a 12-month horizon. In the EM space, stronger global growth will disproportionately benefit the Mexican peso, Chilean peso, Colombian peso, South African rand, Czech koruna, Indonesian rupiah, Korean won, and Singapore dollar. Chart 37Weak Dollar Is Usually A Tailwind For Cyclicals, Non-US Stocks, And Value Stocks (I) Chart 37Weak Dollar Is Usually A Tailwind For Cyclicals, Non-US Stocks, And Value Stocks (II) Consistent with our equity views, a weaker dollar would be good news for cyclical equity sectors, non-US stock markets, and value stocks (Chart 37). E. Commodities Favorable Outlook For Commodities Strong global growth against a backdrop of tight supply should sustain momentum in the commodity complex over the next 12-to-18 months. Capital investment in the oil and gas sector has fallen by more than 50% since 2014 (Chart 38). BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy service, led by Robert Ryan, expects annual growth in crude oil demand to outstrip supply over the remainder of this year (Chart 39). Chart 38Oil & Gas Capex Collapses In COVID-19’s Wake Chart 39Crude Oil Demand Growth To Outstrip Supply Over The Remainder Of This Year A physical deficit in the metals markets – particularly for copper and aluminum – should also persist this year (Chart 40). While the boom in electric vehicle (EV) production represents a long-term threat to oil, it is manna from heaven for many metals. A battery-powered EV can contain more than 180 pounds of copper compared with 50 pounds for conventional autos. By 2030, the demand from EVs alone should amount to close to 4mm tonnes of copper per year, representing about 15% of annual copper production. Chart 40ACopper Will Be In Physical Deficit... Chart 40B...As Will Aluminum China’s Commodity Demand Will Remain Strong Chart 41China Keeps Buying More And More Commodities Strong demand for metals from China should also buoy metals prices. While trend GDP growth in China has slowed, the economy is much bigger in absolute terms than it was in the 2000s. China’s annual aggregate consumption of metals is five times as high as it was back then. The incremental increase in China’s metal consumption, as measured by the volume of commodities consumed, is also double what it was 20 years ago (Chart 41). As we discussed in our report To Deleverage Its Economy, China Needs MORE Debt, the Chinese government has no choice but to continue to recycle persistently elevated household savings into commodity-intensive capital investment. This will ensure ample commodity demand from China for years to come. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist pberezin@bcaresearch.com   Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Fiscal stimulus is no longer a free lunch. US mortgage applications are down by 20 percent since the start of February. With rising bond yields now starting to choke private sector borrowing, bond yields are nearing an upper-limit, and even a reversal point. In which case, the tide out of defensives into cyclicals, and growth into value, will be a tide that reverses. New 6-month recommendation: underweight US banks (XLF) versus consumer staples (XLP). Fractal trade shortlist: US banks, bitcoin, ether, and GBP/JPY. Feature Chart of the WeekMortgage Applications Are Down 20 Percent Why would anybody not get excited about trillions of dollars of fiscal stimulus? The two word answer is: crowding out. If a dollar that is borrowed and spent by the government (or even forecast to be borrowed and spent by the government) pushes up the bond yield, it makes it more expensive for the private sector to borrow and spend. If, as a result, the private sector scales back its borrowing by a dollar, the dollar of government spending has crowded out a dollar of private sector spending. In this case, fiscal stimulus will have no impact on GDP. The fiscal multiplier will be zero. Under some circumstances though, fiscal stimulus does not crowd out the private sector and the fiscal multiplier is extremely high. 2020 was the perfect case in point. As the pandemic gripped the world, much of the private sector was on its knees. Or to be more precise, in lockdown at home, doing nothing, receiving no income, and unwilling and unable to borrow. In such a crisis, the government became the ‘borrower of last resort’. It could, and had to, borrow at will to replace the private sector’s lost income and thereby to stabilise the collapse in demand. With no competition from private sector borrowers for the glut of excess savings, bond yields stayed depressed. Meaning that fiscal stimulus was a free lunch: it had lots of benefit with little cost (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Fiscal Stimulus Was A Free Lunch In 2020, But Not In 2021 Fiscal Stimulus Is No Longer A Free Lunch Covid-19 is still with us, and could be with us forever. Yet the economy will adapt and even thrive with structural changes, such as decentralisation, hybrid office/home working, a shift to online shopping, and less international travel. In fact, all these structural changes were underway long before Covid-19. Meaning that the pandemic was the accelerant rather than the cause of what was happening to the economy anyway. As the private sector now gets back on its feet to restructure, spend, and invest accordingly, fiscal stimulus is no longer a free lunch. Fiscal stimulus is most effective when it is not pushing up the bond yield. To repeat, last year’s massive fiscal stimulus was highly effective because it had little impact on the bond yield, so there was no crowding out of private sector borrowing. The markets have fully priced the 2021 stimulus, but not the crowding out. However, the most recent stimulus package has pushed up the bond yield or, at least, is a major culprit for the recent spike in yields. Hence, there will be some crowding out of private sector borrowing. Worryingly, US mortgage applications, for both purchasing and refinancing, are down by 20 percent since the start of February (Chart of the Week and Chart I-3). Chart I-3Mortgage Applications For Refi Are Down 20 Percent The resulting choke on private sector borrowing and investment will at least partly negate any putative boost from this fiscal stimulus. The concern is that the markets have fully priced the stimulus, but not the crowding out. Time To Rotate Back In our February 18 report, The Rational Bubble Is Turning Irrational, we warned that high-flying tech stocks were at a point of vulnerability. Specifically, since 2009, the technology sector earnings yield had always maintained a minimum 2.5 percent premium over the 10-year T-bond yield, defining the envelope of a ‘rational bubble.’ In February, this envelope was breached, indicating that tech stock valuations were in a new and irrational phase (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Rational Bubble Turned Irrational The warning proved to be prescient. In the second half of February, tech stocks did sell off sharply and entered a technical correction.1 As a result, tech-dominated stock markets such as China and the Netherlands also suffered sharp declines. Proving once again that regional and country stock market performance is nothing more than an extension of sector performance (Chart I-5). Chart I-5As Tech Corrected, So Did Tech-Heavy Markets But the aggregate stock market has remained more resilient than we expected, and is only modestly down versus its mid-February peak. The reason is that while highly-valued growth stocks suffered the anticipated correction, value stocks continued to advance (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Time To Rotate Back We can explain this divergence in terms of the three components of stock market valuation: The bond yield. The additional return or ‘risk premium’ for owning stocks. The expected growth of earnings. Tech and other growth stocks are ‘long-duration’ assets meaning that their earnings are weighted into the distant future. Hence, for growth stocks the relevant valuation comparison is a long-duration bond yield, say the 10-year yield. Whereas for ‘shorter-duration’ value stocks the relevant valuation comparison is a shorter-duration bond yield, say the 2-year yield. Given that the 10-year yield has risen much more than the 2-year yield, the pain has been much more pronounced for growth stock valuations. Turning to the ‘risk premium’ for owning stocks, at ultra-low bond yields the risk premium just moves in tandem with the bond yield. Hence, as the 10-year yield has spiked, the combination of a rising yield plus a rising risk premium has doubled the pain for growth stock valuations. For a detailed explanation of this dynamic please see our February 18 report. Regarding the expected growth of earnings, the market believes that stimulus is much more beneficial for economically sensitive value stocks than for economically insensitive growth stocks. But now that we are at the point where rising bond yields are starting to choke private demand, the rise in bond yields is nearing a limit, and even a reversal point. In which case, the strong tide out of defensives into cyclicals will also be a tide that reverses. On this basis, and supported by the strong technical arguments in the next section, we are opening a new 6-month position: Underweight US banks versus US consumer staples, expressed as underweight XLF versus XLP. US Banks, Bitcoin, Ether, And The Pound This week we have identified susceptibilities to countertrend moves in three areas. The bullish groupthink in US banks is at an extreme. First, based on its fragile fractal structure, the (bullish) groupthink in US banks versus consumer staples is at an extreme approaching February 2016 (bearish), December 2016 (bullish), and March 2020 (bearish). All these previous extremes in fragility proved to be turning points in relative performance. If this proves true again, the next six months could see a reversal of US bank outperformance (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Groupthink In US Banks Is At An Extreme Second, we are extremely bullish on the structural prospects for cryptocurrencies, and are preparing a report detailing the compelling investment case. Look out for it. That said, the composite fractal structures of both bitcoin and ethereum indicate that they are technically very overbought (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Accordingly, we are hoping for pullbacks that provide better strategic entry points for bitcoin at $40,000, and for ethereum at $1300. Chart I-8Bitcoin Is Technically Overbought Chart I-9Ethereum Is Technically Overbought Third, the UK’s Covid-19 vaccination program was one of the fastest out of the blocks. As the vaccination rate quickly rose to over half the adult population (based on at least one vaccination dose), the pound was a major beneficiary. But now, the UK vaccination program is facing the hurdle of reduced supplies. Additionally, there is the danger that the third wave of infections in Continental Europe washes onto the shores of Britain. Hence, the recent strong rally in the pound is susceptible to a countertrend reversal (Chart 10). This week’s recommended trade is short GBP/JPY setting the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 2.2 percent. Chart I-10The Pound Is Susceptible To A Reversal Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 A technical correction is defined as a 10 percent price decline. Fractal Trading System Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Euro Area Chart II-2Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Asia Chart II-4Other Developed   Interest Rate Chart II-5Expectations Chart II-6Expectations Chart II-7Expectations Chart II-8Expectations ​​​​​​
Highlights Stimulus checks will not be inflationary. Most households will regard them as additional wealth, and the propensity to spend additional wealth is very low. The bond market’s model for predicting inflation is the precise opposite of what happens in the real world. The bond market’s expectations for inflation are positively correlated with commodity prices, whereas actual prospective inflation is negatively correlated with commodity prices. When, as now, the crude oil price is above $50, long-term investors should overweight T-bonds versus Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS). The real bond yield is much higher than the bond market is pricing, which means that equities and other risk-assets are more expensive than they appear. Fractal trades shortlist: stocks versus bonds, 30-year T-bond, NOK/PLN. Feature Chart of the WeekCrude Oil Above $50 Results In Prospective Deflation Major anomalies should not exist in the financial markets, and least of all in the government bond market which is supposed to be the most efficient market of all. But a major anomaly does exist. The anomaly is in the way that the bond market prices inflation. More about that in a moment, but let’s first discuss whether the current surge in inflation expectations is warranted. The Inflationary Impact Of Stimulus Checks Is Exaggerated Inflation expectations have risen. And they have risen especially in the US, for two reasons. First, compared with Europe, the US vaccination roll-out appears to be going relatively smoothly. Second, the US government has been more pro-active in stimulating the economy, especially in the form of issuing stimulus checks to households, as well as other so-called ‘personal current transfer payments.’ Given that this has boosted incomes while spending has been constrained, the US household sector has amassed a war chest of savings. The argument goes that as social restrictions and voluntary social distancing are eased, this war chest will get spent, unleashing a tsunami of pent-up demand which will drive up inflation. But is this argument correct? Even if social restrictions do fully ease – a big if – is it correct to assume that unspent income will get spent? A recent study by the Bank of England points out that whether unspent income gets spent depends on whether households regard it as additional income or additional wealth.1 Whether unspent income gets spent depends on whether households regard it as additional income or additional wealth. The propensity to consume out of additional income is relatively high, with estimates ranging up to 50 percent. But the propensity to consume out of additional wealth is tiny, with international estimates centred around just 5 percent. This begs the question: will households regard the stimulus checks as additional income or additional wealth? The answer depends on whether the household has a low income or a high income. Lower income households, that have borne the brunt of job losses and furloughs, have suffered big drops in their income relative to consumption. Hence, they will regard the stimulus checks as additional income. But to the extent that the additional income is just (partly) replacing lost income, it will not boost their consumption versus what it would have been absent the lost income. On the other hand, higher income households and retirees have largely maintained their incomes while their consumption has fallen. This is where the surge in savings is concentrated. But not being ‘income or liquidity constrained’, these higher income households are more likely to deposit the stimulus checks into their savings accounts (or the stock market), regarding it as additional wealth. Hence, any boost to consumption will be modest and short-lived. In fact, this was precisely what happened after previous issues of stimulus checks, such as in 2008 and 2009. Stimulus checks had no meaningful impact on consumption or inflation trends (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Stimulus Checks Had No Meaningful Impact On Consumption Or Inflation Trends A Major Anomaly In The Bond Market The recent surge in inflation expectations has moved in perfect lockstep with higher prices for commodities, especially crude oil. At first glance, this relationship seems intuitive. After all, we associate higher commodity prices with higher inflation. But on further thought, the tight positive correlation between inflation expectations and commodity price levels is counterintuitive. The first issue is basic maths. Inflation is a change in a price, so it should not move in lockstep with the level of any price. But there is a much bigger issue. Whether the commodity price is driving inflation expectations or whether inflation expectations are driving the commodity price, a higher price today will feed back into lower prospective inflation. In fact, a crude oil price above $50 has consistently predicted prospective deflation in the oil price, leading to CPI inflation underperforming its 2 percent target (Chart of the Week). The bond market’s model for predicting inflation is the precise opposite of what happens in the real world. The important takeaway is that the bond market’s model for predicting inflation is the precise opposite of what happens in the real world. The bond market’s expectations for inflation are positively correlated with commodity prices, but actual prospective inflation is negatively correlated with commodity prices (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). Chart I-3The Bond Market's Expectations For Inflation Are Positively Correlated With Commodity Prices... Chart I-4...But Actual Prospective Inflation Is Negatively Correlated With Commodity Prices This major anomaly in the bond market creates a great opportunity for long-term bond investors. When the (Brent) crude oil price is above $50, long-term investors should overweight T-bonds versus Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS). And vice-versa when crude falls below $50. With Brent now at $68, the appropriate long-term stance is to overweight T-bonds versus TIPS (Chart I-5). Chart I-5When The (Brent) Oil Price Is Above , Long-Term Investors Should Overweight T-bonds Versus TIPS There are also implications for other investors. Given that the bond market is useless at predicting inflation, it is also useless at assessing real interest rates. Specifically, when crude is above $50, the ex-post (realised) real bond yield will be higher than the ex-ante (assumed) real bond yield (Chart I-6). The important takeaway right now is that in any comparison with the real bond yield, equities and other risk-assets are even more expensive than they appear. Chart I-6When The (Brent) Oil Price Is Above , The Realised Real Bond Yield Will Be Higher Than Assumed Embrace The Fractal Market Hypothesis The Fractal Market Hypothesis (FMH) is a breakthrough in the understanding of financial markets, replacing the defunct Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH). The breakthrough insight from the Fractal Market Hypothesis is that the market is not always efficient. The market is efficient only when a wide spectrum of investment time horizons is setting the price, signified by the market having a rich fractal structure. The Fractal Market Hypothesis (FMH) is a breakthrough in the understanding of financial markets. The corollary is that when the fractal structure becomes extremely fragile, it tells us that the information and interpretation of long-term investors is missing from the recent price setting, and is likely to reappear. At which point, the most recent price trend, fuelled by short-term groupthink, will break down. As most investors are unaware of the Fractal Market Hypothesis, it gives a competitive advantage to the few investors that do embrace it. Through the past five years, our proprietary Fractal Trading System has identified countertrend trading opportunities with truly excellent results. After 207 trades, the ‘win ratio’ stands at 61 percent. Yet as we understand more about this breakthrough theory of finance, we believe we can do even better. Today, we are very pleased to upgrade the trading system with innovations to the calculations of fractal structure, the countertrend profit opportunity, and the optimal holding period, all detailed in Box I-1. Box 1: Fractal Trading System Principles Countertrend opportunities in an investment will be identified by a fragile composite fractal structure, based on 65-day, 130-day, and 260-day fractal dimensions approaching their lower bounds. The countertrend profit target will be based on a Fibonacci retracement. There will be a symmetrical stop-loss. The maximum holding period will be trade-specific and vary from 33 to 130 business days (broadly 6 weeks to 6 months). From today, we will also identify a larger number of fragile fractal structures and especially highlight those that are evident in mainstream investments. From this shortlist of candidates, we will choose the most compelling to add into our portfolio. In many cases, the alignment of a fundamental argument with a fragile fractal structure will reinforce the investment case. Among our most recent recommendations, underweight China versus New Zealand achieved its 9 percent target, short Korean won versus US dollar achieved its 2.5 percent target, and long Russian rouble versus South African rand expired at 1.5 percent profit. This week, we highlight that the composite fractal structures of stocks versus bonds and the 30-year T-bond are becoming extremely fragile (Chart I-7 and Chart I-8). To be clear, this does not guarantee a countertrend move, but it does indicate an elevated susceptibility to a countertrend move. Hence, for the time being, we remain tactically neutral stocks versus bonds.  Chart I-7The Fractal Structure Of Stocks Versus Bonds Is Becoming Fragile Chart I-8The Fractal Structure Of The 30-Year T-Bond Is Becoming Fragile In the foreign exchange markets, we note that the strong advance in the Norwegian krone, fuelled by the rally in crude oil, is vulnerable to a pullback (Chart I-9). Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is short NOK/PLN, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop at 2.6 percent. Chart I-9Short NOK/PLN   Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Bank of England, An update on the economic outlook by Gertjan Vlieghe, 22 February 2021 Fractal Trading System Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Asset Performance Equity Market Performance Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Euro Area Chart II-2Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Asia Chart II-4Other Developed   Interest Rate Chart II-5Expectations Chart II-6Expectations Chart II-7Expectations Chart II-8Expectations  
Highlights Global Duration: Markets are correctly interpreting the $1.9 trillion US fiscal stimulus package as a factor justifying higher global growth expectations and bond yields. Maintain a below-benchmark stance on overall global duration. Yield Betas & Country Allocation: Within government bond portfolios, overweighting the “lower-beta” countries that have bond yields less sensitive to changes in US yields (Germany, France, Japan) versus the higher-beta markets (Canada, Australia, UK) remains the appropriate strategy during the current bond bear market. Underweights should remain concentrated in the US, though, as it is highly unlikely that any central bank will begin to tighten policy before the Fed. UK Follow-Up: The conclusions from our UK Special Report published last week do not change after adjusting for the difference in the inflation indices used to calculate UK inflation-linked bond yields compared to those of other countries. UK real interest rates are the lowest in the developed economies, while inflation breakevens are the highest. NOTE: There will be no Global Fixed Income Strategy report published next week. Instead, BCA Chief Global Fixed Income Strategist Rob Robis will do a webcast discussing his latest thoughts on global bond markets. Yields Rising Around The World Chart of the WeekPolicy Mix Is Bond-Bearish The path of least resistance for global bond yields remains biased upward. Optimism on future economic growth remains ebullient with consumer and business confidence indices surging in much of the developed world. The epicenter of the global bond bear market remains the US, where pandemic related economic restrictions are being unwound with 21.4% of the US population now having received at least one dose of a vaccine. Fiscal policy in the US is also supporting the positive vibes on future growth after the $1.9 trillion stimulus package was signed into law by President Biden last week. The 10-year US Treasury yield climbed back to the 2021 high of 1.63% on the back of that announcement. The US stimulus package changes the trajectory of the 2021 US fiscal impulse from a $0.8 trillion contraction to a $0.3 trillion expansion, according to estimates from the US Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (Chart of the Week). This, combined with ongoing quantitative easing from global central banks eager to keep bond yields as low as possible until inflation expectations sustainably return to policymaker targets, is providing a bond-bearish lift to both inflation expectations and real yields – most notably in the US. Central bankers can try to fight back against the speed of the increase in bond yields by maintaining their commitment to current policy settings, as the European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Canada (BoC) did last week. The Fed, Bank of England (BoE) and Bank of Japan (BoJ) will all get the chance to do the same this at this week’s policy meetings. The likely message from all will be one of staying the course and not reflexively responding to higher bond yields, which have not triggered a broad-based selloff in global risk assets that would pre-emptively tighten financial conditions. The S&P 500 index hit an all-time high last week, while equity markets in Europe and Japan have returned to pre-pandemic levels (Chart 2). Global corporate credit spreads have remained calm, consistent with a positive growth backdrop that diminishes the potential for credit downgrades and defaults. The US dollar has gotten a lift from improving US growth expectations and relatively higher US Treasury yields, which has had some negative spillover effect into emerging market equities and currencies. The dollar rebound has been relatively modest to date, however, with the DXY index up only 3% from the early 2021 lows. A major reason why global equity and credit markets have absorbed higher bond yields so well is because the sheer scope of the new US fiscal stimulus will have a major impact on growth momentum both in the US and outside the US. This comes on top of the boost to optimism from the speed of the US and UK vaccine rollouts. In an update to its December 2020 economic outlook published last week, the OECD estimated that the $1.9 trillion US stimulus will boost US real GDP growth by 3.8 percentage points versus its original forecast over the next year (Chart 3). Other countries will also benefit from the implied surge in US demand spilling over from that stimulus package, with the OECD projecting a 1.1 percentage point increase to world real GDP growth. Chart 2Risk Assets Ignoring Rising Global Bond Yields Chart 3Big Growth Spillovers From US Fiscal Stimulus Countries that have the greater exposure to US demand, like Canada and Mexico, are expected to benefit a bit more than the rest of the world, but the expected boost to growth is consistent (around one half of a percentage point) from China to Europe to Japan to major emerging market countries like Brazil. That US-fueled pickup in global economic activity will help absorb some of the spare capacity that opened up during the COVID-19 pandemic. In Chart 4 and Chart 5, we show the estimates taken from the December 2020 OECD Economic Outlook for the output gaps in the US, euro area, UK, Japan, Canada and Australia for 2021 and 2022. We adjust those projections by the OECD’s estimate of the impact of the US fiscal stimulus in 2021, as well as by the additional upward revisions to the OECD growth projections in 2021 and 2022 that were published last week. Chart 4The $1.9 Trillion Stimulus Will Close The US Output Gap … Chart 5… And Help Narrow Output Gaps Elsewhere Chart 6Maintain Below-Benchmark Duration The conclusion is that the US output gap will be eliminated in 2022, while output gaps will still be negative, but diminished, in the other countries after factoring in the impact of the latest US fiscal package. This suggests that the maximum upward pressure on global bond yields should still be centered in the US, where inflation pressures will be more evident and the Fed will likely begin signaling a shift to a less dovish stance sooner than other central banks (although not likely until much later in 2021). Our Global Duration Indicator continues to flag pressure for higher bond yields ahead for the major developed economies (Chart 6). The improving growth momentum means that rising real yields should increasingly become the more important driver of higher nominal bond yields. Persistent central bank dovishness in the face of that growth surge, however, means that it is still too soon to position for narrowing global inflation expectations or any bearish flattening of government bond yield curves - even in the US. Bottom Line: Markets are correctly interpreting the $1.9 trillion US fiscal stimulus package as a factor justifying higher global growth expectations and bond yields. Maintain a below-benchmark stance on overall global duration. Using Yield Betas For Bond Country Allocation, One More Time Over the past two months, we have published Special Reports that delved into the outlook for bond yields and currencies in Australia, Canada and the UK. We selected those three countries as they represented the most likely downgrade candidates within our recommended government bond country allocation given their status as “higher beta” bond markets that are more correlated to US Treasury yields. We estimate US Treasury yield betas from a rolling regression (over a three-year window) of changes in 10-year non-US government bond yields to changes in 10-year US Treasury yields (Chart 7). This allows us to assess which markets are more or less sensitive to the ups and downs of US bond yields. We have used this framework to help guide our country allocation strategy during the pandemic and, for the most part, it has been successful. Chart 7Government Bond Yield Sensitivities To USTs Are Shifting Fast So far in 2021, the markets with higher US Treasury yield betas (Canada, Australia and New Zealand) have underperformed the lower beta markets (Germany, France and Japan). We show that in the top panel of Chart 8, which plots the yield betas at the start of the year versus the year-to-date relative return of each country’s government bond market to that of the overall Bloomberg Barclays Global Treasury index. The returns are adjusted to reflect any differences in the durations of each country versus that of the overall index, and are shown in USD-hedged terms to allow for a common currency comparison. The bottom panel of Chart 8 shows the same relationship for the all of 2020. This is a mirror image of what has occurred so far in 2021, with the countries with higher yield betas outperforming the lower beta markets. The obvious difference between the two years is the direction of Treasury yields, which fell in 2020 and have been rising this year. So far in 2020, the differences between the returns of the higher beta markets have been quite similar. New Zealand has had the biggest negative performance (-2.8% versus the global benchmark), but this has only been moderately worse than Australia (-2.6%) and Canada (-2.4%). These are all just slightly worse than the return of US Treasuries relative to the Global Treasury index (-2.3%). Our estimated yield betas have changed rapidly over the past few months. For example, the rolling three-year yield beta of Australia has shot up from 0.61 at the beginning of the year to 0.78, while Canada has seen a similar move (0.81 to 0.88). This reflects the rapid repricing of interest rate expectations in both countries as current growth momentum and growth expectations improve. While not a perfect relationship, yield betas do show some correlation to our Central Bank Monitors – designed to measure the pressure on central banks to tighten of ease monetary policy (Chart 9). The latest increases in the yield betas of Australia, New Zealand and Canada have occurred alongside a rising trend in our Central Bank Monitors for each nation. The implication is that the relative underperformance of government bonds in those countries is related to the cyclical pressure for the RBA, RBNZ and BoC to tighten monetary policy. Chart 8An Intuitive Link Between Yield Betas & Bond Market Performance Chart 9Cyclical Pressures & Yield Betas Are Linked At the same time, the yield betas of government bonds in Germany and the UK have remained low despite the cyclical upturn in our ECB and BoE Monitors. The lingering impact of COVID-19 lockdowns on economic growth and inflation in the euro area and UK is likely weighing on bond yields in both regions. This limits any challenge to the dovish forward guidance of the ECB and BoE, in contrast to the repricing of interest rate expectations seen in other countries. The market-implied path of policy interest rates extracted from OIS forward curves does show a much more aggressive expected path of policy rates in the higher beta markets versus the lower beta markets (Chart 10). Chart 10More Rate Hikes Expected In The Higher Yield Beta Countries​​​​​​​ The “liftoff” date for each central bank shown, representing when the first full interest rate hike is priced into the OIS forwards, is shown in Table 1. We rank the countries in the table by the amount of time until the discounted liftoff date, from shortest to longest. The first rate hike is expected in New Zealand in June 2022, with the BoC expected to lift rates in Canada two months later. The market is not pricing a full rate hike by the Fed until January 2023, while liftoff in the UK and Australia are expected during the summer of 2023. Table 1The "Pecking Order" Of Global Liftoff We treat the countries with perpetually low interest rates, the euro area and Japan, differently in Table 1, as both the ECB and BoJ would most likely move slowly if and when they ever decided to raise rates again. Thus, we define liftoff as only a 10bp increase in policy interest rates for those two regions, while for all the other central banks we assume the size of the first rate hike will be 25bps. On that reduced basis, the market is priced for “liftoff” by the ECB and BoJ in September 2023 and February 2025, respectively. In terms of that “order of liftoff” shown in Table 1, we generally agree with current market pricing except for New Zealand and Canada. We fully expect the Fed to be the first central bank to begin signaling the path towards monetary policy normalization, largely due to the impact of the fiscal stimulus, starting with a move to begin tapering the Fed’s asset purchases at the start of 2022. The Fed will also be the first to begin rate hikes after tapering. We do not anticipate the BoC or Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) to make any hawkish moves (reduced asset purchases or rate hikes) before the Fed does the same, as this would put unwanted appreciation pressures on the New Zealand and Canadian dollars. We expect the BoC and RBNZ to move soon after the Fed begins to shift, followed by the BoE and RBA a bit later after that in line with the current liftoff ordering. The pace of rate hikes after liftoff also appears to be a bit too aggressively priced in the countries with higher yield betas. The cumulative amount of interest rate increases to the end of 2024 currently priced in OIS curves is larger in Canada (175bps) and Australia (156bps) than the US (139bps) and New Zealand (140bps). The relative differences are not huge, however, but we think the odds favor the Fed delivering the greater amount of rate hikes over the next three years. More generally, when looking at what is more important for each central bank in determining the timing of liftoff, we can boil it down to a couple of the most important measures for the higher beta countries (Chart 11): US: The Fed will continue to focus on both inflation expectations and broad measures of labor market utilization before signaling any policy shift. On that basis, there is still some way to go before TIPS breakevens return to the 2.3-2.5% level we believe to be consistent with the Fed sustainably hitting its 2% inflation goal on the PCE deflator. Also, there is still a lot of ground to cover before the US labor market fully returns to pre-pandemic health, as the employment/population ratio is four percentage points below the pre-COVID peak. New Zealand: The RBNZ is now under a lot more pressure to tighten policy after the New Zealand government changed the central bank’s remit to include stabilizing house prices, which have soured to unaffordable levels that have exacerbated income inequality. With house prices now rising at a 19% annual rate, the highest since 2004, the RBNZ will be under pressure to hike sooner, although any associated rise in the New Zealand dollar will likely be of equal concern. Canada: The BoC has been very candid that its current policy mix of aggressive asset purchases and 0% policy rates will be altered if the Canadian economy improves. We believe that the current trends of booming house price inflation, recovering business investment prospects and a rapidly recovering labor market will all make the BoC more willing to signal tighter monetary policy fairly soon after the Fed does the same. Australia: The RBA is likely to continue surprising bond markets with its dovishness in the face of a rapidly recovering economy, given underwhelming inflation. In a recent speech, RBA Governor Philip Lowe noted that Australian inflation will not return to the RBA’s 2-3% target band without wage growth rising from the current 1.4% pace up to 3%. The RBA does not expect the labor market to tighten enough to generate that kind of wage growth until at least 2024, suggesting no eagerness to begin normalizing monetary policy. Among the lower-beta markets, the most important things that will dictate future policy moves are the following (Chart 12): Chart 11What To Watch In The Higher Yield Beta Countries Chart 12What To Watch In The Lower Yield Beta Countries UK: The BoE’s current focus is on how fast the UK economy recovers from the pandemic shock, with inflation expectations remaining elevated (see the next section of this report). The degree of strength in business investment and consumer spending will thus dictate the timing of any BoE shift to a less accommodative policy stance. Euro Area: The latest set of ECB projections call for inflation to only reach 1.4% by 2023. As long as inflation (both realized and expected) stays well below the 2% ECB target, the central bank will focus more on supporting easy financial conditions (lower corporate bond yields, tighter Italy-Germany yield spreads and resisting euro currency strength). Japan: Inflation continues to underwhelm in Japan, and the BoJ is a long way from contemplating any tightening measures. Summing it all up, we still see value in using yield betas to dictate our recommended fixed income country allocations. Although these should be complemented with assessments of the relative likelihood of central banks moving before others to further refine country allocations. Bottom Line: Within government bond portfolios, overweighting the “lower-beta” countries that have bond yields less sensitive to changes in US yields (Germany, France, Japan) versus the higher-beta markets (Canada, Australia, UK) remains the appropriate strategy during the current bond bear market. Underweights should remain concentrated in the US, though, as it is highly unlikely that any central bank will begin to tighten policy before the Fed. A Brief Follow-Up To Our UK Special Report In our Special Report on the UK published last week, we noted that the UK had the lowest real bond yields and highest inflation expectations among the developed market countries with inflation-linked bonds.1 Some astute clients pointed out that we neglected to discuss how the UK inflation-linked bonds are priced off the UK Retail Price Index (RPI) which typically runs with a faster inflation rate than the UK Consumer Price Index (CPI). This creates a downward bias to UK real yields in comparison to other countries that use domestic CPI indices in inflation-linked bond pricing. We did not ignore the RPI-CPI differential in our report, we just did not think it to be relevant to the conclusions of our report. The UK still has the lowest real rates and highest inflation expectations even after adjusting both by the RPI-CPI gap (Chart 13). Furthermore, survey-based measures of UK inflation expectations are broadly in line with the RPI-based inflation breakevens, confirming the message from the RPI-based real yields and inflation expectations. Chart 13UK Real Yields Are Too Low, Using RPI Or CPI Looking ahead, the RPI-CPI gap is likely to stay in a much narrower range compared to its longer run history. Chart 14A Less Active BoE Has Narrowed The RPI-CPI Gap For example, between 2000 and 2007, the RPI-CPI gap averaged a full percentage point but with very large fluctuations (Chart 14). This is because mortgage interest costs are included in the RPI but are not part of the CPI. Thus, RPI inflation tends to be more volatile when the BoE is more active in adjusting interest rates. After the 2008 financial crisis, the BoE has kept policy rates at very low levels with very few changes. The RPI-CPI gap has narrowed as a result, averaging only one-half of a percentage point between 2009 to today. Thus, our conclusion on UK bond yields remains the same – Gilt yields are too low and are likely to rise further over the next 6-12 months.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy/Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low?",dated March 10, 2021, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com and fes.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index ​​​​​​​ Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights With the vaccination campaign in full gear and plenty of fiscal support in the pipeline, investors have swung from worrying that the US economy will grow too slowly to worrying that it will grow too fast. Thanks to the latest stimulus bill, US households will have $2 trillion in excess savings at their disposal by April. This money will seep into the economy as lockdown measures end. There is still scope for US interest rate expectations to rise beyond 2023. However, the Fed is unlikely to raise rates in the next two years even if the economy does begin to overheat. This should keep rate expectations at the short end of the curve well anchored near zero, allowing the curve to further steepen. Investors should continue to overweight equities on a 12-month horizon. Historically, stocks have been able to shrug off rising bond yields, provided borrowing costs did not rise so high as to tip the economy into recession. A faster start to the vaccination campaign in the US and accommodative fiscal policy should support the dollar over the next few months. Nevertheless, the greenback will still decline modestly over a 12-month horizon. Too Hot For Comfort? With the vaccination campaign in full gear and plenty of fiscal support in the pipeline, investors have swung from worrying that the US economy will grow too slowly to worrying that it will grow too fast. Chart 1 illustrates these concerns in a nutshell. Point A on the aggregate demand schedule corresponds to a situation where the economy is operating below capacity and interest rates are stuck at zero. An outward shift in the demand curve from AD1 to AD2 would eliminate the output gap without necessitating higher interest rates (Point B). Such an outcome would be good news for equity investors because it would lead to more output and increased corporate profits without any tightening in monetary policy. Chart 1Where Will Fiscal And Monetary Policy Take Us? If the demand curve were to shift further out to AD3, however, the Fed might be forced to take away the punch bowl. The result would be higher interest rates rather than higher output (Point C). This would be bad news for equity investors. Two Questions Analyzing the current debate about where bond yields are going through the lens of this simple chart, two questions arise: How likely is the US economy to run out of excess capacity over the next few quarters? How would the Fed respond to evidence that the US economy is overheating? On the first question, the honest answer is that no one knows. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the output gap stood at 3% of GDP in the fourth quarter of 2020. The true number is probably closer to 5% of GDP since the CBO implausibly assumes that GDP was 1% above potential prior to the pandemic. As of February, payroll employment was down 5.3% from its pre-pandemic level, suggesting that there is still a fair amount of slack in the economy. Employment had fallen even more among low-income workers, women, and certain ethnic minority groups – an important consideration given the Fed’s heightened focus on “inclusive growth” (Chart 2). Chart 2Some Have Suffered More Job Losses Than Others Slack Will Shrink Chart 3Lower Spending And Higher Income Led To Mounting Excess Savings US households were sitting on around $1.7 trillion in excess savings as of the end of January. Households generated about two-thirds of those excess savings by cutting back on spending during the pandemic, with the remaining one-third stemming from increased transfer payments (Chart 3). We estimate that the stimulus bill that President Biden signed into law earlier today will boost household savings by an additional $300 billion, bringing the stock of excess savings to $2 trillion by April. As lockdown measures ease, it is reasonable to assume that households will spend a portion of this cash cushion. Unlike President Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act will raise the incomes of the poor much more than the rich (Chart 4). Since the poor tend to spend a greater share of each dollar of disposable income than the rich, aggregate demand could rise meaningfully. Chart 4Biden’s Package Will Boost The Income Of The Poor Meanwhile, the supply side of the economy could face a temporary setback. Under the legislation, about 40% of jobless workers will receive more income from extended unemployment benefits than they did from working. While these additional benefits will expire in early September, they could temporarily curtail labor supply at a time when firms are trying to step up the pace of hiring. Putting it all together, there is a high probability that the US economy will heat up this summer, stoking fears of higher inflation. Door C, D, Or E? For investors, how the Fed reacts to any potential overheating will be critical. If the market prices in an earlier liftoff date for the fed funds rate, the economy will move towards Point C. However, there is another possibility: Rather than fretting about an overheated economy, the Fed could welcome it, stressing its commitment to maintain very easy monetary policy. In that case, the economy would find itself closer to Point D. In fact, Point D could turn out to be a waystation to Point E. An overheated economy could lift inflation. In the absence of any rate hikes, real interest rates would fall. Lower real rates would further stoke spending, causing the aggregate demand curve to shift to AD4. What point will the US end up reaching? As we discuss below, our guess is “eventually Point C,” but with a temporary detour towards Points D/E. The Long-Term Case For C Chart 5Real Yields Have Recovered But Are Still Low The 5-year/5-year forward US TIPS yield currently stands at 0.18%. This is well above the trough of -0.84% reached last August, but still below the average of 0.7% that prevailed in 2017-19 (Chart 5). One can make a case that real bond yields will eventually rise above where they were before the pandemic. Even though the US budget deficit will decline next year due to the expiration of most stimulus measures, fiscal policy will remain looser than it was for most of the post-GFC period. Notably, BCA’s geopolitical strategists expect Congress to pass a $4 trillion 10-year infrastructure bill by this fall, only half of which will be financed through tax hikes. They also anticipate increased spending on health care and other social programs. Chronically easier fiscal policy will lift the neutral rate of interest. Recall that the neutral rate – also known as the “equilibrium rate” –  is simply the interest rate that equalizes aggregate demand with aggregate supply. To the extent that looser fiscal policy raises aggregate demand, a higher interest rate will be necessary to bring aggregate demand back down so that it matches aggregate supply. Temporary Detour Towards D/E That journey to higher real bond yields is likely to be prolonged, however. As noted above, the Fed has no desire to validate market expectations of tighter monetary policy anytime soon. Chart 6 shows that yields rarely rise significantly when the Fed is on hold. Chart 6Treasurys Tend To Underperform When The Fed Delivers Hawkish Surprises Currently, investors expect the Fed to start hiking rates in November 2022, with a second rate hike delivered in May 2023, and a third in November 2023 (Chart 7). This is considerably more hawkish than the Fed’s own forecast from December, which called for no rate hikes until at least 2024. Chart 7The Market Expects Liftoff In Late 2022 While the Fed is likely to bring forward its dots during this month’s FOMC meeting, our US bond strategists still expect the revised dots to signal a later liftoff than what the market is pricing in. On balance, we expect the 10-year Treasury yield to finish the year at about 1.7% – broadly in line with market expectations – but to rise more than expected over a longer-term horizon of 2-to-5 years. Is Inflation A Short-Term Or Long-Term Risk? A sizeable gap has opened up between US 5-year and 10-year inflation breakevens (Chart 8). Investors believe that inflation will accelerate over the next few years but then settle down to a lower level by the middle of the decade.  We think the opposite is more likely to transpire. Economies can often operate above potential for a while before inflation expectations become unmoored. For example, in the 1960s, the unemployment rate spent over two years below NAIRU before inflation finally burst onto the scene. However, as the sixties also revealed, when inflation does rise, it can rise quickly. Core CPI inflation doubled within the span of nine months in 1966. Inflation continued rising all the way to 6% in 1969 (Chart 9). Chart 8Breakeven Curve Inversion Chart 9Inflation Started Accelerating Quickly Only When Unemployment Reached Very Low Levels In The 1960s   As we discussed in February, there are numerous similarities between the present environment and the mid-1960s. This suggests that inflation could surprise significantly to the upside in the middle of the decade, even if it is slow to get off the ground over the next few years. Remain Overweight Stocks Over A 12-Month Horizon Stocks usually rise when growth is strong and monetary policy is accommodative (Chart 10). While bond yields in the US and most other economies will trend higher, they will remain below their equilibrium level for at least the next two years. Chart 10Stocks Do Well When The Economy Does Well In fact, fiscal largesse may have boosted the US neutral rate of interest by more than bond yields have risen, implying that monetary policy has become more, not less, stimulative over the past few months. Historically, stocks have been able to shrug off rising bond yields, provided borrowing costs did not rise so high as to tip the economy into recession (Chart 11 and Table 1). Chart 11What Happens To Equities When Treasury Yields Rise?   Table 1As Long As Bond Yields Don't Rise Into Restrictive Territory, Stocks Will Recover Mixed Picture For The US Dollar The OECD estimates that GDP in the rest of the world will receive a modest lift from US fiscal stimulus (Chart 12). Nevertheless, the US economy will be the primary beneficiary. This has important implications for the direction of the dollar. Chart 12The Benefits Of US Fiscal Stimulus Will Spill Over To Other Countries The dollar is normally a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of the global business cycle. One key reason for this is that the US economy, with its relatively small manufacturing base and large service sector, is less cyclical than most other economies. Thus, when global growth rises, the US often lags behind. The pattern has been different this year, however. Chart 13 shows that growth expectations have risen more in the US than abroad. This is partly because US fiscal policy has been more stimulative than elsewhere. In addition, the US has been faster out of the gate in vaccinating its population (Chart 14). Chart 13US Growth Outperformance Could Be A Near-Term Tailwind For The Dollar US growth outperformance should support the greenback over the next few months. Nevertheless, we are not ready to abandon our bearish 12-month dollar view. For one thing, growth revisions should shift back in favor of other developed economies later this year as they catch up to the US in their vaccination campaigns. The prospect of negative fiscal thrust in 2022 due to the expiration of various stimulus measures will also weigh on the US growth outlook. Lastly, the Fed’s reticence to signal a tighter monetary stance will prevent US 2-year real yields – which are already quite low compared to other developed markets – from rising very much (Chart 15). We have found that shorter-dated yields help explain currency movements better than longer-dated yields. Chart 14US Is Among The Vaccination Leaders   Chart 15Real Rate Differentials Are A Headwind For The Dollar A modestly softer dollar should, in turn, support cyclical equity sectors and value stocks over the next 12 months.   Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist pberezin@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Duration: Only 2 of the 5 items on our Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration have been checked. We will heed this message and stick with below-benchmark portfolio duration for the time being. We will have an opportunity to re-assess the items on our Checklist after the March FOMC meeting when the Fed’s interest rate forecasts will be updated. The Fed & Financial Conditions: The recent dip in the stock market is not the result of investors pricing-in worse economic outcomes. Rather, it is a sector rotation driven by extreme economic optimism. It is certainly not a concern for the Fed. The Fed & The Labor Market: We need to see monthly nonfarm payroll growth coming in consistently above 419 thousand before we can be confident that the Fed will hike rates by the end of 2022. Feature Chart 1Bearish Trend Intact The bond bear market rages on. The Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Index returned -1.8% in February, its worst monthly performance since 2016. The sell-off then continued through the first week of March, culminating with the 10-year Treasury yield touching 1.56% as of Friday’s close (Chart 1). The 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield ended the week at 2.41%, near the top-end of primary dealer estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate (Chart 1, bottom panel). We don’t want to catch a falling knife, but eventually, yields will look attractive enough for us to increase our recommended portfolio duration. To help us make that decision, we unveiled a Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration in our February Webcast (Table 1).1 Table 1Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration This week, we check-in with our Checklist, concluding that it is still too early to increase portfolio duration. Checking-In With Our Duration Checklist Chart 2Cyclical & Valuation Indicators The first item on our Checklist is the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield reaching levels consistent with survey estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate. As noted above, this condition has been met. Second, we would like to see survey-derived measures of the 10-year term premium reach extended levels. Specifically, we’d like to see them approach their 2018 peaks (Chart 2). Currently, our two measures are sending diverging signals. The term premium derived from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants is 60 bps, only 15 bps off its 2018 peak. However, the term premium derived from the New York Fed’s Survey of Primary Dealers is only 22 bps, 53 bps off its 2018 peak. For now, our assessment is that this condition has not been met. It’s important to note that the surveys used to construct our two term premium measures and to obtain our fair value range for the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield have not been updated since January, and that they will be revised ahead of this month’s FOMC meeting. If primary dealers and market participants revise up their fed funds rate expectations, then our valuation measures will give the 10-year yield more room to rise. Third, we continue to track high-frequency cyclical economic indicators like the CRB/Gold ratio (Chart 2, panel 3) and the relative performance of cyclical versus defensive equity sectors (see section titled “The Fed’s Approach To Financial Conditions” below). These measures have yet to show any signs of deterioration, consistent with an environment where bond yields should be rising. Fourth, if current trends continue, we are concerned that US yields may rise too far compared to yields in the rest of the world. This could entice foreign inflows into the US bond market, sending yields back down. Historically, bullish sentiment toward the US dollar is a good indicator of when US yields have risen too far. At present, dollar sentiment remains extremely bearish (Chart 2, bottom panel). This suggests that we are not yet close to the point when foreign purchases will push US yields lower. Finally, we consider the market’s fed funds rate expectations relative to the Fed’s most recent forecast, as inferred from its quarterly “dot plot”. Currently, the market is priced for Fed liftoff to occur in January 2023, with a second rate hike delivered in May 2023 and a third in October 2023 (Chart 3). This is considerably more hawkish than the Fed’s median forecast from December, which called for no rate hikes until at least 2024! Chart 3Market Expects Liftoff In January 2023 We think it’s conceivable that economic conditions could warrant Fed liftoff in late-2022 (see section titled “Tracking Payrolls And The Countdown To Fed Liftoff” below), but the Fed will probably be more cautious about how quickly it brings its expected liftoff date forward. FOMC participants will have an opportunity to push back against the market when they update their funds rate forecasts at this month’s meeting. The Fed will likely bring forward its anticipated liftoff date, but probably not all the way to January 2023. This could halt the uptrend in bond yields, at least for a while. Bottom Line: Only 2 of the 5 items on our Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration have been checked. We will heed this message and stick with below-benchmark portfolio duration for the time being. We will have an opportunity to re-assess the items on our Checklist after the March FOMC meeting when the Fed’s interest rate forecasts will be updated. Other surveys used in the construction of our term premium estimates and 5-year/5-year yield targets will also be updated around this time. The Fed’s Approach To Financial Conditions Chart 4Financial Conditions Are Easy Remarks from Fed Chair Jay Powell were a catalyst for higher bond yields last week. Apparently, there had been some expectation in the market that Powell would use his platform to express concern about the recent increase in long-maturity bond yields. In fact, many expected him to foreshadow changes to the Fed’s balance sheet policy, either extending the maturity of its ongoing asset purchases or initiating an Operation Twist, where the Fed sells short-dated securities and buys long-dated ones.2 Powell didn’t announce any of these things. In fact, he didn’t even express concern about the recent rise in long-dated yields despite being given several opportunities to do so. To understand why, we need to understand how the Fed thinks about financial conditions. The Fed only cares about conditions in financial markets to the extent that they are expected to influence the real economy. This means that the Fed takes a broad view of financial conditions, including bond yields, credit spreads and equity prices. From this perspective, financial markets do not currently pose a risk to the economy (Chart 4). Yes, long-dated bond yields have risen, but short-dated yields remain low. Credit spreads also remain very tight and equity prices have only dipped modestly from high levels. The Chicago Fed’s broad index of financial conditions shows that they are extremely accommodative (Chart 4), and thus support continued economic recovery. This financial market back-drop is not one that will cause the Fed to take additional actions to ease policy. Even the recent drop in the stock market appears to be more a reflection of economic optimism than a cause for concern. Looking at the performance of different equity sectors, we find that the sectors that stand to benefit from the end of the pandemic and economic re-opening are surging. Meanwhile, the sectors that are performing poorly are simply giving back some of the huge gains that were realized when the pandemic was raging last year. For example, cyclical sectors (Industrials, Energy and Materials) are soaring while defensive sectors (Healthcare, Communications, Consumer Staples and Utilities) have hooked down (Chart 5A). The ratio between the two remains tightly correlated with the 10-year Treasury yield. Similarly, Bank stocks have exploded higher since bond yields troughed last fall while the Technology sector has had difficulty making further gains (Chart 5B). Last year, the Tech sector benefited from low bond yields and surging demand. This year, Banks stand to profit from higher yields and an improving labor market. Finally, our US Equity Strategy team put together a basket of “COVID-19 Winners” designed to profit from the pandemic and a basket of “Back To Work” stocks designed to benefit from economic re-opening. Not surprisingly, the former is dragging the S&P 500 lower while the latter is on a tear (Chart 5C). Chart 5ASector Rotation: Cyclicals Vs. Defensives Chart 5BSector Rotation: Banks Vs. Tech Chart 5CSector Rotation: COVID Winners Vs. Re-Open Winners The bottom line is that the recent dip in the stock market is not the result of investors pricing-in worse economic outcomes. Rather, it is a sector rotation driven by extreme economic optimism. It is certainly not a concern for the Fed. Other Reasons For The Fed To Change Its Balance Sheet Policy In addition to concerns about a drop in the stock market, several other reasons have been given for why the Fed might consider either increasing its asset purchases or shifting them toward the long end of the curve. 1) Treasury Market Liquidity Chart 6Treasury Market Liquidity First, there is an ongoing tension in the Treasury market between imposing stricter capital regulations on dealer banks and ensuring that they have enough balance sheet capacity to maintain Treasury market liquidity during periods of stress.3 This delicate equilibrium broke down last March when Treasury market liquidity evaporated at a time when both equities and bonds were crashing. The Fed was forced to step into the Treasury market to sustain market functioning. Last week’s Treasury sell-off had a whiff of illiquidity about it as well. One liquidity index that measures the average curve fitting error across all government bond yields increased slightly, but not nearly as much as it did last March (Chart 6). Treasury bid/ask spreads also widened a touch, but unlike last March, Treasury ETFs continued to trade close to their net asset values. A significant deterioration in Treasury liquidity would prompt a quick response from the Fed. That is, the Fed would quickly ramp up purchases to restore market functioning. However, last week’s blip was not nearly severe enough to raise alarm bells. Other periods of Treasury market stress that have prompted the Fed to step in have occurred during periods of extreme economic deterioration and market panic, such as in March 2020 and 2008. With economic growth accelerating rapidly, we place low odds on a major Treasury market liquidity event occurring this year. 2) Expiry Of The SLR Exemption Chart 7Reserve Supply Is Massive A second possible reason for the Fed to change its balance sheet policy is the upcoming expiry of the exemption to the Supplementary Leverage Ratio (SLR). The SLR is a regulation that requires large banks to hold common equity capital totaling at least 5% of assets. Assets are not risk-weighted for the purposes of the SLR. A problem arose with the SLR last March when the Fed bought massive amounts of bonds, flooding the banking system with reserves (Chart 7). The problem is that banks are forced to hold those reserves, and this makes it more difficult for them to meet their SLR requirement. To alleviate the problem, the Fed announced that reserves and Treasury securities would be exempted from the SLR calculation. Today, the issue is that this exemption is scheduled to expire at the end of March and the Fed has yet to announce whether it will be extended or allowed to lapse. Table 2US Bank Supplementary Leverage Ratios If the exemption lapses, then banks may try to unload Treasury securities to remain compliant with the SLR. In theory, this could lead to upward pressure on Treasury yields that the Fed could mitigate by ramping up its asset purchases. However, it’s unclear how much of an impact a lapsing of the SLR exemption would actually have on the Treasury market. Even adjusting for a lapsing of the exemption, all major US banks remain compliant with the 5% SLR (Table 2). Also, banks could always decide to increase their SLRs by reducing share buybacks rather than by shedding Treasuries.   In any event, an increase in Fed asset purchases to lean against rising Treasury yields driven by bank selling would be counterproductive. It would only flood the banking system with more reserves, making the SLR even more difficult to meet. Our view is that a fair compromise would be for the Fed to continue the SLR exemption for bank reserves, but to allow the Treasury security exemption to lapse. But even if the SLR exemption is allowed to lapse completely, we doubt that it will lead to enough market turmoil to prompt a change in the Fed’s balance sheet strategy. 3) Supply/Demand Imbalance In Money Markets Finally, some have noted that the large and growing supply of bank reserves could lead to problems in money markets. Specifically, with the Treasury Department now in the process of paying down its cash account (Chart 7, bottom panel), there is a lot of cash flooding into money markets and coming up against limited T-bill supply. In theory, the Fed could try to mitigate this problem by engaging in an Operation Twist – selling some T-bills and buying some coupon bonds. But we doubt this will occur. The Fed already has tools in place to maintain control over short rates in such circumstances. For example, the same situation arose in 2013 when an over-supply of bank reserves pushed short rates down toward the bottom of the Fed’s target range (Chart 8A). The Fed’s response was to create the Overnight Reverse Repo Facility (ON RRP). This facility allows counterparties to park excess cash at the Fed in exchange for a security off the Fed’s balance sheet. This proved to be an effective floor on repo rates and the fed funds rate, and we expect it will be again (Chart 8B). Chart 8AFed Created ON RRP In 2013... Chart 8B... It Remains A Firm Floor On Rates T-bill yields remained below the ON RRP rate for some time in 2014 and 2015, and the same thing could happen again this year. But this will not be a major concern for the Fed as long as it maintains control over the fed funds rate and the overnight repo rate. Eventually, the Treasury Department can deal with the lack of bill supply by increasing the amount of T-bill issuance. Bottom Line: Treasury market liquidity remains an ongoing concern for the Fed, and the possible expiry of the SLR exemption and lack of T-bill supply present additional near-term technical challenges. We think it’s unlikely that any of these things will prompt the Fed to deviate from its current pace and composition of asset purchases in 2021. Tracking Payrolls And The Countdown To Fed Liftoff Chart 9The Fed's Maximum Employment Targets Employment growth surprised to the upside in February as 379 thousand jobs were added to nonfarm payrolls. This sent bond yields higher, but we caution that even stronger employment growth will be required to keep bond yields rising going forward. The Fed needs to see a return to “maximum employment” before it will lift rates off the zero bound. This means not only that the unemployment rate will have to fall to a range of 3.5% to 4.5%, but also that the labor force participation rate must make a full recovery to pre-pandemic levels (Chart 9). We calculate that average monthly employment growth of 419 thousand will be required to achieve this goal by the end of 2022 (Table 3). In other words, to justify the market’s January 2023 expected liftoff date, we will need to see average monthly payroll growth of at least 419 thousand going forward.   Table 3Average Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 4.5% By The Given Date This number seems high, but it may be attainable. With vaccine distribution kicking into high gear, many service sectors of the economy will soon be able to re-open. This already started to happen last month when the Leisure & Hospitality sector added 355 thousand jobs. Even after last month’s gains, Leisure & Hospitality still accounts for 36% of the net job loss since last February (Table 4). This means that there is scope for extremely large employment gains this year if the coronavirus can be contained. Table 4Employment By Industry Bottom Line: We need to see monthly nonfarm payroll growth coming in consistently above 419 thousand before we can be confident that the Fed will hike rates by the end of 2022. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bcaresearch.com/webcasts/detail/387 2 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-03-01/treasury-curve-dysfunction-ignites-talk-of-federal-reserve-twist?sref=Ij5V3tFi 3 For more details please see US Investment Strategy / US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Alphabet Soup, Part 2: Shocked And Awed”, dated July 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Rising Global Yields: The increased turbulence in global bond markets is part of the adjustment process to a more positive outlook for global economic growth. Rising real yields are now the main driver of nominal yield movements, with stable inflation expectations indicating that investors are not overly concerned about a sustained inflation overshoot. Duration: Central bankers will eventually be forced to shift to less dovish interest rate guidance to reflect the new reality of faster growth and increased inflation pressures, but this is likely to not occur until much later in 2021, starting with the Fed. Maintain a below-benchmark cyclical duration stance in global bond portfolios. UST Yields & Spreads: The selloff in US Treasuries has pushed US yields to levels that are starting to look a bit stretched relative to yields from other major developed economies like Germany and Japan. This is especially true on a volatility-adjusted basis. As a result, we are closing our tactical US-Germany spread widening trade in bond futures at a profit of 1.8%. Feature Chart of the WeekBond Yields Are Rising Because Of Growth The rapid surge in global bond yields seen so far in 2021 has led some commentators to declare that the dreaded “bond vigilantes” have returned to dole out punishment for overly stimulative fiscal and monetary policies (most notably in the US). The rapid pace of the bond selloff, with the 10-year US Treasury yield reaching 1.6% on an intraday basis last week, has raised fears that spiking yields could damage a fragile global economic recovery. This logic is backwards – it is surging growth expectations that are driving bond yields sustainably higher from deeply depressed levels. Global growth is projected to accelerate at a very rapid pace over the rest of this year and 2022. The combination of the Bloomberg consensus real GDP growth and inflation forecasts for the major developed economies suggest that nominal year-over-year GDP growth is expected to climb to 7.2% in the US, 8.4% in the UK and 6.4% in the euro area by year-end (Chart of the Week). Nominal growth in 2022 is expected to grow by another 5-7% across the same regions, suggesting a return to a slightly faster pace than prevailed during the pre-pandemic years of 2017-19 - even after a boom in 2021. Nominal longer-term global government bond yields, which had been priced for a pandemic-stricken economic backdrop, are now playing catch-up to the new reality of a post-pandemic, vaccinated world. Bond investors understand that the need for extreme monetary accommodation is ebbing, especially in the US where there will be an enormous fiscal impulse to growth in 2021 (and beyond). As a result, interest rate expectations are moving higher, fueling a repricing towards higher bond yields around the world. This process has more room to run. A Global Move Higher In Yields, For The Right Reasons Chart 2Reflationary Bear-Steepening Of Global Yield Curves The cyclical rise in developed market bond yields that began last summer was initially focused on longer-maturity yields boosted by rising inflation expectations (Chart 2). The very front-ends of bond yield curves – which are more sensitive to expectations of changes in central bank policy rates – have remained subdued. The upward pressure on global bond yields is starting to infect some shorter maturities, however. 5-year government bonds yields in the UK, Canada and Australia rose 44bps, 42bps and 35bps, respectively, during the month of February. The latter two represented a near doubling of the level of the 5-year yield. In the case of the UK, the surge in 5-year Gilt yields came from a starting point of negative yields at the end of January. Last week, the 5-year US Treasury yield jumped a massive 22bps on a single day due to a poorly received US Treasury auction. Year-to-date, longer-term global bond yields have been rising more through the real yield component than higher inflation expectations (Charts 3A & 3B). This is a change in the dynamics from the latter half of 2020 when inflation expectations were the dominant force pushing global yields higher. Chart 3AReal Yields Are Driving The Recent Bond Selloff … Chart 3B… Even In The Lower-Yielding Markets This shift in “leadership” of the global bond market selloff has been broad-based. 10-year real yields from inflation-linked bonds have surged higher in the US (+35bps year-to-date), UK (+40bps), Australia (+44bps) and Canada (+25bps). Real 10-year yields have even inched up in France (+9bps), despite euro area growth suffering because of COVID-19 lockdowns. This coordinated rise in real bond yields comes on the heels of a sharp improvement in overall global economic momentum and improving expectations for future growth. Manufacturing PMIs, a reliable leading indicator of real yields in the developed markets, began a cyclical improvement in the middle of last year and, right on cue, global bond yields bottomed out toward the end of 2020 (Chart 4). The link between that strong growth momentum and real bond yields comes from expected changes in central bank policies. Our Central Bank Monitors for the US, euro area, UK, Japan, Canada and Australia – designed to measure cyclical pressures on monetary policy - have all moved significantly higher since mid-2020 (Chart 5). This suggests a diminished need for additional monetary stimulus because of rebounding economic growth and intensifying inflation pressures. The Monitors have climbed to above pre-pandemic levels in the US and Australia. Chart 4Real Yields Starting To Catch Up To Solid Growth Chart 5Markets Starting To Discount Rate Hikes In 2023 Interest rate markets are responding to this cyclical pressure to tighten monetary policies by repricing the expected timing and pace of the next rate hiking cycle. Our 24-month discounters, which derive the amount of interest rate changes priced into overnight index swap (OIS) curves up to two years in the future, are now pricing in higher policy rates in the US (+40bps), the UK (+32bps), Australia (+36bps) and Canada (a whopping +82bps) by the first quarter of 2023. This repricing of interest rate expectations does conflict with current central bank forward guidance, to varying degrees. For example, the Fed continues to signal that there will not be any rate hikes until at least the end of 2023. Policymakers will not be overly concerned about higher government bond yields and shifting interest rate expectations, however, if there is limited spillover into broader financial market performance. In the US, the latest increase in real Treasury yields to date has had minimal impact on US equity market valuations or corporate bond yields (Chart 6A), suggesting no tightening of financial conditions that could impact future US economic growth. A similar situation is playing out in Europe, where higher longer-term real yields have had little impact on equity market valuations or the borrowing rates that the ECB is most concerned about, like Italian BTP yields (Chart 6B). Chart 6ANo Tightening Of Financial Conditions In The US... Chart 6B...Or Europe Currency valuations are a more important indicator of financial conditions for other central banks. For example, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has been explicit that its current policies – near-zero policy rates, yield curve control to anchor the level of 3-year bond yields and quantitative easing (QE) to moderate the level of longer-term yields – are intended to not only keep borrowing costs low but also dampen the value of the Australian dollar. At the moment, the US dollar is being pulled in different directions by the typical fundamental drivers. Real rate differentials between the US and other major developed economies remain unattractive for the greenback, even with the latest rise in US real yields (Chart 7). At the same time, growth differentials between the US and the other major economies are turning more USD-positive. For now, rate differentials are the more dominant factor for the US dollar and will remain so until the Fed begins to shift to a less dovish policy stance – an outcome that we do not expect until much later this year when the Fed will begin to prepare the market for a tapering of asset purchases in 2022. A sustainable bottoming of the US dollar, fueled by a shift to a less accommodative Fed, will also likely mark the end of the rising trend for global inflation expectations, given the links between the dollar, commodity prices and inflation breakevens (bottom panel). Central banks outside the US will continue to resist any unwelcome appreciation of their own currencies versus the US dollar. That means doing more QE when bond yields rise too quickly, as the RBA did this week and the ECB has threatened to do in recent comments from senior policymakers (Chart 8). Increasing the size of asset purchases is unlikely to sustainably drive non-US bond yields lower, however, in an environment of improving global growth that is causing investors to reassess the future path of interest rates. All more QE can hope to do at this point in the global business cycle is limit how fast bond yields can increase. Chart 7The USD Remains The Critical Reflationary Variable Chart 8More QE Is Less Effective At Capping Bond Yields   Chart 9Markets With A Lower Yield Beta To USTs Are Outperforming From an investment strategy perspective, the current growth-fueled move higher in global real bond yields does not change any of our suggested tilts. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark overall duration stance within global bond portfolios. Within our recommended country allocation among developed market government bonds, we continue to prefer a large underweight to US Treasuries and overweights to markets that are less susceptible to changes in US Treasury yields like Germany, France, Japan and the UK (Chart 9). We also continue to recommend only neutral allocations to Canadian and Australian government bonds (with below-benchmark duration exposure within those allocations), although we are on “downgrade alert” for both given their status as higher-beta bond markets with central banks more likely follow the Fed down a less dovish path later this year. Bottom Line: Rising real yields are now the main driver of nominal yield movements, with stable inflation expectations indicating that investors are not overly concerned about a sustained inflation overshoot. Central bankers will eventually be forced to shift to less dovish interest rate guidance to reflect the new reality of faster growth and increased inflation pressures, but this is likely to not occur until much later in 2021, starting with the Fed. Maintain a below-benchmark cyclical duration stance in global bond portfolios, with a large underweight allocation to US Treasuries. The UST-Bund Spread Widening Looks Stretched Chart 10Yield Chasing Has Been A Losing Strategy In 2021 Last August, we published a report discussing how “yield chasing” – a strategy of consistently favoring the highest yielding government bond markets – had become the default strategy for bond investors during the early months of the pandemic.1 We concluded that yield chasing would be a successful strategy for only as long as central banks stuck to their promises to maintain very loose monetary policy for the next few years. Investors would be forced to chase scarce yields in that environment, while worrying less about cyclical economic and inflation factors that could push up bond yields. Yield chasing has performed quite poorly so far in 2021. A basket of higher-yielding markets like the US, Canada and Australia has underperformed a basket of low-yielders like Germany, France and Japan by -1.4 percentage points (Chart 10). Obviously, such a carry-driven strategy would be expected to perform poorly during an environment of rising bond volatility as is currently the case. Markets that have been offering relatively enticing yields, like the US or Australia (Table 1), are actually generating the largest total return losses. Those higher-yielders have suffered more aggressive repricing of interest rate expectations, as discussed in the previous section of this report, leading to losses from duration that are dwarfing the higher yields. This is especially true in the US, where there remains the greater scope for an upward repricing of interest rate and inflation expectations. Table 1Government Bond Yields: Unhedged & Hedged Into USD This suggests that investors must be cautious on determining when to consider increasing exposure to higher yielders like the US, even after Treasury yields have increased substantially. One way to evaluate that is to look at the spreads between US Treasuries and low yielders like Germany and Japan, relative to US bond volatility. In Chart 11, we show the spread of 10-year US Treasuries to 10-year German Bunds. To facilitate a fair comparison between the two, we hedge the Treasury yield into euros while adjusting the spread for duration difference between the two bonds. The currency-hedged and duration-matched Treasury-Bund spread is shown in the middle panel of the chart. In the bottom panel, we adjust that spread for US interest rate volatility by dividing the spread by the level of the MOVE index of US Treasury option volatility. On an unadjusted basis, the 10-year yield gap now sits at 175bps, +70bps higher than the lows seen in August 2020. That spread is narrower on a currency hedged basis, with the 10-year US Treasury yield hedged into euros +73ps higher than the 10-year German bund yield. Two conclusions stand out from the chart: The currency-hedged and duration-matched spread is still well below the prior peaks dating back to 2000; The volatility-adjusted spread is already one standard deviation above the mean value since 2000. In other words, there is scope for US Treasuries yields to continue rising relative to German Bund yields based on levels reached in past cycles. Yet at the same time, the spread provides a reasonable level of compensation compared to the riskiness (volatility) of Treasuries, also based on past cycles. We show the same chart for the spread between 10-year US Treasuries and 10-year Japanese government bonds (JGBs) in Chart 12. In this case, there is also scope for additional spread widening although the volatility-adjusted spread is still not as attractive as at previous peaks since 2000. Chart 11UST-Bund Spread Looking Stretched Vs UST Vol Chart 12UST-JGB Spread Getting Stretched Vs UST Vol The message from the volatility-adjusted Treasury-Bund spread lines up with that of the momentum measures of the unadjusted spread. The latter is historically stretched relative to its 200-day moving average, while the change in the spread over the past six months has been as rapid as any of the moves seen since the 2008 financial crisis (Chart 13). Adding it all up, positioning for additional widening of the Treasury-Bund spread is a much poorer bet from a risk versus reward perspective than it was even a few months ago. On a fundamental medium-term basis, however, there is still room for the Treasury-Bund spread to widen further. Relative inflation and unemployment (spare capacity) trends both argue for relatively higher US bond yields (Chart 14). In addition, the Fed is almost certainly going to start tightening monetary policy well before the ECB, thus policy rate differentials will underpin a wider bond spread – although that is already largely discounted in the spread on a forward basis (top panel). Chart 13UST-Bund Spread Momentum Looks Stretched Chart 14Fundamentals Still Support A Wider UST-Bund Spread Chart 15Stay Underweight US Vs. Germany On A Strategic Basis Our fundamental fair value model of the 10-year Treasury-Bund spread shows that the spread is still cheap relative to fair value, which is rising (Chart 15). This suggests more medium-term upside in the spread, perhaps even by more than currently priced into the forwards over the next year. Based on this analysis, we see a case for maintaining a core strategic (6-12 month holding period) underweight position for the US versus Germany in our recommended country allocation within our model bond portfolio. At the same time, with the spread looking a bit stretched on some of the momentum and volatility-adjusted measures, we are taking profits on our tactical (0-6 month holding period) 10-year Treasury-Bund spread widening trade using bond futures, realizing a 1.8% return (see the Tactical Overlay table on page 18). Bottom Line: The selloff in US Treasuries has pushed US yields to levels that are starting to look a bit stretched relative to yields from other major developed economies like Germany and Japan. This is especially true on a volatility-adjusted basis. As a result, we are taking profits on our tactical US-Germany spread widening trade. However, we are maintaining our strategic overweight for Germany versus the US in our model bond portfolio, as fundamentals argue for a wider Treasury-Bund spread on a cyclical and strategic basis.   Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Report, "We’re All Yield Chasers Now", dated August 11, 2020, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights We continue to believe that the distribution of Goldilocks economic and market outcomes is quite wide, … : Financial markets and the economy are in a good spot, supported by a combination of above-trend growth and easy monetary policy that will remain in place for at least the next year. … though an unwelcome COVID turn could put the US in the left-hand tail, … : Growth could fall short of expectations in the event of a negative pandemic surprise. As long as vaccinations occur at a pace that confers herd immunity by the end of September, the left-tail scenario is highly unlikely. … and a consumption tidal wave could bring the right tail into play: An explosive release of pent-up consumer demand could push US growth beyond the top of the sanguine consensus range. Too-strong growth would eventually become self-limiting because it would pull the Fed off the sidelines. Our recommendations are unchanged: Goldilocks is just right for risk assets, and we continue to favor equities over bonds and spread product over Treasuries. Feature The potential outcomes for financial markets and the US economy broadly align with Goldilocks’ porridge choices at the three bears’ house: one is too hot, one is too cold and one is just right. The just-right outcome is where we are positioned now: thanks to enormous infusions of emergency aid that have morphed into consumption pump-priming, above-trend growth appears to be assured. That would be plenty favorable for equities and credit on its own, but they also benefit from the Fed’s promise to maintain accommodative monetary policy longer than it previously would have. As our Chief Global Fixed Income Strategist Rob Robis puts it, emergency COVID monetary and fiscal policy will persist well beyond the COVID emergency. That’s an awfully good combination for risk assets and investors have taken note of it, driving equity multiples up and credit spreads down. It is entirely possible that they could spoil things by bidding prices too high, but so far the growth impacts – in the form of knockout earnings surprises and better-than-expected credit performance – have been able to keep the party going. It is our view that they will continue to do so this year, as the range of good-enough growth outcomes is so wide that a Goldilocks outcome is considerably more probable than not. Figure 1 doesn’t quite do it justice, because the area under the tails had to be large enough to accommodate lengthy words like “resurgent” and “consumption,” but we think the tails begin at least one standard deviation away from the middle of the distribution. Figure 1This One Is Just Right How Did We Get Here? It is too soon for humanity to declare victory over COVID-19 but we do appear to have gained the upper hand as new case counts have plummeted from their January peaks in the US and the rest of the developed world (Chart 1). Much of Europe re-imposed stringent restrictions on activity for much of November and December, but US officials applied a loose patchwork of local measures, stepping in mostly when hospital capacity was strained (Chart 2). The good news going forward is that increased vigilance, and the cumulative infections that have already occurred, were apparently enough to slow the virus’ spread even during the northern hemisphere winter. The pandemic news can apparently be kept trending in the right direction without cutting off the economy’s oxygen. Chart 1The Tide Has Turned ... Chart 2... Relieving Pressure On Local Health Care Systems Lavish fiscal support has been the other critical element. The CARES Act swiftly rushed a great deal of aid to vulnerable households in two bursts spanning spring and early summer, with the first arriving mainly in April and May via economic impact payments of $1,200 per adult and $500 per child (Chart 3, top panel). The second burst came in the form of a weekly $600 federal unemployment insurance (UI) benefit supplement available through the end of July (though processing delays spread some of the flows into August) (Chart 3, middle panel). The transfers boosted aggregate household income above its pre-pandemic level despite a drop in compensation (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 3As Fiscal Transfers Wax And Wane, ... Chart 4... So Does The Economy By the end of the third quarter, however, the transfer flow had slowed to a trickle, with only the pandemic unemployment assistance (PUA) program, which expanded UI benefits to several categories of otherwise ineligible workers, still operating. President Trump’s executive order reallocating some FEMA funds briefly revived supplemental federal UI benefits, but the maximum $400 weekly bump only lasted for a handful of weeks in September and October. Once the fiscal transfers faded, signs of fraying rapidly emerged, with hiring flat-lining and retail sales falling sequentially in all three months of the fourth quarter (Chart 4). A New Paradigm No sooner had the economy begun to show signs of wear than the second round of economic impact payments, provided for in December’s compromise spending bill, arrived in two-thirds1 of American households and the federal government resumed topping up UI benefits. Both the direct payments ($600 per qualifying adult and $600 per child) and the supplemental UI benefits ($300 per week) were smaller than in the spring but we take the snapback in January retail sales as evidence that high marginal-propensity-to-consume households immediately put them to work. Households’ ability to satisfy their obligations to creditors (Chart 5) and landlords slipped as the year wore on as well. We expect that February rent collections and leading 30-day consumer delinquency rates will also show improvement (Chart 6), albeit not as dramatically as the retail series. Chart 560-Day Delinquency Rates Have Stopped Falling … Chart 6... And Leading 30-Day Delinquencies Had Been Ticking Higher With another, larger round of stimulus coming down the pike, the US economy will cease fraying around the edges. The immediate catalyst for the passage of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Act was Georgia’s Senate run-off elections, but there were two longer-term developments at play. First, the mainstream economic consensus has come full circle since the global financial crisis and a chorus of expert voices is now warning governments of the perils of cutting off aid too quickly. Fed Chair Powell and Treasury Secretary Yellen have avidly taken up this theme, along with their central bank and finance ministry peers around the world. Second, and more lastingly and influentially, US voters have lost their taste for fiscal austerity. As we wrote with our US Political Strategy colleagues in last week’s Special Report, Democrats are actively renouncing Reaganite budget discipline and Republicans have quietly retired it. Now that the Fed has determined that Volcker-era inflation vigilance is no longer relevant, the stage is being set for a reversal of the investment-friendly inflation and interest rate trends that have been in place for four decades. That will weigh on financial market returns over the long run, but it should prop them up in the near term. Staying Out Of The Left Tail Central bankers are as prone as generals to fight the last war. Corrosively high inflation was every Fed official’s bête noire since the seventies, but a decade of missed inflation targets and tepid, plodding recoveries around the world has shifted central bankers’ focus to hysteresis and the specter of secular stagnation. Once the pandemic arrived, threatening self-reinforcing waves of defaults and bankruptcies, the Fed effectively declared that providing too much accommodation was a lesser evil than prematurely tightening to counter inflation fears that may prove to be unfounded. With fiscal policy makers also at pains to err on the side of doing too much, the near-term growth picture looks awfully good. Chart 7The Vaccination Effort Is Picking Up Steam Against that policy backdrop, it will be hard for the US economy to slide into the left-hand tail of the distribution in the absence of a negative virus surprise. We cannot rule out the possibility of virus-resistant mutations or new rounds of outbreaks among a weary populace that lets its guard down, but a failure to vaccinate at a pace consistent with achieving herd immunity by the end of September looks to be the most likely route to disappointment. To that end, we are monitoring vaccination progress against the pace required to get enough of the population inoculated to effect herd immunity by the end of the third quarter (Chart 7). The US got off to a slow start, but we are confident that it will catch up by early spring under an administration that has made crushing the virus its top priority and a Congress that is providing the resources to enable local health authorities to get the job done. Overheating Is Not Inevitable The case for an upside near-term surprise stems from the notion that Congress has provided households with considerably more aid than they need. As we have previously noted, the number of households receiving economic impact payments is multiples of the number of households that have had to grapple with unemployment. Thanks to the first two rounds of fiscal transfers, we estimate that aggregate household income from March through January was nearly $600 billion greater than it would have been in the absence of COVID-19 (Table 1). The looming third round of direct payments could put incremental pandemic income in the neighborhood of $1 trillion. Table 1Households' Excess Pandemic Savings Keep Growing Coupled with foregone consumption that already sums to $1.1 trillion, households’ excess pandemic savings is on course to top $2 trillion. That’s a lot of dry powder, even in a $21 trillion economy, and it underpins our view that the probability-adjusted distribution of Goldilocks outcomes is very wide. Without another major virus shock, it is hard to see a scenario where growth doesn’t comfortably exceed its 2% trend level. The question is whether or not enough of the savings will be spent in 2021 and 2022 to push the economy into the right-hand tail and potentially overheat. No one can say with much conviction, as the current backdrop is without precedent. Mount Rushmore-level economists David Ricardo and Milton Friedman would advise investors to temper their enthusiasm. Ricardian equivalence suggests that households will be reluctant to spend distributions they may be taxed to pay for later, and Friedman’s permanent income hypothesis posits that one-off windfalls have little effect on consumption decisions. The multiplier effect of the direct payments to households may not be all it’s cracked up to be, but the lion’s share of the savings stash has come from reduced consumption. How much of that reduced consumption was merely deferred rather than destroyed will determine how much growth can rise. Despite the vast household spending shortfall, consumption of goods has actually tracked above the level that would have been expected if the pandemic had not occurred; the spending gap has entirely been a function of diminished services spending, especially in pandemic-stricken categories like food service, recreation and transportation (Table 2). People surely have an appetite to resume that spending, and will flock to their favorite places once they can again enjoy them fully, but there’s a hitch. Last year’s forgone spending cannot be caught up by eating multiple restaurant dinners in a day, going back in time to attend last season’s sports and entertainment events, or flying on two planes2 and staying in two hotel rooms. Table 2The Spending Gap Is Almost Entirely On The Services Side As a result, it seems that a fair amount of forgone services consumption is likely to turn into demand destroyed. Some demand for services could be diverted to demand for goods – one might build out a home theater instead of going to ballgames, movies and concerts; one might buy home exercise equipment in place of a gym membership – but much of that substitution has already taken place and may not persist going forward. The bottom line is that some goods demand appears to have been pulled forward by the pandemic while some services demand has likely been destroyed. There is surely pent-up consumer demand, but only some of the accumulated savings will be directed to satisfying it and we do not think they’ll push the economy to overheat. Investment Implications Our base case has the Goldilocks backdrop of solid growth and ample monetary accommodation remaining in place for at least the rest of the year. Markets have fully discounted that scenario but earnings growth has surprised to the upside by a remarkable margin over the last three quarters (Chart 8) and we expect that the fundamental backdrop will support mid- to high-single-digit equity returns. That will allow stocks to easily surpass bonds and we continue to overweight the former and underweight the latter. If some of the excess savings fuels multiple expansion, equity returns could be even better. Chart 8Earnings Have Been Beating Expectations By A Remarkable Margin Although we are not worried that inflation is about to break out to uncomfortably high levels, we do expect further yield curve steepening from the combination of accelerating growth and an inflation-tolerant Fed. We continue to recommend that fixed income investors keep duration below benchmark levels. We expect an ongoing rotation from COVID winners to COVID losers as the virus is increasingly contained and look for value to outperform growth.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Every single adult taxpayer with adjusted gross income (AGI) of $75,000 or less (and every married filing jointly taxpayer with AGI of $150,000 or less) was eligible for the full payments. 2 Even GE’s CEO doesn’t have this option anymore.