Emerging Markets
Although, a closer look at debt sustainability in Mexico reveals a different picture. Mexico’s public debt level including the debt of state-owned enterprises is lower than those in Brazil and South Africa. Notably, Mexico’s public debt-to-GDP ratio has been…
Highlights The Taiwanese equity market has closely tracked the global benchmark over the past few years, meaning Taiwan is particularly an “alpha” rather than a “beta” play. This means that a bullish 6-12 month outlook for Taiwanese relative performance rests on the odds of a positive “Taiwan-specific” event. In our view, the forthcoming recovery in Chinese economic activity likely qualifies as an alpha catalyst for Taiwanese stocks over the coming 6-12 months, given the strong link between export-related indicators and Taiwanese relative performance. Investors should increase exposure relative to global equities (to overweight) over a 6-12 month time horizon in US$ terms. Evidence of Taiwanese central bank intervention implies that there is limited potential for TWD appreciation versus the U.S. dollar over the coming year. Our bet is that TWD-USD will remain broadly flat. Feature BCA’s China Investment Strategy team recommended that investors upgrade Chinese stocks to overweight (both investable and domestic) in an April 12 Special Alert,1 and last week’s report provided a detailed analysis and review of the Chinese economic and financial market outlook following our upgrade.2 This week’s report briefly updates the outlook for Taiwanese stocks, and argues that investors should increase exposure relative to global equities (to overweight) over a 6-12 month time horizon in US$ terms. However, we see somewhat less upside for Taiwanese stocks than for Chinese stocks, and recommend that investors reduce exposure to neutral once Taiwan registers a 6% relative return (versus the global benchmark) over the coming year. Relative To Global Stocks, Taiwan Is An Alpha (Not A Beta) Play It is a little known fact that Taiwan’s equity market has exhibited a remarkably different relative performance profile over the past decade than it did during the prior decade. On a rolling 10-year basis, Chart 1 shows that Taiwan consistently ranked poorly relative to other equity markets until the onset of the global financial crisis. But since 2008, and especially since 2013, Taiwan’s relative performance has improved meaningfully compared with other markets, recently scoring as highly as in the 90th percentile. Chart 2 highlights that this comparative improvement in relative performance has largely occurred because Taiwan has neither significantly outperformed or underperformed the global benchmark, in contrast to the U.S., emerging markets (EM), and developed markets (DM) ex-U.S. Chart 2 shows that regional equity performance since 2008 has been a simple story of massive U.S. outperformance alongside significant EM and DM ex-U.S. underperformance. Simply by keeping up with global stocks in the aggregate, Taiwan has managed to outperform most individual equity markets over the past decade. Chart 1Over The Past Decade, Taiwan Has Ranked Highly Compared With Other Equity Markets Chart 2Since 2013, Taiwan Has Tracked Global Stocks For investors, the consequence of Taiwan closely tracking the global benchmark over the past few years is that the Taiwanese equity market is particularly an “alpha” rather than a “beta” play, implying that a bullish 6-12 month outlook for Taiwanese relative performance rests on the odds of a positive “Taiwan-specific” event. Stronger Chinese Growth: A Likely “Alpha” Catalyst In our view, the forthcoming recovery in Chinese economic activity that we discussed in last week’s report likely qualifies as an alpha catalyst for Taiwanese stocks over the coming 6-12 months. Taiwanese relative performance has already reflects some of this likely improvement, but we believe that investors stand to gain somewhat further over the coming year. Investors should increase Taiwanese equity exposure relative to global stocks (to overweight) over a 6-12 month time horizon in US$ terms. Chart 3Exports To China, 12-Month Forward EPS, And Relative Stock Prices: All Likely To Improve Chart 4Buy Taiwanese Stocks, But Book Profits After A 6% Relative Return Chart 3 presents the cyclical case for Taiwanese stocks in a nutshell. Panels 1 & 2 show that the new export orders component of the official Taiwanese manufacturing PMI rebounded massively in March, and that it has historically coincided with both Taiwanese exports to China and the relative Taiwanese Markit manufacturing PMI (versus the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing PMI). The latter, in turn, reliably leads the growth in absolute Taiwanese forward EPS, which have fallen sharply into negative territory over the past several months (Panel 3). Taiwanese relative US$ performance has typically correlated well with accelerating absolute Taiwanese forward earnings, underscoring that a period of relative gains loom. Given the likely uptrend in Taiwanese relative performance over the coming 6-12 months, we are opening a long MSCI Taiwan Index / short MSCI All Country World Index (US$) trade today, initiated at 0.725. Chart 4 highlights that a rally to 0.77 would mark both a 6% relative return from today’s levels and would almost constitute a return back to the post-2013 high in Taiwanese relative performance (90th percentile). As such, we would recommend that investors use this point as a stop-sell for our recommendation to favor Taiwanese stocks within a global equity portfolio. What’s Next For The Taiwanese Dollar? Over the coming 6-12 months, our bet is that TWD-USD will remain broadly flat. While it is difficult to conclusively prove, three observations point to recent intervention by the Taiwanese central bank, which is likely to limit major trends in the exchange rate: Over the coming 6-12 months, our bet is that TWD-USD will remain broadly flat. Chart 5The Taiwanese Dollar Has Not Been Responding To Interest Rate Differentials TWD-USD has trended flat since the middle of last year, after having fallen from its early-2018 highs. The earlier decline reflected the risk posed to the Taiwanese economy by the U.S.-Sino trade war, but was also consistent with an ever-widening interest rate differential between Taiwan and the U.S. (Chart 5). In the face of this gap and frequent positive and negative developments concerning the trade war, TWD’s extremely stable profile is quite suspicious. Chart 6 highlights that the ability of changes in the U.S. dollar to explain changes in TWD-USD has fallen sharply over the past several months, to a multi-year low. While the U.S. dollar has never been able to strongly explain changes in TWD-USD, a sudden weakening in the relationship is consistent with increased central bank intervention. In addition, panel 2 shows that the recent decline in the predictive power of the dollar has corresponded with a sharp pickup in the growth rate of official foreign exchange reserves. Chart 7 shows that TWD-CNY has been trading over the past two years at the high end of its post-2008 range. Taiwanese exports to China are meaningfully larger than those to the U.S., which highlights that there is an incentive for Taiwanese policymakers to limit further gains. To the extent that a strong link between TWD-USD and CNY-USD exists, our bias for a flat trend in the latter suggests that a strong trend in the former is unlikely. Chart 6Over The Past Year, TWD Has Largely Been Unresponsive To Dollar Moves Chart 7The Taiwanese Dollar Is Fairly Elevated Compared To CNY As a final point, limited potential for TWD appreciation versus the U.S. dollar also implies that a full return to the March 2018 high for Taiwanese relative US$ performance is unlikely. This underscores the importance of our stop-sell recommendation, and reinforces that we are favoring Taiwanese stocks as a cyclical catch-up play, rather than as a high-conviction, long-term buy. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research’s China Investment Strategy Special Alert, “Upgrade Chinese Stocks To Overweight,” published April 12, 2019. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research’s China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “In The Wake Of An Upgrade: An Investment Strategy Post-Mortem,” published April 17, 2019. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
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