Financial Markets
Highlights We re-examine our Yield and Protector portfolios to find out which assets will hold up best if there is a material correction. Our tactical view on gold is neutral, but the risk in gold prices will remain skewed to the upside this year. Are tariffs on aluminum and steel the start of a trade spat or a trade war? Feature Fears of a trade war and a hawkish tone from Fed Chair Jay Powell at his first Humphrey Hawkins testimony to Congress pushed the U.S. equity market lower last week. The ten-year Treasury yield barely budged however, buffeted by a more hawkish Fed on one side and a trade-induced slowdown in global growth on the other. The dollar was modestly higher last week, but oil and gold prices moved lower. The S&P 500's 4% loss in February was the worst single month since October 2016 and worst February since 2009. Both investment-grade and high-yield credit spreads widened last week, and have yet to return to their late January lows. Moreover, at 22, the VIX remained elevated relative to start of the year, consistent with our view that markets have entered a more volatile, late-cycle phase. With the 2.8% run-up in the S&P 500 since the February 8 low, investors are less concerned that the early February pullback in risk assets was a signal that the equity bull market is over and a recession is right around the corner. Nonetheless, some clients with a more strategic outlook are considering paring back risk now. Others want to know how to protect gains while still participating in the bullish tone for the market BCA expects in the next 12 months. Our Yield and Protector portfolios might provide a way for investors to protect against the downside while still participating in the S&P 500. Preparing For A Pullback BCA recommends investors stay overweight on equities and U.S. spread product, but expects that positions should be moved to neutral later this year and then to underweight sometime in 2019.1 Long-term investors should already consider paring back their exposures to both asset classes given that valuations are stretched. We have periodically recommended that a variety of investments be added as portfolio "insurance" to help guard against a material correction in equities. We recently highlighted two forms of insurance: our Yield and Protector Portfolios. We introduced the Yield Portfolio in October 20142 and first discussed the Protector Portfolio in October 2015.3 This week, we revisit the issue by comparing both portfolios with a more common form of insurance: shifting from cyclical to defensive stocks within an equity allocation. The Yield Portfolio (YP) emphasizes "high quality carry", along with some protection via TIPS (25% of the Portfolio), if inflation begins to surprise on the upside after investors are conditioned to expect only deflation shocks. The YP performs well in an environment of slow nominal growth, no recession and gradual interest-rate hikes. On the other hand, the Protector Portfolio (PP) is designed to provide insulation against both deflationary (gold and trade-weighted dollar) and inflationary (TIPS) tail risks. Therefore, the PP may underperform risk assets for a time if tail risks keep receding. Still, it has done well during the equity rally and conservative investors should consider adopting it. As discussed in the section below, our tactical view on gold is neutral, but the BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy notes that the risk in gold prices will remain skewed to the upside this year. Charts 1, 2, and 3 show a breakdown of the relative performance of S&P 500 defensives along with our Yield and Protector Portfolios. Panels 2 and 3 of Charts 1, 2 and 3 present the rolling one-year beta and alpha of each strategy versus the S&P 500. Alpha is presented as the difference between the actual year-over-year excess return of the portfolio (versus short-term Treasury bills) and what would have been expected given the portfolio's beta. This measure is also referred to as "Jensen's alpha." Chart 1S&P 500 Defensives##BR##A Modestly Low Beta Option Chart 2A Lower Beta##BR##Than Defensives Chart 3A Beta Near Zero,##BR##And Positive Alpha Based on the historical beta of the three portfolios versus the S&P 500, defensive stocks are the most correlated with the overall equity market. Our PP had a negative correlation to the broad market until earlier this year, when it turned slightly positive. BCA's YP is somewhere in between, with a positive but relatively low beta. This is consistent with the equity composition of the three portfolios (shown in Table 1). Note that our protector portfolio is composed entirely of non-equity assets. Table 1A Breakdown Of Three##BR##Portfolio Insurance Options After accounting for their lower betas, all three portfolios have outperformed the S&P in risk-adjusted terms since the onset of the global economic recovery. However, the three portfolios have experienced a relative decline versus the S&P 500 since Trump's election. This has occurred due to passive rather than active underperformance. In other words, they have underperformed because they failed to keep up with the S&P 500 rather than because of losses in absolute terms. We draw two important conclusions from Charts 1, 2 and 3 for U.S. multi-asset investors. First, the lower beta of our YP and PP compared with S&P defensives means that the former represent a better insurance against a sell-off in the equity market rather than the latter. Secondly, the persistently positive volatility-adjusted returns for our insurance portfolios highlights an investor preference for these assets in the past few years. However, since late 2017 when investors began to significantly upgrade the prospects for global growth and U.S. corporate profits, all three portfolios struggled to outperform the S&P 500 on a risk-adjusted basis. BCA's forecast implies that these portfolios may continue to struggle in the next year or so. For now, our investment bias towards equities over government bonds makes us less inclined to favor a low beta position within a balanced portfolio. Our analysis suggests that clients who anticipate the need for portfolio insurance in the coming year should back our YP and PP over a defensive-sector allocation. We would likely extend this recommendation to all clients if there is any material progression towards the sell-off triggers identified in the Bank Credit Analyst's February 2018 publication.4 Bottom Line: Investors seeking protection against a potential equity market sell-off should look to our Yield and Protector Portfolios over defensive-sector positioning. We do not currently recommend these portfolios for all clients, but we may do so if our key sell-off triggers are breached. Gold Bugged Our tactical view on gold is neutral, but the BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy notes that the risk in gold prices will remain skewed to the upside this year. The yellow metal is supported by increasing inflation and inflation expectations, heightened geopolitical risks and greater volatility in equity markets.5 However, the higher inflation and inflation expectations will be countered by Fed rate hikes, which will boost the U.S. dollar and lift real rates in our base case. Strategically, we expect that gold will provide a good hedge against any downturn in equities when the bull market turns bear in 2H19. Chart 4 shows that the price of gold in real terms is still very expensive. On a nominal basis, gold is at the top end of a trading channel initiated in early 2012 (Chart 5). There has been a significant gap between the model value and the actual price of gold for the past four years. The real price of gold remains elevated, although inflation has been well contained. Chart 4Model Suggests Gold Is Overvalued Chart 5Testing Top End Of A Downward Channel However, the macro environment BCA envisions for 2018 is also supportive for gold (Table 2). Gold tends to perform well when oil prices rise and as the 2/10 Treasury curve steepens. Moreover, gold prices tend to go up when the U.S. economy benefits from fiscal thrust and tax cuts. Furthermore, the soundings on the February ISM manufacturing index support higher gold prices. When the headline index is above 60 as it was in February (60.8), gold climbs by an average of 31%. Even 12 months after ISM is above 60, gold returns are over 20%. The elevated level of ISM new orders (64.2) and price (74.2) indices in February also suggest solid increases for gold. Finally, gold prices climb in the late stages of an economic expansion, such as the current one that began in 2009.6 Even so, our 6 to 12-month view on gold is that it will take its cues from Fed policy and policy expectations. The Fed is not behind the curve on inflation, and inflation expectations and measured inflation remain low. Our CPI and PCE models (Chart 6) show only a modest acceleration in inflation by year-end, which will be sufficient to keep the Fed on track this year as it continues to shrink its balance sheet and boost rates four times. Thus, there is no pressing need to hold gold as a hedge against inflation in the next year. Nonetheless, for those investors too concerned about a pullback that turns into a correction or a bear market, we note that gold has a 33% weight in our Protector Portfolio. Table 2Favorable Macro Backdrop For Gold Chart 6BCA's Inflation Models Show Only##BR##Modest Acceleration Through Year-End Bottom Line: Gold is expensive in real terms relative to a set of fundamentals that have explained its real price since 1970. However, it may have a better value on a strategic basis or as part of a portfolio designed to protect against falling equity prices. Moreover, our macro backdrop forecast for the next 12 months supports higher gold prices. Keep gold as a strategic portfolio hedge. Trade Off BCA's Geopolitical Strategy team has long argued that two sources of geopolitical risk this year are China's trade surplus and Trump's position on trade relations with China, Canada and Mexico. Specifically, the view is that weak poll numbers may lead Trump to trigger trade disputes with important trading partners such as China, Mexico and Canada. However, our geopolitical analysts also point out that investors should not confuse a trade spat with a trade war. There are very few legal or constitutional constraints on Trump over trade issues (Table 3). It will be his decision whether to adopt sweeping tariffs (trade war) as opposed to a more targeted approach (trade spat). Clearly, the former is more disruptive and raises more uncertainty, so this is the key distinction to keep in mind. Presidents Nixon, Reagan, Bush (II) and Obama all imposed temporary tariffs on items (including steel and aluminum, and including by citing national security concerns) without triggering a trade war. Late last week, Trump indicated that he would announce tariffs on steel and aluminum this week. He implied that he would go for a broad-based approach of penalizing all steel and aluminum imports, which points toward the more aggressive approach. But the details (whether he exempts U.S. allies and partners or narrows the scope of goods) will not be certain until he issues his official proclamation. Table 3Trump Faces Few Constraints On Trade Steel and aluminum get the headlines, but account for only a small share of U.S. trade and GDP7 (Chart 7). BCA is more concerned about the Administration's stance on more deeper issues, like the WTO, NAFTA, or (in China's case) intellectual property and state-owned enterprises.8 The issues here are harder to quantify, have few precedents, and have more structural and ideological issues which are at stake. The U.S. has a massive trade surplus in services and in intellectual property,9 so a prolonged disruption would pose a serious threat to the U.S. economy, at least in the short term. Trump's decision on intellectual property trade with China is due on August 12, but could occur earlier. BCA's stance on U.S.-China relations is bearish in the long run.10 We place high odds on an eventual trade war, but the timing is a tougher call. Investors should not view China's proportional retaliation on an item-by-item basis as the start of a trade war. BCA's view is that China's leadership will try to offer reforms and investment opportunities to pacify Trump. However, there is a risk either that China offers no reforms (in which case Xi Jinping's rampant Communism exacerbates trade conflicts) or that Trump may introduce broad sweeping measures that give China no choice but to respond in kind, leading to a trade war. Our Geopolitical Strategy service notes that the probability of Trump abrogating NAFTA is as high as 50%. The seventh round of NAFTA talks concludes this week; an eighth round is scheduled for late March. Negotiations could drag on right to the Mexican election on July 1, but if they are not looking more optimistic by this spring then the risk of the U.S. (or Mexico) walking away will rise. The U.S. economy has been largely unaffected by NAFTA and would likely experience no disruption if Trump abrogated the deal and began negotiations on bilateral trade agreements with Canada and Mexico (Chart 8). Chart 7Steel And Aluminum In Perspective Chart 8U.S. Economy: Largely Unaffected By NAFTA Bottom Line: Elevated trade tensions with China,11 Canada and Mexico are near-term risks to global growth. From now through April could be a decisive time for the Trump Administration with China and NAFTA. We are bearish on U.S.-China relations in the long term. If Trump abandons NAFTA, the implications for the U.S. economy would be muted, although U.S. inflation may push higher. Such a decision would also send a clear signal to other key U.S. allies. However, if Trump stands by NAFTA, then it signals that he has sided with the establishment on trade. This would be bullish for risk assets and would lower geopolitical risk premia. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Next Recession: Later But Deeper," published February 23, 2018. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Ice Storm", published October 20, 2014. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Tenuous Relief Rally", published on October 12, 2015. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Research's Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, February 2018. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Gold Still Shines Despite Threat Of Higher Inflation", published February 1, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Late Cycle View", published October 16, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Global Aluminum Deficit Set To Ease", published March 1, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "America Is Roaring Back", published January 31, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Can The Service Sector Save The Day?", published June 5, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin", published January 18, 2017. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Politics Are Stimulative, Everywhere But China", published February 28, 2018. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
Dear Client, I am travelling this week meeting clients in Asia, so this report has been written by my colleagues, Billy Zicheng Huang and Sophie McGrath. Greece, the epicentre of the euro debt crisis, is finally recovering. Declining net NPLs, an upturn in investor confidence and improving employment are encouraging. But there is a risk that growth will lose some momentum amid the country's exit from the third economic adjustment program. Hence, we are recommending a neutral weighting in the Greek equity market as a whole comprising four overweight ideas counterbalanced by four underweight ideas. We expect companies with essential product focus, low debt levels and strong asset health to outperform non-essential product providers, highly leveraged players and weak asset-quality counterparts. Dhaval Joshi Best Overweight And Underweight Ideas Table I-1Single-Stock Statistics On Select Greek Companies* Greece: The Long Road To Recovery Macro indicators in Greece have improved and investors have become more confident. This is highlighted by the recent upgrade of Greece's long-term sovereign credit rating to B and an oversubscribed seven-year bond sale, confirming high investor demand. Nevertheless, there is a risk that growth will lose some momentum amid the country's exit from the third economic adjustment program. Listing the improvements, economic sentiment is approaching previous peaks (Chart I-1), the unemployment rate has dropped to its lowest level since 2011 (Chart I-2) and the youth unemployment rate has fallen around 20 percentage points from its high (Chart I-3). Chart I-1Economic Sentiment Has Improved Chart I-2Unemployment Is Down... Chart I-3...Youth Unemployment Even More So Furthermore, the most intense headwinds from fiscal drag are over. In the depths of the debt crisis, fiscal drag reached 7% of annual GDP. While Greece is not set to receive a sustained fiscal 'thrust' in the medium term, it appears the worst is over on the austerity front (Chart I-4). The most promising indicator is competitiveness. Greece appears to have made the necessary adjustments to unit labor costs and is no longer a euro area outlier (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Peak Fiscal Drag##br## Is Over Chart I-5Unit Labour Costs Are Now In Line ##br##With Euro Area Counterparts Recent developments in the banking system are also encouraging. Bank liquidity has improved, and the use of ECB Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) has significantly diminished (Chart I-6). Net NPLs have declined sharply and are now covered by bank equity capital (Chart I-7). An unprecedented legal foundation is now in place to address the NPL stockpile. These measures include the introduction of electronic auctions to recover claims, the simplification of the out-of-court settlement process and reducing the liability of individuals involved. If net NPLs continue to fall, we can expect a healthier banking sector to support the economy, as witnessed in Spain, Ireland, and more recently in Italy. Chart I-6Banks Are No Longer Reliant ##br##On Emergency Funding Chart I-7Bank Equity Capital Finally ##br##Exceeds Net NPLs Despite these encouraging signs, the consumption recovery is fragile as households continue to delever (Chart I-8). Additionally, retail sales have dipped again recently (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Households Continue To Delever Chart I-9Retail Sales Have Dipped Regarding the bailout exit and debt sustainability, markets have seemingly priced in the wrapping up of the third review later this year, with the Eurogroup meeting on January 22 having recorded progress. However, what is more uncertain is whether this will take the form of a 'clean' or 'dirty' exit. The level of post-bailout monitoring that is agreed upon will ultimately dictate the pace of Greece's return to capital market normalcy. Considering the uncertainties in the overall picture, we recommend a market neutral portfolio in Greece with an overall beta of 0.15, consisting of four overweight companies versus four underweight counterparts from the consumer discretionary, telecoms, real estate, banking, consumer staples and energy sectors (Table I-2). Through our selection process we focused on companies with better growth profiles in essential sectors of the Greek economy. Table I-2Select Companies And 12-Month Beta Vs. MSCI EM Sector Specifics/Dynamics Our overweight (OW) basket performance over the past three years has been exceptionally strong relative to the underweight (UW) names. The OW basket has outperformed by 59% (Chart I-10A). However, this was primarily due to a selloff in Piraeus Bank (UW) in the second half of 2015. On a short-term horizon we see a different picture. Looking at one-year performance, the OW basket has actually just closed the underperformance gap over the past two months (Chart I-10B). Chart I-10AThree-Year Performance: ##br##Overweight Vs. Underweight Basket Chart I-10BOne-Year Performance: ##br##Overweight Vs. Underweight Basket Valuations favor the OW basket, especially from the second half of 2017 on, when OW and UW share prices began to diverge. Compared to historical valuations, OW names are currently trading close to their three-year average P/E, while their UW counterparts are trading at one standard deviation above historical P/E (Chart I-11A, Chart I-11B, and Chart I-11C). Chart I-11AOW Basket Displays Appealing Valuations##br## Relative To UW Basket... Chart I-11B...And Its Own ##br##Historical Average... Chart I-11C...While UW Basket Is Trading One Standard##br## Deviation Above Mean Non-bank OW companies display stronger operating margin dynamics, despite a recent dip, while the OW bank demonstrates superior net interest margins. Both margin trends are translating into solid profitability (Chart I-12A and Chart I-12B). Chart I-12ARobust Operational Level Performance... Chart I-12B...Feeds Into Solid Profitability Additionally, the OW basket displays more favorable debt dynamics, with debt remaining at low levels and trending down, whereas the debt ratio in the UW basket is already at an elevated level and continues to climb (Chart I-13). Meanwhile, free cash flow yield has favored UW players since mid-2016 when banks are excluded (Chart I-14). Chart I-13Debt Levels Remain ##br##Low In OW Companies Chart I-14Free Cash Flow Yield Favors ##br##UW Non-bank Names Specifically for banks, Alpha Bank (OW) enjoys a much healthier asset quality profile compared to Piraeus Bank (UW), with a combination of a lower NPL ratio and a higher tier-1 ratio (Chart I-15). Please also note that EPS growth is not shown as we normally do in our reports due to abrupt volatility in both baskets, which prevents us from drawing comparative conclusions. Dividend yield is also omitted due to the fact that most companies we have selected do not pay dividends. Chart I-15Alpha Bank Illustrates Healthier Asset Quality The Overweight Basket Jumbo (BELA GA) Jumbo (BELA GA) (Chart I-16) Chart I-16Performance Since February 2017: ##br##Jumbo Vs. MSCI EM Jumbo reported financial results for the fiscal 2017 year on October 12. Revenue increased by 7% year over year. Despite a difficult year in Greece, sales were compensated largely by organic growth in Romania and Bulgaria, with one new store open in each country respectively. EBITDA grew by 6% year over year, on the back of an effective cost management effort, while EBITDA margin remained virtually flat at 25.2%. As a result, the bottom line expanded by 8% year over year, with profit margin up 20 basis points to 19.2% Jumbo is currently trading at a forward P/E of 15.5x, while the market is forecasting an EPS CAGR of 6.3% over the next three years. The company is expected to continue its strong expansion drive in Eastern Europe, with one more store open in Romania in November 2017 (the 9th store) and one more store to be open next year in Bulgaria. At the same time, a drop in unemployment and a pick-up in household consumption will help Jumbo's recovery in the Greek market, signaling upside potential for the share price. Hellenic Telecom (HTO GA) Hellenic Telecom (HTO GA) (Chart I-17) Chart I-17Performance Since February 2017: ##br##Hellenic Telecom Vs. MSCI EM Hellenic Telecom (OTE) reported full-year 2017 results on February 22. Revenues declined slightly year over year by 1.3% to €3857 million, dragged down mainly by mobile operations in Albania, where revenues declined by 11.8%. Mobile operations in Romania remained positive, aided by a strong fourth-quarter performance which saw revenues increase by 14.4% year over year. Revenue growth in Greece remained solid in both mobile and fixed line, increasing by 0.7% and 1% year over year respectively. EBITDA shrank by 1.3% year over year, while EBITDA margin remained flat at 33.8%. As a result of muted top line growth on an annual basis as well as elevated operating costs, the bottom line contracted by 20% year over year, in line with market expectations. Hellenic Telecom is currently trading at a forward P/E of 86x, while the market is forecasting an EPS CAGR of 6.9% over the next three years. Management guidance indicates that free cash flow (FCF) and adjusted capex will start to return to normal levels in 2018 after heavy investments in both its fixed and mobile network capabilities in 2017. Additionally, growing confidence in the company's outlook is signalled by its announcement of a new shareholder return policy, where 100% of the FCF will be distributed through a combination of a dividend payout and share buybacks. We expect that its recent investment in mobile and fixed capabilities and an improving Greek economy should drive a positive performance in 2018. Grivalia Properties (GRIV GA) Grivalia Properties (GRIV GA) (Chart I-18) Chart I-18Performance Since February 2017: ##br##Grivalia Properties Vs. MSCI EM Grivalia Properties reported stellar full-year 2017 financial results on January 31. The top line displayed solid results, with rental income advancing 7% year over year. Furthermore, the company realized a strong net gain of EUR18.8 million from fair value adjustments on investment property, compared to a EUR13.6 million loss in 2016. This was mainly driven by new property investments. As a result, operating profit surged by 102% year over year. All this translated into 139% year-over-year net income growth. Due to loan growth, the loan-to-value ratio grew by 8 percentage points to 14%, while NAV per share expanded by 5% year over year. Grivalia Properties is trading at a forward P/E of 15x, while the market is forecasting an EPS contraction of 1% over the next three years. The company announced in February the acquisition of office space in Maroussi, which has already been leased out to multinational companies. Two more properties were acquired in Greece in the same month. We believe a stabilizing property market leaves ample room for recovery, which is expected to support Grivalia's overweight Greek real estate portfolio and its risk diversification. Alpha Bank (APLHA GA) Alpha Bank (APLHA GA) (Chart I-19) Chart I-19Performance Since February 2017: ##br##Alpha Bank Vs. MSCI EM Alpha Bank reported solid third-quarter 2017 financial results on November 30. Net interest income improved by 2% year over year, with net interest margin growing 20 basis points to 2.9%. However, on a quarter-over-quarter basis, growth was negative. Fee income depicted a similar picture, up 2% year over year but down 7% quarter over quarter. On the positive side, operating expenses were under control, declining by 3% year over year, effectively pushing down the cost/income ratio. With the help of a decline in impairment losses, net income surged by 386% year over year. Asset quality showed a pattern of recovery: The NPL ratio went down by 7.4 percentage points to 33.2% year over year, while the tier-1 ratio improved by 1 percentage point to 17.8%. Moreover, ELA has trended down year to date. The market is forecasting an EPS CAGR of 53.6% over the next three years. Despite uncertainty regarding stress testing and the overall trajectory of Greek economic growth, Alpha Bank has demonstrated a solid pace of recovery in terms of a better asset-liability mix, improved liquidity and steady disengagement with the ELA. As guided by management, ELA funding is expected to be further replaced by strong deposit inflows, deleveraging initiatives and an increase in interbank lending. The Underweight Basket Intralot (INLOT GA) Intralot (INLOT GA) (Chart I-20) Chart I-20Performance Since February 2017:##br## Intralot Vs. MSCI EM Intralot reported mixed third-quarter financial results on November 27. Top-line growth was solid, up 10% year over year, mainly boosted by licensed operations in Jamaica, Azerbaijan and Poland. This also drove up gross margin by 2.8 percentage points to 18.1% year over year. However, a cost hike took a bite out of profits, with operating expenses expanding by 8%. Along with a 49% surge in R&D costs, the bottom line was still in negative territory. On a year-to-date basis, cash flow grew by 23%. However, this was mainly boosted by financing activities, with operating cash flow almost unchanged. Meanwhile, long-term debt has grown by over 50% year over year, which has prompted questions on solvency and the ability to further carry the interest payment burden. The market is forecasting negative EPS over the next three years. We believe the 80% share sale of the company's Peruvian operations reflects its need for cash inflow and raises concerns on balance sheet health. Coca-Cola HBC (EEE GA) Coca-Cola HBC (EEE GA) (Chart I-21) Chart I-21Performance Since February 2017:##br## Coca-Cola HBC Vs. MSCI EM Coca-Cola HBC reported solid full-year 2017 financial results on February 14. Revenues came in strong, growing by 5% year over year. Sales volume in developed markets, developing markets and emerging markets went up 1%, 7%, and 7% respectively. Looking at product lines, Sparkling was the best seller, driven by new flavor launches (such as lime, lemon, and cucumber). Stripping out foreign exchange effects, FX-neutral revenue grew by 6% year over year. Cost of sales ticked up by 4% year over year. EBITDA expanded by 10% year over year, while EBITDA margin added 60 basis points to 14.3%. As a result, the bottom line expanded by 24% year over year, beating market expectations. Coca-Cola HBC is currently trading at a forward P/E of 20x, while the market is forecasting an EPS CAGR of 11% over the next three years. The stock price rallied in the second half of 2017 following the company's announcement that it was acquiring 54.5% of Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA), indicating market complacency toward a strong synergy effect the deal could bring. However, given its weak profitability, CCBA is not expected to be as accretive as many investors believe. With the acquisition news priced in, CCHBC's year-to-date stock price has begun reverting to its true fundamentals. Hellenic Petroleum (ELPE GA) Hellenic Petroleum (ELPE GA) (Chart I-22) Chart I-22Performance Since February 2017:##br## Hellenic Petroleum Vs. MSCI EM Hellenic Petroleum reported full-year 2017 financial results on February 22. Revenue increased by 21% year over year, driven by higher volumes (exports +12% and +14% in domestic net sales, mainly helped by aviation and bunkering) in the refining division and improved average selling prices. However, this result was offset by higher cost of sales, up 23% year over year, driven by increased input prices, sending gross margin 160 basis points lower to 13.6%. Operating income was 4.7% higher year over year, helped by lower operating expenses. EBITDA was up 14% year over year, while EBITDA margin was 200 basis points lower, finishing at 10.6%. The company secured bottom line growth of 15.7%, but came in below the market expectation by 4.5%. Hellenic Petroleum is currently trading at a forward P/E of 6.5x, while the market is forecasting an EPS CAGR of 4.6% over the next three years. The reopening of the Elefsina refinery will enable Hellenic Petroleum to return to normal capacity in 2018. However, continued maintenance work expected to end in March 2018 and higher crude prices will continue to place pressure on margins. We expect weak domestic demand to continue to impact carbon revenue, despite strong sales growth from increased tourism. Piraeus Bank (TPEIR GA) Piraeus Bank (TPEIR GA) (Chart I-23) Chart I-23Performance Since February 2017: ##br##Piraeus Bank Vs. MSCI EM Piraeus Bank delivered disappointing third-quarter 2017 financial results on November 9. Net interest income came in weak, sliding 3% year over year, with net interest margin remaining virtually flat at 2.7%. On the positive side, net fee income displayed strong growth, up 24% year over year. Operating expenses contracted by 5% year over year, pushing down the cost/income ratio by 5 percentage points to 51%. Despite robust pre-provisional income, the impairment on loans dragged down net income into negative territory, compared to a positive bottom line during the same period last year. Asset quality was a mixed bag: The NPL ratio went down by 2.6 percentage points to 48.3%, but is still the highest among its peers. The loan-to-deposit ratio declined, with ELA loan exposure trending slightly down year-to-date. The market is forecasting an EPS contraction of 8.8% over the next three years. Piraeus Bank has shown little signs of operational recovery, with most cost-savings efforts achieved through branch reductions (-8% year to date) and employee layoffs (-7% year to date). We believe the bank is still a long way away from a real turning point and prefer to monitor on the sidelines. How To Trade? The EMES team recommends gaining exposure to the sector through a basket of the listed stocks below, which would consist of overweight positions in four select Greek companies and underweight positions in the other four. The main goal is active alpha generation by excluding laggards and including out-of-benchmark plays, to avoid passive index-hugging via an ETF. Direct: Equity access through the tickers (Bloomberg): Jumbo (BELA GA) vs. Intralot (INLOT GA) Hellenic Telecom (HTO GA) vs. Coca-Cola HBC (EEE GA) Grivalia Properties (GRIV GA) vs. Hellenic Petroleum (ELPE GA) Alpha Bank (ALPHA GA) vs. Piraeus Bank (TPEIR GA) ETFs: There are no ETFs that would allow for an overweight/underweight position in the same sector. Funds: There are no funds that would allow for an overweight/underweight position in the same sector. Please note this trade recommendation is strategic and based on an overweight/underweight pair trade. We do not see a need for specific market timing for this call (for technical indicators please refer to our website link). For convenience, the performance of both market cap-weighted and equal-weighted equity baskets will be tracked (please see upcoming updates as well as the website link to follow performance). Risks To Our Investment Case Because of the overall market neutral exposure, the portfolio performance will be largely immune to the direction of Greek economic growth and political developments. Some macro risk factors stem from a slower-than-expected property market recovery, which would affect the rental income of Grivalia Properties. Other major macro risks include an oil price drop, which would benefit Hellenic Petroleum's profit margins within its refining operations. Also, a slow recovery of consumer sentiment and retail sales would put downward pressure on Jumbo's domestic top-line performance. Company specific risks worth mentioning include remarkable management efforts in CCBA's financial performance in the coming quarters. This would send the market a bullish signal on Coca-Cola HBC's stock price due to potentially strong synergies, posing upside risk to the underweight basket. Furthermore, Jumbo would be negatively affected by excessive focus on overseas markets, and thus it could miss further business development and market share expansion opportunities in the domestic market. Last but not least, asset quality remains problematic among banks, reflected by elevated NPLs, which would weigh on performance indefinitely if not properly tackled. Billy Zicheng Huang, Research Analyst billyh@bcaresearch.com Sophie McGrath, Research Assistant sophiemc@bcaresearch.co.uk
The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of February 28, 2018. After the large upgrade in January, the model has furthered upgraded the U.S. to a small overweight of 3.3 percentage points from neutral in January. This change is mainly financed by a reduction in the large overweight in the Netherlands. Directionally, the model is becoming more defensive in the sense that the sizes of large bets have shrunk two months in a row, as shown in Table 1. As shown in Table 2 and Chart 1, Chart 2 and Chart 3, the overall model underperformed its benchmark by 55 bps in February, largely driven by the Level 2 model which underperformed by 131 bps. The large underweight in Japan hurt the performance the most because in USD terms Japan was the best performer thanks to the strength of JPY versus USD. Since going live in January 2016, the overall model has outperformed the benchmark by 102 bps, largely from the allocation among the 11 non-U.S. countries, which has outperformed its benchmark by 345 bps. The Level 1 model has performed on par with the MSCI benchmark. Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD) Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1) Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) Please see also the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see the January 29, 2016 Special Report, "Global Equity Allocation: Introducing the Developed Markets Country Allocation Model." http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/articles/view_report/18850. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model (Chart 4) is updated as of February 28, 2018. Table 3Allocations Table 4Performance Since Going Live Chart 4Overall Model Performance The model has turned negative on cyclical sectors by sending negative signals from the growth component. Additionally, the recent correction in equity markets has also created unfavorable momentum signals. From being overweight on cyclical sectors by 10%, the model has now turned underweight by 1.3%. However, energy stocks have seen their overweight increase by 3% on the back of favorable valuations. The biggest change was an upgrade to overweight for the utilities sector on the back of the weaker growth outlook and not so negative momentum. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report "Introducing The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model," July 27, 2016 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoli@bcaresearch.com Aditya Kurian, Research Analyst adityak@bcaresearch.com
Fiscal Stimulus To Prolong The Expansion The market swoon in early February should not induce investors to lower risk. The stock market correction (the first for almost two years) was triggered by a couple of inflation and wage readings that came in slightly above expectations, and was exacerbated by some technical factors such as automated trading by volatility-target funds. But, significantly, it was not accompanied by the usual signals of rising risk aversion: for example, credit spreads barely widened and the gold price was stable (Chart 1). Volatility is likely to remain high but, as our U.S. Investment Strategy service recently found, the VIX has not been a useful indicator of recessions and bear markets: many times over the past 30 years it has spiked higher without risk assets producing negative returns over the subsequent 12 months (Chart 2).1 Recommended Allocation Chart 1Sell-Off Didn't Trigger Risk Signals Chart 2Spike In Vix Is Not A Sell Signal Fiscal policy moves in the U.S. make us believe, rather, that the current economic expansion will last longer than we previously forecast. A combination of tax cuts plus recent spending proposals (including $165 billion on the military and $45 billion on disaster relief) will boost GDP by about 0.8% of GDP this year and 1.3% next, compared to the IMF's earlier forecast of a fiscal contraction this year (Chart 3).2 Add to that the boost from the 8% trade-weighted depreciation of the U.S. dollar over the past 12 months (which should add 0.3% to growth over two years), and it is difficult to imagine U.S. GDP growth turning down any time soon. Accordingly, BCA has shifted its recession call from the second half of 2019 to sometime in 2020. Of course, this is not all good news. The U.S. budget deficit is likely to increase to 5½% of GDP in 2019, which will put upward pressure on interest rates. The fiscal impulse will hit an economy already at full capacity, and so will be inflationary. The scenario we envisage is boom-and-bust, leading to a nastier recession than we had previously expected. Nonetheless, the boost to growth should be positive for risk assets over the next 12 months. Our model of earnings growth now suggests that U.S. EPS should continue to grow at close to a 20% rate for the rest of this year (Chart 4). Chart 3Fiscal Boost To U.S. Growth Chart 4Earnings Growth Gets A Boost Too How quickly will the Fed push back against the potentially inflationary implications of this higher growth? We have found a remarkable turnaround in investors' perceptions of inflation over the past few weeks. Whereas last year most argued that structural forces (online shopping, the gig economy etc.) meant that inflation would stay depressed, now many worry that it will quickly shoot above 2% and force the Fed to tighten policy aggressively. This has caused them to over-react, for example, to the (rather obvious) statement from the last FOMC minutes that "participants noted that a stronger outlook for economic growth raised the likelihood that further gradual policy firming would be appropriate." Our view remains that core PCE inflation - the Fed's favorite measure - is likely to move back gradually to 2% (from 1.5% currently), but not accelerate dramatically. Unit labor costs remain subdued (Chart 5), the continued rise in the participation rate means there is more slack in the labor market than implied by headline unemployment (Chart 6), and inflation expectations remain low. This should allow new Fed chair Jerome Powell to continue to withdraw accommodation at a measured pace. The market has already priced in that the Fed will tighten this year at least in line with its dots (Chart 7). We expect four, rather than the Fed's projected three, hikes this year, but this should not be too hard for the market to absorb. Chart 5Unit Labor Costs Don't Point To Jump In Inflation Chart 6 Still Some Slack In Labor Market Chart 7Market Has Caught Up To The Fed We have for some months now advised long-term, more risk-averse investors to consider dialing back risk, and the volatility in February was a good example of why. We would expect further such bouts of volatility. However, with a recession still probably two years away, and a combination of stronger-than-expected growth and a Fed reluctant to accelerate tightening, the next 12 months should remain positive for equities and other risk assets. Fixed Income: We now expect the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield to rise to 3.3-3.5%. This will come from a further 40 BP increase in inflation expectations (taking them back to a level compatible with the Fed achieving its inflation target) plus a rise in the real yield, as markets start to price in the end of secular stagnation (Chart 8). The rise in global yields will be exacerbated by increasing net supply, as fiscal deficits rise and central banks wind down QE (Chart 9). We are, accordingly, underweight duration, and prefer inflation-linked bonds to nominal ones. We will likely reduce our exposure to credit before we turn defensive on equities. But, for now, strong economic growth and higher oil prices mean spread product is likely to outperform government bonds. Chart 8Inflation Expectations And Real Yields To Rise Chart 9Net Government Bond Supply To Increase Currencies: Rising interest rate differentials have failed to cause the dollar to rally (Chart 10). FX markets are trading, rather, on valuations (the euro and yen are, indeed, undervalued), on current account positions (the euro zone and Japan have large surpluses), and on the narrative that U.S. twin deficits historically caused the dollar to weaken. Our FX strategists find this is true only when, as in 2001-3, U.S. real rates were falling; after the Reagan tax cuts in 1981, real rates rose, pushing up the dollar (Chart 11). The key, therefore, is how quickly the Fed reacts this time. The dollar currently has strong downward momentum (especially against the yen) and this could continue. But as global growth slows relative to the U.S., relative interest rates are likely to reassert themselves as a factor, causing the dollar to strengthen again. Chart 10Rising Rate Differentials Fails To Boost Dollar Chart 11Do Twin Deficits Matter For Dollar? Equities: Given the macro environment, we continue to recommend pro-cyclical equity tilts, with overweights in higher beta markets such as the euro zone and Japan, and cyclical sectors such as financials, energy, and industrials. Our underweight on EM equities is based on the risk of a slowdown in China (where tighter financial conditions point to a slowing of the industrial sector, Chart 12), the possibility of a U.S. dollar rebound, and the vulnerability of highly leveraged foreign-currency EM borrowers to a rise in U.S. interest rates. Commodities: Our energy team has further revised up their oil price forecast, on expectations that the OPEC agreement will be extended, which will cause a greater draw-down in oil inventories (Chart 13).3 They see Brent crude averaging $74 a barrel this year, with spikes above $80. However, the response of the U.S. shale industry will begin to kick in, pushing the price down to below $60 by end-2019. We are neutral on industrial commodities, which will benefit from stronger global growth but are at risk in the event of dollar appreciation and slowdown in China. Chart 12Tighter Monetary Conditions In China Chart 13Oil Inventories To Draw Down Further Please note that, due to the Easter holidays in some countries, the GAA Quarterly Portfolio will be published one day later than usual, on April 3. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Late Innings," dated 26 February 2018, available at usis.bcaresearch.com 2 For details, please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "March 2018," available at bca.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0: Getting Comfortable With Higher Prices," dated 22 February 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights Seasonal environmental restrictions on Chinese aluminum output are due to ease going into spring, which will restore some of the output taken off line when inefficient smelters were shuttered last year. Global demand likely will slow later this year, largely because we expect GDP growth in China, which accounts for more than half of global aluminum consumption, to moderate in 2H18. In addition, expected U.S. tariffs and quotas will limit imports and revive output in that market. This will contribute to the easing of a tight global balance, and take some of the pressure off prices, but we do not expect a significant move lower. We remain neutral. Energy: Overweight. Our long Dec/18 $65/bbl Brent calls vs. short Dec/18 $70/bbl calls - recommended last week on the back of our updated price forecast - closed with a 3.1% gain on Tuesday. We took profits on our long 4Q19 $55/bbl Brent puts vs. short 4Q19 $50/bbl Brent puts, realizing a 20.7% gain since it was recommended January 18, 2018. Base Metals: Neutral. We are expecting a secular increase in aluminum supplies this year, on the back of Chinese environmental policies and more difficult global trading conditions. Precious Metals: Gold markets awaited Fed Chair Powell's Humphrey-Hawkins testimony beginning Tuesday, as vice chair for financial supervision, Randal Quarles, warned U.S. economic growth could exceed expectations the day before. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Argentina's drought looks like it will stress that country's grain harvests, and tighten markets at the margin. Feature Chart of the WeekAluminum In Large Deficit Last Year Easing of winter supply restrictions in China, as well as tighter controls on U.S. aluminum imports, will dominate the aluminum market in the near term. In both cases, the net effect likely will be an increase in global supply. The latter would also support aluminum's price in the U.S. market - as measured by the U.S. Midwest premium. These events will ease the global physical deficit in aluminum, which last year came in at its widest since 1995 (Chart of the Week). The current tight conditions are driven by Beijing's elimination of overcapacity, which, along with environmental reform policies implemented last year, led to a reduction in China's output. The price dynamics that dominated the aluminum market over the past couple years will shift as a result. This already can be seen in the behavior of prices on the LME and the SHFE: LME prices have been gyrating around $2,200/MT, while SHFE prices have dipped by more than 5% since the beginning of the year. Unwinding China's Supply-Side Policies? At first blush, it may not be apparent China's primary aluminum production sector experienced significant changes last year. After stalling at 1% year-on-year (y/y) growth in 2016, output grew 1.2% y/y in 2017, a sharp deceleration from the 16% y/y average growth rates registered between 2010 and 2015. However, the annual gain masked a 10% y/y increase in output in 1H17, which was almost completely reversed by the negative impacts of China's environmental policies and its efforts to eliminate overcapacity. These policy-led initiatives ultimately caused output to fall 7% y/y in 2H17 (Chart 2). The resulting 1 mm MT of production cuts in the second half of last year reflects China's 2017 supply-side policies. Beijing's strategy is two-fold: Chart 2Sharp Fall In 2H17 Output From China ... Eliminate outdated and unlicensed capacity by forcing it to close. This has removed an estimated 3-4 mm MT of annual capacity. The policy targets capacity lacking proper building and expansion permits, as well as the smelters that do not meet strict environmental standards. However, not all the shutdowns are permanent. Among this shuttered capacity is 2 mm MT of outdated smelter capacity belonging to China Hongqiao, which the company plans to replace with new capacity.1 The other major supply-side policy implemented by Beijing last year is a restriction on smelter activity during the mid-November to mid-March period. As is the case in the steel sector, this winter-curtailment policy seeks to reduce pollution during the smog-prone winter months. Aluminum smelters in the cities targeted in the winter plan were ordered to cut output by ~ 30% during this period. This policy is expected to be an annually recurring event until 2020. However, while 3 mm MT of annualized capacity would have been closed during the winter if the full 30% curtailment target had been met, reports surfaced in mid-December that compliance was low, and suggested only ~ 0.6 mm MT of capacity (just 20% of the goal, or 6% of the curtailment target) had been closed.2 The total aluminum annual capacity affected by both the winter environmental curtailments and capacity-reduction policies implemented last year could potentially reach 7 mm MT. China's total smelting capacity was a reported 40 mm MT in 2016. Lower Chinese Production ... And Consumption On a year-on-year basis, global primary aluminum production has been falling since August. This is, for the most part, true on a month-on-month basis, as well. The 12-month moving average for global aluminum production peaked in July, and has been coming down consistently since then. Although 2017 production came in higher than the previous year, this is due to a ~ 6% y/y increase in the first half, which preceded a ~ 4% y/y decline in output in the second half of the year. These dynamics are driven by China, which accounts for 55% of global primary production. Chinese firms raised primary output in 1H17, which was followed by a sharp contraction in 2H17. Chinese primary aluminum production peaked in June, recording an all-time record of 2.98 mm MT before falling in the subsequent months. On the other hand, primary production from the rest of the world has remained largely unchanged over the past two years, at 26 mm MT. Data from the International Aluminum Institute shows month-on-month production increases in China in December and January; however, output is still lower vs. the same period a year earlier. Chinese production drove global aluminum production higher in the past, but falling output from the world's leading producer now is causing global primary aluminum supply to contract. The impact of China's supply curtailments has been muted by lower demand for the metal (Chart 3). Again, lower consumption has been driven by the top-demand market - China - which typically consumes ~ 55% of the primary metal. Chinese primary consumption and production each came down by more than 1 mm MT y/y in the second half of last year. Falling aluminum demand in China is consistent with a slowdown in Chinese automobile production as well as fixed asset investments in infrastructure and transportation (Chart 4). Furthermore, China's scrap aluminum imports increased in 2H17, reflecting a preference for the secondary metal as the price of primary aluminum increased. Chart 3... Coincided With Falling Chinese Consumption Chart 4Slowdown In Chinese Demand A Divergence In Global Dynamics ... Despite the improved balance in China, the global primary aluminum balance in the rest of the world recorded a large deficit last year - the largest since 1995 (Chart 5). While both consumption and production in China came down by more than 1 mm MT in 2H17, consumption in the rest of the world increased by ~ 0.4 mm MT, even as production remained largely unchanged. This tightened the global market, as more stringent aluminum production policies in China meant that there was no flooding of Chinese aluminum to ease the deficit. In fact, the world excluding China deficit is the largest at least since the World Bureau of Metal Statistics (WBMS) started collecting data in 1995. ... Is Reflected In Inventory Dynamics This also coincides with rising aluminum stocks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange and falling inventory on the LME. In fact, Chinese aluminum imports have been falling and were down almost 30% y/y in 2H17. At the same time, Chinese net exports picked up slightly (Chart 6). Chart 5Record Aluminum Deficit Outside China Chart 6Chinese Net Exports On The Rise In response to lower output, LME inventories have been falling since 2Q14, and they continued their descent last year, ending 2017 at roughly the same level as mid-2008. On the other hand, stocks at the SHFE have been rising steeply since the beginning of last year and are at record highs (Chart 7). Whether the tight global market fundamentals will persist depends on whether China's outdated capacity cuts prove to be temporary or permanent. Chart 7Dynamics Reflected In Stock Changes U.S. Tariffs And Quotas Would Offset Tight Markets In what appears to be an effort to revive U.S. aluminum and steel production, the U.S. Commerce Department launched an investigation into these domestic industries late last year. Last month, Commerce proposed tariffs and quotas that would impact all aluminum imports with the exception of aluminum scrap and aluminum powders. There appear to be two main objectives of this investigation: 1. Increase capacity utilization in the U.S. aluminum and steel industries; and 2. Penalize China for subsidizing its aluminum sector at the expense of those in other countries. Among the Commerce proposals: 1. A 7.7% tariff on all aluminum imports to the U.S. 2. A 23.6% tariff on all aluminum imports from certain countries, while other countries would be subject to quotas equal to 100% of their 2017 exports to the U.S.3 3. A quota on all aluminum imports from other countries equal to a maximum of 86.7% of their 2017 exports to the U.S. In a memo issued last week, the U.S. Department of Defense expressed its support for the targeted tariffs (option 2 above), as well as a recommendation to postpone action on the aluminum sector. President Trump has until April 19 to make a decision on the aluminum recommendations. While he may not stick to the exact details outlined in the three options, our Geopolitical Strategists expect him to go through with implementing protectionist measures to limit aluminum imports. U.S. production of primary aluminum is at its lowest level since 1951 (Chart 8). To reach the 80% target of smelter capacity utilization envisioned by Commerce, the U.S. will have to add ~ 0.67 mm MT of supply. This represents just ~ 1.16% of world supply in 2016. Imports currently make up 90% of U.S. primary aluminum consumption. Chart 8U.S. Producers Took A Big Hit In fact, even if this amount of aluminum was supplied domestically in the U.S. last year, the world aluminum market would have remained in deficit. Furthermore, this additional supply would pale in comparison to the cuts China has already implemented in its aluminum sector last year. China's primary production in the August to December period last year came in 1.15 mm MT below the same period in 2016. Annual smelter capacity in the U.S. is estimated to be a combined 1.82 mm MT. Of this capacity, Alcoa has 0.34 mm MT of idle capacity, Century Aluminum has 0.27 mm MT, while ARG International's Missouri plant has 0.27 mm MT of idle capacity. U.S. producers have started communicating plans to restart idled capacity. According to Century Aluminum's CEO, the company's eastern Kansas operation, which shuttered more than half of its production, could ramp output at one of its smelters to full capacity of up to 0.27 mm MT by early next year. Similarly, Alcoa has committed to partially restarting production at its Warwick, Indiana, facility, which would bring 0.16 mm MT of capacity online by the second quarter of this year. However, imports are not the sole reason output in the U.S. aluminum sector is falling. High power costs also have contributed, but this is not addressed in the Department of Commerce's report. In any case, we would not be surprised to witness an increase in aluminum imports by U.S. consumers before a final decision is made. If import controls do in fact fall into place, prices in the U.S. - as reflected by the U.S. Midwest transaction premium - will likely increase. Bottom Line: Supply- and demand-side developments, mostly in China, which accounts for more than half of global production and consumption, will combine to ease a global supply deficit this year. Expected U.S. tariffs and quotas will limit imports and revive output in that market. This will take some pressure off prices, but, we do not expect levels to move significantly lower. Roukaya Ibrahim, Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "China Hongqiao says to cut 2 mln T/year of outdated aluminum capacity," published on August 2, 2017, available at reuters.com. 2 Please see "Aluminum Under Pressure After China Smog Cutbacks Fall Short," published on December 20, 2017, available at reuters.com. 3 The countries noted are China, Hong Kong, Russia, Venezuela, and Vietnam. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
Highlights Fed: The Fed is getting more optimistic on growth and continues to forecast a rebound in inflation. Nevertheless, the March FOMC meeting is probably too soon to expect an upward revision to the Fed's rate hike expectations. Inflation: The headwinds working against inflation are set to fade this year. The core goods and medical care sectors will lead the way, but there are even tentative signs that the deceleration in shelter inflation might start to ease. Spread Product: A survey of investment grade bond sectors shows that municipal bonds, Foreign Agency bonds and Local Authority bonds are all attractively valued relative to corporates. In contrast, USD-denominated Sovereign bonds are expensive. At the upper-end of the credit spectrum, Consumer ABS offer good value but deteriorating credit fundamentals. Feature One byproduct of this year's increase in Treasury yields is that market expectations for the near-term path of Fed rate hikes have converged with the Fed's most recent median projection (Chart 1). At present, the overnight index swap curve is priced for a fed funds rate of 2.19% by the end of this year and 2.54% by the end of 2019. The Fed's most recent median projection calls for a fed funds rate between 2% and 2.25% by the end of 2018, and of 2.75% by the end of 2019.1 Chart 1Market Expectations Have Converged With The Fed Dots This convergence makes the next few Fed meetings particularly interesting. Will the Fed revise up its rate projections, giving the market permission to push short-dated yields even higher? Or will the Fed continue to signal three hikes this year and 2-3 more in 2019, restraining the bear market in short-dated bonds? Fortunately, last week we received a lot of information to help us answer these questions. Several FOMC members made noteworthy public remarks and the Fed released the minutes from the January FOMC meeting. What To Expect From The March FOMC Meeting The Fed's Rosy Growth Outlook The minutes from the January FOMC meeting showed a great deal of optimism about the U.S. recovery, from both the Fed staff and FOMC participants. Chart 2Substantial Stimulus In The Pipeline The minutes noted that the Fed staff submitted stronger economic projections at the January meeting than at previous meeting, noting that: [T]he forecast for real GDP growth was revised up, reflecting a reassessment of the recently enacted tax cuts, along with higher projected paths for equity prices and foreign economic growth and a lower assumed path for the foreign exchange value of the dollar. It's important to note that while these projections include the impact of recent changes to the tax code, they do not include the potential impact from the newly proposed two-year appropriations bill that is poised to pass through Congress in the next few weeks. This bill is significant with large outlays for disaster relief ($45 billion), the military ($165 billion) and non-defense discretionary items ($131 billion), spread over the next two years. Chart 2 demonstrates how much this spending bill and the recent tax cuts have altered the growth outlook. It shows two estimates of fiscal thrust, the initial economic impulse of changes in government tax and spending policies.2 One estimate is the IMF's baseline forecast that was made before the tax legislation was passed. That estimate showed that fiscal policy would have been contractionary this year, trimming about 0.5% from GDP, and only slightly expansionary in 2019. The second estimate, which incorporates both the tax legislation and the proposed spending bill, shows that the fiscal impulse will be +0.8% this year and +1.3% next year. A major turnaround, and the most stimulative fiscal policy since the immediate aftermath of the financial crisis. Staying The Course On Inflation At the January FOMC meeting the Fed saw a presentation on the performance of different inflation models, an exercise that is particularly important given that the Fed's traditional expectations-augmented Phillips curve model was not able to explain why prices decelerated last year. The staff concluded that while the prediction errors from Phillips curve-style models have been larger in recent years than during the 2001-07 period, they were not completely out of line with history. This synchs up with our own analysis. We re-created the Fed's expectations-augmented Phillips curve model using details from a speech given by Janet Yellen in 2015 (Chart 3).3 That model certainly shows a large prediction error in 2017, but one that is not inconsistent with past errors. The message is that 2017 was not an outlier in terms of the Fed's ability to forecast inflation, but rather that inflation is quite often difficult to forecast. The Fed staff did provide a couple reasons for why inflation lagged the model's predictions last year: [S]tructural changes in the price setting for some items, such as medical care, and the effects of idiosyncratic price shocks, such as the unusual drop in prices of wireless telephone services. And also forecast that inflation would reverse course in 2018: [C]ore PCE prices were forecast to rise notably faster in 2018, importantly reflecting both the expected waning of transitory factors that held down 12-month inflation measures in 2017 as well as the projected further tightening in resource utilization. We agree with this assessment. In fact, both CPI and PCE inflation measures have formed tentative troughs in the past few months and should see further near-term upside from both the core goods and medical care components (Chart 4). Core goods inflation has still not caught up with accelerating import prices (Chart 4, panel 2) and the PPI data show a recent large jump in health-care prices (Chart 4, panel 3). Chart 3The Fed's Inflation Model Chart 4Inflation Headwinds Will Fade On medical care, research from the San Francisco Fed has shown that a major reason for lower inflation in recent years has been the slower growth of Medicare payments to physicians and hospitals as mandated by the Affordable Care Act. But these payments are also forecast to grow 2% this year, much higher than the 0.6% growth seen last year and the 0.9% growth seen in 2016.4 It is even possible that the deceleration in shelter inflation could moderate in the months ahead, given the renewed decline in the rental vacancy rate (Chart 4, panel 4). Meanwhile, we continue to expect that stronger wage growth will eventually pressure core services inflation (excluding shelter and medical care) higher (Chart 4, bottom panel). But What Are They Saying? Even though the minutes conveyed a decidedly optimistic tone with regards to both growth and inflation, Fed speakers were much more cautious last week. Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker said that "based on the relatively strong economy, but the continued stubbornness of inflation, I've penciled in two hikes for 2018." Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said he is "comfortable continuing with a slow removal of policy accommodation" but also that "that doesn't necessarily mean as many as three or four moves per year." St. Louis Fed President James Bullard also said that 100 basis points of rate hikes in 2018 "seems like a lot." At the very least it appears that upward revisions to GDP growth forecasts are not sufficient for these three members to revise their rate projections higher. But these three members also already projected shallower paths for rate hikes than the median FOMC member (Table 1). Table 1Composition Of The FOMC More important is whether FOMC members whose projections are consistent with the median - those with a "neutral" policy bias in Table 1 - are inclined to get more hawkish. One of those members is San Francisco Fed President John Williams who said last week that "it makes sense to think about three or four rate increases in 2018." Chart 5Still Not Back To Target At the moment, the median Fed projection calls for three rate hikes in 2018, and that median will only move higher in March if four out of the six members who currently forecast three hikes this year decide to increase their dots. Given the cautious tone struck by most Fed speakers last week, we think the odds of an upward revision to the Fed's 2018 rate hike forecasts at the March meeting are low. Bottom Line: The Fed is getting more optimistic on growth and continues to forecast a rebound in inflation. Nevertheless, the March FOMC meeting is probably too soon to expect an upward revision to the Fed's rate hike expectations. Our own assessment is that the headwinds working against inflation are set to fade this year and that 3-4 Fed rate hikes are likely. In either case, bond yields are still biased higher given that they are still not priced for an eventual return of inflation to the Fed's target (Chart 5). Maintain a below-benchmark duration stance. Searching For Late-Cycle Value In Spread Product As we have noted repeatedly in recent reports, we anticipate that we will start to de-risk the spread product side of our U.S. bond portfolio sometime in 2018, possibly quite soon depending on the future path of inflation.5 So this week we perform a survey of investment grade spread product sectors, with an eye towards identifying sectors that look attractively valued and also present a low risk of spread widening. Our primary tool for identifying value is the 12-month breakeven spread. The 12-month breakeven spread is the basis point spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for a sector to earn zero excess returns versus a duration-equivalent position in Treasury yields.6 Table 2 shows the 12-month breakeven spread for each sector split by credit rating. Table 212-Month Breakeven Spreads By Credit Rating The first thing we notice is the attractive spreads offered by municipal bonds after adjusting for the tax advantage. In fact, for investors exposed to the top marginal tax rate, the 12-month breakeven spread on a Aaa-rated municipal bond exceeds the spread offered by a Baa-rated corporate bond. We have previously noted that when the tax-adjusted spread on a 10-year Aaa-rated municipal bond exceeds the spread offered by the duration-matched investment grade corporate bond index, it has historically been a signal that the credit cycle is very late. We are not seeing this signal yet, but it is getting very close (Chart 6). The second observation that jumps out is that USD-denominated Sovereign debt is not attractive compared to U.S. corporate debt. This is true across the entire investment grade credit spectrum. Further, Chart 7 shows that Sovereign bonds typically exhibit greater excess return volatility than U.S. corporate bonds. Chart 6Positive Muni/Corporate Spreads##br## Are A Late-Cycle Indicator Chart 712-Month Breakeven Spread Versus ##br##Excess Return Volatility We anticipate getting an opportunity to shift out of corporate bonds and into Sovereign debt at some point during the next 12 months, but expect some poor performance from Sovereign bonds first. A quicker expected pace of Fed rate hikes has historically coincided with Sovereign bond underperformance (Chart 8), and if that plays out while growth outside the U.S. starts to moderate - a risk that has been flagged by both our leading indicators for the Chinese economy and the performance of EM/JPY currency carry trades - then this would further exacerbate the underperformance of Sovereign bonds by putting upward pressure on the U.S. dollar.7 A third observation from Table 2 is that Foreign Agency bonds look very attractive, and Chart 7 also shows that the sector has historically exhibited quite low volatility. Foreign state-owned energy companies make up a large portion of the Foreign Agency index, and this sector's performance closely tracks the price of oil (Chart 9). With our commodity strategists now calling for average 2018 crude oil prices of $74/bbl and $70/bbl for Brent and WTI respectively, the Foreign Agency sector should stay well supported.8 Local Authority bonds are also attractively valued, though to a lesser extent than Foreign Agencies, and also tend to exhibit relatively low excess return volatility. We continue to recommend an overweight position in this sector that is comprised principally of taxable municipal debt and USD-denominated Canadian provincial bonds. Chart 8Underweight Sovereigns Chart 9Overweight Foreign Agencies Finally, we notice that credit card and auto loan backed Consumer ABS offer very attractive spreads and relatively low volatility. While we retain a neutral allocation to Consumer ABS, we note that credit trends are starting to shift against the sector. Bank are now tightening lending standards on both credit cards and auto loans, and the delinquency rate has made a cyclical bottom (Chart 10). Aaa-rated non-Agency CMBS also offer an attractive breakeven spread, though this sector has historically been much more volatile. Here too we see that banks are tightening lending standards, but the tightening has moderated in recent quarters. If this continues then delinquencies could start to roll over and property prices could start to accelerate (Chart 11). We remain underweight non-agency CMBS for now, but note the tentative improvement in credit quality. Chart 10Neutral Consumer ABS Chart 11A Nascent Improvement In Credit Quality Bottom Line: A survey of investment grade bond sectors shows that municipal bonds, Foreign Agency bonds and Local Authority bonds are all attractively valued relative to corporates. In contrast, USD-denominated Sovereign bonds are expensive. At the upper-end of the credit spectrum, Consumer ABS offer good value but deteriorating credit fundamentals. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 We exclude the forecast provided by the St. Louis Fed President as an outlier and calculate the median from the remaining forecasts. 2 The fiscal thrust is defined as the change in the cyclically-adjusted budget balance, expressed as a percentage of GDP. 3 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/yellen20150924a.htm 4 https://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/publications/economic-letter/2017/november/contribution-to-low-pce-inflation-from-healthcare/ 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "On The MOVE", dated February 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 We calculate the 12-month breakeven spread as the average index option-adjusted spread divided by the average index duration. We ignore the impact of convexity. 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Two-Stage Bear Market In Bonds", dated February 20, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0 Getting Comfortable With Higher Prices", dated February 22, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights The combined U.S. current account and fiscal deficits are set to rise as Trump's profligacy and higher interest rates kick in. In and of itself, this does not spell doom for the dollar. The Fed's response to the twin deficit is what will ultimately set the path for the greenback. Stimulus hitting an economy at full employment raises the likelihood that the Fed will not stand idly by. The dollar's momentum is not deteriorating anymore, global growth could hit a soft patch, and U.S. hedged yields might regain some composure versus European hedged yields. These factors are likely to precipitate a dollar rebound. The durability of this rebound remains an unknown. An opportunity to go short EUR/SEK has emerged. Feature When it comes to the U.S. dollar, the story of the day has become the twin deficits. It is now presented as the key factor that will drag the dollar lower over the course of the cycle. We do agree there are plenty of reasons to be concerned with the long-term outlook for the dollar. However, we remain unconvinced whether the twin deficits really are the much-vaunted "boogey man" that will haunt the greenback. In fact, we would argue that while they are a handicap for the dollar, the role of the Federal Reserve, global growth and hedging costs take precedence over the evil twins. The Twin Deficit Will Widen We take no offence with the assertion that the twin deficits are set to increase. According to the work of Mark McClellan, who writes The Bank Credit Analyst, the U.S. fiscal deficit is set to increase to 5.5% of GDP over the course of the next two years. U.S. President Donald Trump's tax cuts and the recent spending agreement will undeniably contribute to this.1 The current account deficit is also set to widen. Chart I-1 shows our estimate for the path of the current account. We anticipate it to move to -3.4% of GDP by late 2018 or early 2019. This is a noteworthy deterioration, but one that only brings the U.S. current account to a level last experienced in 2009. One contributor is obviously the trade balance. The Bank Credit Analyst estimates that the impact of the combined fiscal measures announced will reach 0.3% of GDP in 2018. The biggest source of deterioration will not come from trade: it will come from a fall in the net primary income balance of the U.S., which currently stands at 1.1% of GDP. Essentially, higher interest rates in the U.S. means that foreigners will receive greater income from the U.S. Based on the current level of the median long-term interest rate forecasts by the FOMC's participants, my colleague Ryan Swift estimates that a move in 10-year Treasury yields to 3.5% is likely by year end.2 Based on our estimate, this will push down the primary income balance to 0.4% of GDP. It is important to acknowledge that this forecast for the current account is likely to prove to be a worst-case scenario. To begin with, the trade balance could continue to be buffeted by the fact that U.S. energy production keeps expanding, which is slowly but surely moving the U.S. toward a positive energy trade balance (Chart I-2). Moreover, periods of weakness in the USD have been followed by improvements in the U.S. primary income balance. This is because while payments made by the U.S. to foreigners are mostly in the form of interest, 55% of U.S. income receipts are earnings on FDIs. If we add dividends received on foreign equity holdings, this share rises to 80% of U.S. gross primary income. Thus, if the dollar weakens, U.S. receipts benefit from a translation effect as corporations convert their foreign earnings back into U.S. dollars at more beneficial exchange rates. Chart I-1Higher U.S. Rates ##br##Will Hurt The Current Account Chart I-2U.S. Shale Oil Production Will Prevent Too Great A Deterioration In The Trade Balance But do twin deficits even matter? We would argue, it depends. Bottom Line: The U.S. twin deficits are set to increase. The U.S. fiscal deficit will move to 5.5% of GDP and the current account to -3.4% of GDP as interest owed to foreigners is set to increase. Twin Deficit, So What? It is one thing to anticipate a widening of the twin deficits, but does history suggest that twin deficits have an impact on the dollar? Here, the empirical evidence is rather mixed. As Chart I-3 illustrates, there has been no obvious link between twin deficits and the dollar. In fact, Arthur Budaghyan highlighted in BCA's Emerging Market Strategy service the following phases:3 1970s: no discernable relationship; First half of the 1980s: Substantial widening of twin deficits, but a massive dollar bull market materialized; 1985 to 1993: no reliable relationship between twin deficits and the dollar; 1994 to 2001: The dollar did rally as twin deficits narrowed on the back of the fiscal balance moving from roughly -4% of GDP to 2% of GDP; 2001 to 2011: dollar weakened as twin deficits grew deeper; 2011 to 2016: When twin deficits narrowed considerably, the dollar was stable, but when they stopped improving, the dollar rallied 25%. Chart I-3In My Time Of Dying? Let us focus on the growing twin deficits episodes. As it turns out, the missing link between twin deficits and the dollar is Fed policy. A widening in twin deficits is normally associated with a strong economy. Profligate government spending can boost domestic demand, and because imports have a high elasticity to domestic demand, a widening current account also tends to come alongside robust growth. The Volcker Fed played a high-wire act from 1979 to 1982, plunging the U.S. into a vicious double-dip recession in order to bring realized and expected inflation back to earth after the 1970s. Volcker was not about to let former President Ronald Reagan's stimulus boost growth to the point of lifting inflation expectations again, undoing all the Fed's previous good work. He elected to increase real rates sharply, which was the key factor behind the dollar's strength. The 2001 to 2011 experience needs to be broken down in parts. From 2001 to 2003, the twin deficits were expanding thanks to former President George Bush's wars and tax cuts. Yet the Fed did not play the same counterweight as it did in the mid-1980s. Instead, it kept cutting rates all the way until 2003 as then-Chairman Alan Greenspan was worried about deflation. U.S. real rates did not experience the necessary lift required to fight the negative impact of the twin deficits on the dollar. From 2003 to 2007, the twin deficits were in fact narrowing, real rates were trendless and the dollar was experiencing mild depreciation. During that time frame, global growth was extremely robust, China was growing at a double-digit pace and EM economies were booming. Money was flowing toward these destinations. From 2007 to mid-2008, while the twin deficits continued to narrow, the dollar plunged. The sharp fall in real rates as the Fed engaged in aggressive rate cutting explains this apparent inconsistency. From the second half of 2008 to 2009, the dollar surged, despite a further widening of the twin deficits. Real rates rebounded as inflation expectations melted, and risk aversion prompted investors to seek the safety of the global reserve asset and the global reserve currency - Treasurys and the greenback, respectively. From 2009 to the middle of 2011, the twin deficits stabilized, real rates stabilized, and the dollar stabilized as well, but nonetheless experienced wild gyrations as the global economy kept experiencing aftershocks from the great financial crisis. Neither the twin deficits nor real rates were offering a clear path forward, thus the dollar was also mixed. Bottom Line: A close look at various episodes of twin deficits in the U.S. pushes us toward one conclusion: if twin deficits are expanding but the Fed is trying to tighten policy and real rates are rising, the dollar ignores the twin deficits and, in fact, manages to rise. If, however, the twin deficits expand, and real rates do not experience enough upside to counterbalance this development, the dollar weakens. This means one thing for the coming years: Forecasting twin deficits is not sufficient to predict a dollar bear market. Instead, we also need a view on the Fed and the outlook for real rates. So Where Will The Dollar Go In 2018? We expect there could be some upward pressure on the Fed's dots as the year progresses. The reason is rather straightforward. The U.S. economy will receive a very large shot in the arm this year and next. Mark's calculations show that the fiscal thrust in 2018 and 2019 will morph from -0.4% of GDP to 0.8% of GDP, and from 0.3% of GDP to 1.3% of GDP, respectively (Chart I-4). While currently the fiscal thrust is expected to become a large negative in 2020, that year is an election year. There is a non-trivial probability that the fiscal cliff anticipated that year may in fact be postponed: it is not in the interest of the Republicans or Democrats to be blamed for a slowing economy in a year where Americans are hitting the voting booths! This stimulus is not happening in a vacuum either: it is materializing in an environment where the labor market seems to be at full employment, where capacity utilization is tight, and where financial conditions remain easy (Chart I-5). Stimulating when the economy is at full capacity is likely to lift prices more than it will boost real economic activity. The Fed is fully aware of this risk. Chart I-4Much Stimulus ##br##In The Pipeline Chart I-5Could Fiscal Stimulus Be Inflationary With This Backdrop?##br## We Think So However, it remains possible that the Fed will err on the side of caution and wait until the impact of the stimulus measures on the economy become more evident before sending a more hawkish message to the markets. Chart I-6Twin Deficits Narratives ##br##Look Like Ex-Post Explanations If the Fed elects to be proactive and adjusts its message regarding the future path of policy before the impact of the stimulus becomes evident, the dollar could rise as it would put upward pressure on U.S. real rates. If, however, the Fed elects to be reactive and wait until the economy responds to the stimulus package with higher wage growth and inflation, then the dollar could weaken as real rates experience little upside and the twin deficits exact their toll. BCA is currently conducting research to assess which path is more likely. In the meanwhile, there other factors to consider. First, as we highlighted three weeks ago, since 2011, spikes in the number of mentions of the twin deficits in media have historically been associated with temporary rebounds in the dollar following periods of USD weakness (Chart I-6).4 The twin deficits seem to come to the forefront of investors' minds as an ex-post explanation for previous weak-dollar periods. Second, our dollar capitulation index is not only at oversold levels, but the indicator has formed a positive divergence with the trade-weighted dollar's exchange rate (Chart I-7). Technically, this increases the probability of a meaningful rebound in the USD. Chart I-7A Positive Technical Development For The Greenback Third, global growth is showing signs of weakening. We have already highlighted that rollovers in the performance of EM carry trades such as the one we have been experiencing for a few months now have been very reliable leading indicators of activity slowdowns over the past 20 years.5 Korea exports are also ebbing. As Chart I-8 illustrates, when Korean exports weaken, this tends to be associated with weakness in highly pro-cyclical financial variables like EM equities, EM bonds, AUD/USD or AUD/JPY. When a slowdown in global growth materializes, especially when it does so as the U.S. economy is set to accelerate, it tends to be associated with a stronger dollar. Fourth, the super-charged strength in the euro versus the USD since the second quarter of 2017 happened as European hedged yields overtook U.S. hedged yields. Chart I-9 takes the example of a Japan-based investor. We pick Japan as an illustration because Japan is the largest creditor nation in the world, and extra-low domestic yields, Japanese investors continue to exhibit heightened yield-seeking behaviors. When the gap between European bond yields hedged into yen and U.S. bond yields hedged into yen became more negative, the euro was depreciating. Once this gap started to narrow, the euro stabilized. Once European bond yields hedged into yen became greater than U.S. bond yields hedged into yen, the euro took off. Chart I-8Growth Sensitive Assets May Be At Risk Chart I-9Are Hedged Yields The Culprit Behind The Dollar's Weakness? We expect these gaps in hedged yields to move back in the U.S.'s favor. The U.S. yield curve has some scope to begin to steepen a bit, especially as U.S. growth accelerates. Additionally, a big component of the underperformance of U.S. hedged yields has been associated with a widening of the LIBOR spread and the cross-currency basis swap spreads (Chart I-10). As we anticipated, the introduction of tax rules favoring repatriations of foreign earnings by U.S. corporations is having this effect.6 U.S. firms hold their offshore earnings in high-quality securities like bank papers or Treasurys. These securities are a vital supply of dollars in the Eurodollar market - the offshore USD market - as they are high-quality collateral that can be used to secure many transactions. As the market in December began to discount the impact of the tax changes, FRA-OIS spreads and basis swap spreads began to widen. This increased the cost of hedging U.S. bonds. Chart I-10Will The Increase In Treasurys Issuance ##br##Pull Back Down The Cost Of Hedging U.S. Assets? But here's one overlooked but potentially friendly outcome of the twin deficits. By increasing its current account deficit, the U.S. economy will begin to supply more USDs to Eurodollar markets, providing a relief valve to the collateral-starved offshore USD-funding markets. Moreover, because the fiscal deficit is set to mushroom, and because after many debt-ceiling debacles the Treasury's cash reserves are low, the Treasury is likely to start issuing a lot more T-Notes and T-Bills, which will also provide a source of high-quality collaterals in the system, especially as the Fed is not buying those bonds anymore. The stress in the funding market may begin to recede and hedged U.S. yields may begin to rise relative to the rest of the world. Bottom Line: While the twin deficit could become a negative for the USD, it is not yet clear that this will indeed be the case. Instead, we need to keep in mind that the U.S. government is injecting a large amount of stimulus in an economy running at full capacity. This could be inflationary. The Fed's response will dictate the USD's path. If the Fed is proactive, the USD will experience an upswing. If the Fed is reactive and waits to guide real rates higher, the dollar could remain weak. In the meanwhile, other forces are pointing toward a rebound in the dollar. The greenback is oversold and unloved; momentum indicators are forming positive divergences, raising the odds of a rebound; global growth is set to slow; and U.S. hedged yields are likely to move back in favor of the dollar. Will EUR/SEK Break Above 10? The recent inflation miss in Sweden has raised some concerns, with EUR/SEK hovering around the critical 10 level, and NOK/SEK breaking above the 1.03 handle. Headline consumer prices rose only 1.6% annually in January, while contracting by 0.8% in monthly terms. The official inflation measure tracked by the Riksbank - the CPIF - fell to 1.7% per annum. This move away from the inflation target has market participants questioning the Riksbank's willingness and ability to normalize policy this year. However, the underlying picture is not that negative. The most recent inflation figure was greatly impacted by the seasonality of Swedish CPI. As Chart I-11 shows, January tends to be a very weak number for Swedish inflation. The February data is likely to rebound significantly. Additionally, our model further highlights that based on both international and domestic factors, Swedish inflation should rise in the coming months, putting CPI much closer to the Riksbank's objective (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Seasonal Pattern In Swedish CPI Chart I-12Swedish Inflation Is Set To Rebound Reassuringly, Swedish inflation expectations have not subsided, suggesting market participants are fading the latest weak reading. As the bottom panel of Chart I-13 illustrates, CPI swap rates are still holding steady. On the macro front, consumers continue to be a source of durable strength. Real consumption is growing at a 3% annual rate, and Swedish consumer confidence is still elevated (Chart I-14). Chart I-13Swedish Inflation Expectations Are Stable Chart I-14The Swedish Consumer Is Still Spending Essentially, the Riksbank's extremely easy monetary policy may not have yet generated inflation in the prices of consumer goods and services, but it has generated huge debt and asset price inflation. The clearest symptom of this is Sweden's non-financial private debt, which now stands at a stunning 240% of GDP, only surpassed by Switzerland and Norway among the G10 economies. These developments imply that the positive Swedish output gap will expand further, and that inflationary pressures will only become more entrenched. Thus, we continue to anticipate a rate hike by the Riksbank this year. This is very much a consensus call. However, where we diverge from consensus is that while futures are pricing in approximately 85 basis points of interest rate hikes by March 2020, we think the scope to lift rates is greater. We also see a higher probability of hikes over that time frame than the Riksbank's own forecast. In other words, we anticipate that the Riksbank's rate forecasts will be revised to the upside. This is because inflationary pressures are growing greater and the economy is very strong. Thus, the Swedish central bank is falling behind the curve and will have to play catch up as soon as inflation moves back closer to target. This will most likely happen over the coming 12 months. As a result, selling EUR/SEK at current levels seems an interesting trade with an attractive entry point. As Chart I-15 illustrates, EUR/SEK only traded above this level during the great financial crisis. It did not manage to punch above this level during the Nordic financial crises of the early 1990s, nor did it during the 1997-'98 crisis - or directly after the September 11 attacks. Chart I-15The Line In The Sand Moreover, EUR/SEK currently trades 7.5% above its purchasing power parity equilibrium. The gap between Sweden's and the euro area's basic balance of payments is very large. While Sweden's stands at 5.1% of GDP, the euro area's is near zero. This reinforces the message that the EUR/SEK is very expensive: when the cross appreciates too much, Swedish assets become much more attractive to foreigners relative to European assets. These long-term flows end up boosting the relative basis balance in favor of Sweden. This is exactly what is happening today (Chart I-16). Chart I-16Expensive EUR/SEK Makes Swedish Assets Attractive From a tactical perspective, EUR/SEK also looks vulnerable. Various short-term momentum measures such as the 14-day RSI or the 13-week rate of change are diverging from actual prices. Additionally, EUR/SEK risk reversals - i.e. the implied volatility of calls versus the implied volatility of puts on this cross - have spiked up. This is true even after controlling for the rise in implied volatility that has affected the option market. It seems to suggest that investors that would have been buying EUR/SEK have already placed their bets. The marginal player is likely to now bet in the other direction. This trade is not without risks. First, a move above 10.1 could be mechanically followed by a sharp rally as stops are hit and momentum traders force the cross higher. Second, Swedish PMIs have been rolling over for six months, but so have the preliminary releases of Europe PMIs this week. What is more concerning is the weakness in Asian manufacturing production that is behind the sharp slowdown in Korean exports. This is worrisome because historically, the Swedish economy has been very sensitive to EM shocks. However, only 2008 was able to push EUR/SEK above 10. Even if EM slows, we are not anticipating a shock as large as what occurred in 2015, let alone in 2008. Moreover, while we anticipate Swedish inflation to surprise to the upside, we equally expect euro area inflation to exhibit much more limited gains. Bottom Line: Sweden's inflation report came in well below expectations, which prompted a sharp rally in EUR/SEK to near 10. However, this level has been an important resistance since the early 1990s, only breached during the great financial crisis. We are betting on it not being breached this time around. The Swedish economy is strong, and inflation is set to pick up again. As a result, we think the Riksbank will be forced to lift its interest rate forecast as time passes. Moreover, EUR/SEK is expensive, and flows are currently very much in favor of Sweden. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com Haaris Aziz, Research Assistant HaarisA@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, dated February 29, 2018, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "On the MOVE", dated February 13, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "EM Local Bonds and U.S. Twin Deficits", dated February 21, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "The Euro's Tricky Spot", dated February 2, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Reports, "Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades", dated December 1, 2017, and "Canaries In the Coal Mine Alert 2: More on EM Carry Trades And Global Growth", dated December 15, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "It's Not My Cross To Bear", dated October 27, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. Currencies U.S. Dollar U.S. data was mixed: Markit PMIs beat expectations ; Existing home sales, however, grew by less than expected at 5.38 million, a 3.2% contraction form the previous month; Continuing jobless claims outperformed expectations, coming in at 1.875 million; Initial jobless claims also outperformed with 222,000. In the meeting's minutes, FOMC members were quite positive on growth and their rhetoric suggest they intend to follow up on the current set of dot plots. Subsequently, equities sold off, the 10-year yield climbed to 2.954%, bringing them close to BCA's fair value estimate. Due to these developments, the dollar's descent seems to be taking a breather for now, and it may even experience a rebound in the coming weeks. Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 A Cold Snap Doesn't Make A Winter - January 5, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Euro The tone of European data has been deteriorating: German PMIs underperformed expectations, with services coming in at 55.3, and manufacturing, at 60.3; European PMIs also underperformed anticipations with manufacturing coming in at 58.5 and services at 56.7; The Current Situation section of the ZEW Survey was also weaker than expected; German IFO underperformed expectations, with the Business Climate measure coming in at 115.4, and the Expectations measure also dropping to 105.4. The euro weakened substantially this week on poor data and a hawkish Fed, even if it managed to eke out a rebound on Thursday. We have recently published on the risks to global growth, and the weak European PMIs seem like a consequence of these developments. We expect the euro's bull market to pause until global growth picks back up. Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 The Yen Recent data in Japan has been mixed: Imports yearly growth underperformed expectations, coming in at 7.9%. It also declined significantly from the previous 14.9% pace . Moreover, Nikkei Manufacturing PMI underperformed expectations, coming in at 54. It also declined from 54.8 in the previous month, However, exports yearly growth outperformed expectations, coming in at 12.2%. It also increased from its 9.3% pace the previous month. USD/JPY has rallied by roughly 1.5% since last week. Overall, we expect that the current volatile environment will provide strength to the yen to the point that a level of 100 for USD/JPY is plausible. However, on a long term basis the yen is likely to be weak against the U.S. dollar, as the BoJ will fight tooth and nail to prevent a strengthening yen from hampering inflation. Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Report Links: The Yen's Mighty Rise Continues... For Now - February 16, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 British Pound Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: The ILO Unemployment rate surprised negatively, coming in at 4.4%. It also increased form 4.3% the previous month. Moreover, retail sales and retail sales ex-fuel annual growth also underperformed, coming in at 1.6% and 1.5% respectively. However, average hourly earnings yearly growth excluding bonus outperformed expectations, coming in at 2.5% GBP/USD has depreciated by nearly 1.6% this week. There are currently 45 basis points of hikes by the BoE priced into the next 12-months. We believe that there is not much more upside beyond this, given that the end of the pound's collapse will weigh on inflation. Moreover, recent data has shown that although inflation is high, the economy rests on a shaky foundation. We continue to expect the pound to fall on a trade-weighted basis as well. Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 The Euro's Tricky Spot - February 2, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Australian Dollar Data out of Australia was mixed: The Westpac Leading Index stayed steady at -0.2%; Wage growth beat expectations, growing at a 0.6% quarterly rate, and 2.1% annual rate; Construction work done slowed down severely, contacting by -19.4%, greatly surpassing the expected 10% contraction. It should also be noted that much of the wage growth was driven by the growth in public sector wages, which grew by 2.4% as opposed to the 1.9% growth experienced by the private sector. RBA members highlighted the risks created by lower than expected wage growth: weaker household consumption as a below-target inflation. The RBA is therefore likely to stay put this year, and the AUD will underperform its G10 peers. Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 From Davos To Sydney, With a Pit Stop In Frankfurt - January 26, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 New Zealand Dollar The kiwi has fallen by roughly 1% this week, in part due to dollar rebound in the greenback. Nevertheless, AUD/NZD has declined by 0.6%, and is now down almost 3% during the year, thanks to dairy prices surging by more than 13% in 2018. Overall, we expect that the NZD will outperform the AUD, given that the consumer sector in China should outperform the industrial sector, as the Chinese authorities are cracking on overcapacity. With this being said, NZD/JPY will probably see downside, as the current volatility in markets will weigh on this cross. Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Canadian Dollar Canadian data was weak: Wholesale sales contracted by 0.5% at a monthly pace; Retail sales contracted by 0.8%, underperforming expectations; Core retail sales, excluding autos, contracted by 1.8%. The CAD weakened against all currencies this week. However, even if it may not increase much against the U.S. dollar, the case for a stronger CAD against other major currencies is still firm as the BoC is likely to hike interest rates more than most central banks year. Additionally, stronger U.S. growth should support the health of the Canadian export sector. Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swiss Franc Recent data in Switzerland has been mixed: The trade balance underperformed expectation on January, coming in at CHF1.324 billion. It also declined from last month's value of CHF3.374 billion. However, industrial production yearly growth increased from last month, coming in at a stunning 19.6% pace. EUR/CHF has been relatively flat this week. Overall we believe that the franc can only rally against the euro on episodes of rising global volatility, given that the SNB will fight against any appreciation of the franc that could hurt the little progress that has been made in achieving their inflation target. Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 The Xs And The Currency Market - November 24, 2017 Norwegian Krone USD/NOK has rallied by roughly 1.3% on the back of a stronger dollar. Overall, we believe that the krone should be the best performer amongst the commodity currencies, as the economic situation has improved substantially, with the Labour Survey improving last month. This will help the Norges Bank to tighten monetary policy more than the market currently expects. Investors who want to take advantage of these developments should short CAD/NOK as an oil-neutral bet. More audacious traders could short AUD/NOK or NZD/NOK as well. Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC! - January 12, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Swedish Krona Swedish inflation dropped by more than expected: in monthly terms, inflation contracted by 0.8%, while in annual terms it grew by only 1.6%, less than the expected 1.8%. However, this monthly contraction was in line with the seasonal pattern historically witnessed in Swedish inflation, which also tells us that inflation is likely to pick up again in the following months. EUR/SEK hit 10, an historically very strong overhead resistance, indicating that markets may be unnerved by the Riksbank's unwillingness or inability to tighten policy. While the OIS curve is pricing in 80 bps of hikes in the next two years, we believe that the Riksbank will hike more than that, as inflation will come back to Sweden with a vengeance. Not only is the economy firing on all fronts, but the currency is also very cheap. The SEK is likely to strengthen this year. Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Report Links: Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 10 Charts To Digest With The Holiday Trimmings - December 22, 2017 Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert 2: More On EM Carry Trades And Global Growth - December 15, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades