Global
Highlights Global Inflation has upside on a cyclical basis, but this narrative is well known and investors have already placed their bets accordingly, buying inflation protection in a wide swath of markets. However, global growth has not yet found its footing, suggesting a mini-deflation scare, at least relative to expectations, is likely this summer. The U.S. dollar will benefit in such a scenario, and NOK/SEK will depreciate. While GBP/USD has downside, the pound should rally versus the euro. Weakness in EUR/CAD has not yet fully played out; the recent bout of strength was only a countertrend move. Feature Inflation is coming back, and this will obviously have major consequences for both asset and currency markets. However, macro investing is not just about forecasting fundamentals correctly; often, just as importantly, it is about understanding how other investors have priced in these expected economic developments. Therein lies the problem. While we understand why inflation could pick up, so too have most investors, and they have positioned themselves accordingly. With global growth currently looking shaky, we believe a better entry point for long-inflation plays will emerge in the coming months. In the meanwhile, a defensive, pro-U.S. dollar posture still makes sense. Investors Are Long Inflation Bets We have long argued that inflation was likely to make a cyclical comeback, a return that would begin in the U.S. before spreading to the rest of the globe. This story is currently playing out. However, in response these developments, investors have placed their bets accordingly, and the story currently seems well baked in. Prices of assets traditionally levered to inflation have already moved to discount a significant pick-up in inflation. The most evident dynamics can be observed in the U.S. inflation breakevens. Both the 10-year breakevens as well as the 5-year/5-year forward breakevens just experienced some of their sharpest two-year changes of the past 20 years, notwithstanding the pricing out of a post-Lehman, depression-like outcome (Chart I-1). Breakevens are not alone. Other assets have displayed similar behavior. In the U.S., investors have aggressively sold their holdings of utilities stocks, which have been greatly outperformed by industrial stocks. Traditionally, investors lift the price of XLI relative to that of XLU when they anticipate global inflation to pick up (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Markets Are Positioning Themselves##br## For Higher Inflation Chart I-2U.S. Sectoral Performance Suggests Investors ##br##Have Already Bet On Higher Inflation... It is not just intra-equity market dynamics that support this assertion. The behavior of the U.S. stock market relative to Treasurys further buttresses the idea that investors have already aggressively discounted an upturn in global consumer prices (Chart I-3). Potentially, the best illustration of investors' preference for inflation protection is currently visible in EM assets. A seemingly paradoxical phenomenon has been puzzling us: How have EM equities managed to avoid the gravitational pull that has caused EM bonds to nearly flirt with the nadir of early 2016? After all, EM equities, EM currencies and EM bonds are normally closely correlated, driven by investors' wagers on the direction of global growth. A simple variable can explain this strange dichotomy: anticipated inflation. As Chart I-4 illustrates, the performance of a volatility adjusted long EM stocks / short EM bonds portfolio tends to anticipate fluctuations in global inflation. The current price action in this basket indicates that investors have made their bets, and they think inflation is going up. Chart I-3...So Does The Stock-To-Bond Ratio Chart I-4Inflation Bets Explain Why EM Stocks And EM Bond Prices Have Diverged Anecdotal evidence suggests that in recent quarters, pension plans have been aggressive buyers of commodities - a move that normally coincides with these long-term investors putting in place some inflation hedges. Moreover, positioning in the futures markets corroborates these stories: speculators are still very long commodities like copper and oil - commodities traditionally perceived as efficient protectors against inflation spikes (Chart I-5). Finally, despite the potentially deflationary risks created by Italy three weeks ago, speculators remain short U.S. Treasury futures, bond investors are underweight duration, and sentiment toward the bond market remains near its lowest levels of the past eight years (Chart I-6). Again, this behavior is consistent with investors being positioned for an inflationary environment. Chart I-5Money Has Flown Into Resources Chart I-6Bond Market Positioning Is Still Very Short Bottom Line: There is a well-defined case to be made that a global economy that was not so long ago defined by the presence of deflationary risks is now morphing into a world where inflation is on the upswing. However, based on inflation breakevens, sectoral relative performance, equities relative to bonds in both DM and EM as well as on the positioning of investors in commodity and bond markets, this changing state has been quickly discounted by investors. The Decks Are Stacked, But Where Does The Economic Risk Lie? The problem facing investors already long inflation protection every which way they can be is that the global economy is slowing, which normally elicits deflationary fears, not inflationary ones. This seems a recipe for disappointment, albeit one that is likely to help the dollar. Our global economic and financial A/D line, which tallies the proportion of key variables around the world moving in a growth-friendly fashion, has fallen precipitously. This normally heralds a slowdown in global economic activity (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Global Growth Is Losing Traction In similar vein, global leading economic indicators have also begun to roll over - a trend that could gain further vigor if the diffusion index of OECD economies experiencing rising versus contracting LEIs is to be believed (Chart I-8). The global liquidity picture has also deteriorated enough to warrant caution. Currency carry strategies - as approximated by the performance of EM carry trades funded in yen - have sagged violently. This tells us that funds are flowing out of EM economies and moving back to countries already replete with excess savings like Japan or Switzerland (Chart I-9). Historically, these kinds of negative developments for global liquidity have preceded industrial slowdowns, as EM now accounts for the lion's share of global IP growth. Finally, China doesn't yet look set to bail out the world's industrial sector. This month's money and credit numbers were weaker than anticipated, and our leading indicator for the Li-Keqiang index - our preferred gauge of industrial activity in the Middle Kingdom - points to further weakness (Chart I-10). This makes it unlikely that China's imports will rise, lifting global growth. Additionally, China has re-stocked in various commodities, suggesting it is front-running its own domestic demand, highlighting the risk that its commodities intake could become even weaker than what domestic growth implies. Chart I-8More Weakness In LEIs Chart I-9Global Liquidity Tightening Chart I-10China Not Yet Set To Bail Out The World With this kind of backdrop, we expect the current slowdown in global growth to run further before ebbing, probably in response to what will be a policy move out some kind from China to put a floor under growth. As a result, the current infatuation with inflation hedges among investors may wane for a bit as slower growth could shock inflation expectations downward, especially in a global context that has been defined by excess capacity since the late 1990s. An environment where global inflation expectations could be downgraded in response to slower growth is likely to be an environment where the dollar performs well, particularly as U.S. growth continues to outperform global growth (Chart I-11). This also confirms our analysis from two weeks ago that showed that when bonds rally the dollar tends to outperform most currencies, with the exception of the yen.1 Moreover, with the Federal Open Market Committee upgrading its path for interest rates by one additional hike in 2018, this reinforces the message from our previous work noting that once the fed funds rate moves in the vicinity of r-star, the dollar performs well, nearly eradicating the losses it incurred when the fed funds rate rises but is well below the neutral rate (Table I-1). This is especially true if vulnerability to higher rates rests outside - not inside - the U.S., as is currently the case.2 Chart I-11The Dollar Likes Lower Global Inflation Table I-1Fed And The Dollar: Where We Stand Matters As Much As The Direction Beyond the dollar, one particular currency cross has historically been a good correlate to investors betting on higher inflation: NOK/SEK. As Chart I-12 illustrates, when investors buy inflation hedges such as going long EM equities relative to EM bonds, this generates a rally in NOK/SEK. These dynamics played in our favor when we were long this cross earlier this year. However, not only are EM equities extended relative to EM bonds, the current economic environment portends a growing risk of investors curtailing these kinds of bets. The implication is bearish for NOK/SEK, and we recommend investors sell this cross at current levels. Chart I-12NOK/SEK Suffers If Inflation Bets Are Unwound Bottom Line: Investors have quickly and aggressively positioned themselves to protect their portfolios against upside inflation risks. However, the global economy is still slowing - a development that has further to run. As a result, this current anticipation of inflation could easily morph into a temporary fear of deflation, at least relative to lofty expectations. This would undo the dynamics previously seen in the market. This is historically an environment in which the dollar performs well, suggesting the greenback rally is not over. Moreover, NOK/SEK could suffer in this environment. The Bad News Is Baked Into The Pound There is no denying that the data flow out of the U.K. has been poor of late. In fact, despite what was already a low bar for expectations, the U.K. economy has managed to generate large negative surprises (Chart I-13). One of the direct drivers of this poor performance has been the complete meltdown in the British credit impulse (Chart I-14). Additionally, the slowdown in British manufacturing can be easily understood in the context of slowing global growth (Chart I-15). Chart I-13Anarchy In The U.K. Chart I-14The Credit Impulse Has Bitten Chart I-15U.K. Exports Are Slowing Because Of Global Growth But, the bad new seems well priced into the pound, especially when compared to the euro. Not only is the GBP trading at a discount to the EUR on our fundamental and Intermediate-term timing models, speculators have accumulated near-record short bets on the pound versus the euro (Chart I-16). This begs the question: Could any positive factor come in and surprise investors, resulting in a fall in EUR/GBP? We think the answer to this question is yes. First, despite the negatives already priced in, incremental bad news have had little traction in dragging the pound lower versus the euro in recent weeks, suggesting that EUR/GBP buying has become exhausted. Second, a falling EUR/USD tends to weigh on EUR/GBP, as the pound tends to act as a low-beta version of the euro (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Investors Are Well Aware Of Britain's Problems Chart I-17EUR/GBP Sags When EUR/USD Weakens Third, the economic outlook for the U.K. is improving. It is true that in the context of slowing global growth, the manufacturing and export sectors are unlikely to be a source of positive surprises for Great Britain. However, the domestic economy could well be. As Chart I-14 highlights, the credit impulse has collapsed, but the good news is that outside of the Great Financial Crisis it has never fallen much below current levels, suggesting that a reversion to the mean may be in offing. Additionally, U.K. inflation is peaking, which is lifting British real wages (Chart I-18). In response, depressed consumer confidence is picking up. This is crucial as consumer spending, which represents roughly 70% of the U.K.'s GDP, has been the key drag on growth since 2016. Any improvement on this front will lift the whole British economy, even if the manufacturing sector remains soft. Fourth, Brexit is progressing. This week's vote in the House of Commons was confusing, but it is important to note than an amendment that gives Westminster the right to force a renegotiation between the U.K. and the EU if no deal is reached in 2019 has been passed. This also decreases the risk of a completely economically catastrophic Brexit down the road, but increases the risk that PM Theresa May could be ousted over the next 12 months. Our positive view on the pound versus the euro (or negative EUR/GBP bias) is not mimicked in cable itself. Ultimately, despite the GBP/USD's beta to EUR/GBP being below one, it is nonetheless greater than zero. As such, it is unlikely that GBP/USD will be able to rally if the DXY rallies and the EUR/USD weakens (Chart I-19). Therefore, while we recommend selling EUR/GBP, we are not willing buyers of GBP/USD. Chart I-18A Crucial Support To Growth Chart I-19Cable Will Not Avoid The Downward Pull Of A Strong Dollar Bottom Line: The British economy has undergone a period of weakness, which is already reflected in the very negative positioning of investors in the GBP versus the EUR. However, the bad data points are losing their capacity to push EUR/GBP higher, and the British economy may begin to heal as consumer confidence is rebounding thanks to improving real wages. The low beta of GBP/USD to the euro also implies that a falling EUR/USD will weigh on EUR/GBP. However, while the pound has upside against the euro, it will continue to suffer against the dollar if EUR/USD experiences further downside. What To Do With EUR/CAD? One weeks ago, we were stopped out of our short EUR/CAD trade. Has EUR/CAD finished its fall, or was the recent rally a pause within a downward channel? We are inclined to think the latter. Heated rhetoric on trade has hit the CAD harder than the EUR, as exports to the U.S. represent a much larger share of Canada's GDP than of the euro area, forcing the pricing of a risk premium in the loonie. However, even after a rather explosive G7 meeting, we do believe that a compromise is still feasible and that NAFTA is not dead on arrival. A deal is still likely because, as Chart I-20 demonstrates, Canadian tariffs on U.S. imports are not only marginally in excess of U.S. tariffs on Canadian imports, they are also in line with international comparisons. This suggests only a small push is needed to arrive to a deal that salvages NAFTA, which ultimately is much more important to Canada than the dairy industry. Chart I-20Canada And The U.S. Can Find A Compromise Despite this reality, we cannot be too complacent, U.S. President Donald Trump is likely to be playing internal politics ahead of the upcoming mid-term elections. U.S. citizens are distrustful of free trade (Chart I-21), a trend especially pronounced among his base. However, a good result for the GOP in November is contingent on the Republican base showing up at the polls. Firing this base up with inflammatory trade rhetoric is a sure way to do so. This means that risks around NAFTA are still not nil. Chart I-21America Belongs To The Anti-Globalization Bloc However, EUR/CAD continues to trade at a substantial premium to fair-value on an intermediate-term horizon (Chart I-22). Moreover, as the last panel of the chart illustrates, speculators remain massively short the CAD against the EUR. This creates a cushion for the CAD versus the EUR if global growth slows. Moreover, technicals are still favorable of shorting EUR/CAD. Not only is EUR/CAD still overbought on a 52-week rate-of-change basis, it seems to be in the process of forming a five-wave downward pattern, with the fourth one - a countertrend wave - potentially ending (Chart I-23). Chart I-22EUR/CAD Is Still Vulnerable Chart I-23Wave Pattern Not Completed Finally, EUR/CAD tends to perform poorly when the USD strengthens, which fits with our current thematic for the remainder of 2018. Bottom Line: The headline risk surrounding NAFTA has weighed on the loonie against the euro, stopping us out of our short EUR/CAD trade with a small profit. However, the valuation, positioning and technical dynamics suggest the timing is ripe to short this cross once again. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Rome Is Burning: Is It The End?", dated June 1, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "This Time Is NOT Different", dated May 25, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 U.S. data was stellar: NFIB Business Optimism Index climbed to 107.8, outperforming expectations; the price changes and good times to expand components are also very strong; Headline and core PPI both outperformed expectations, auguring well for future consumer inflation; Headline and core retail sales grew by 0.8% and 0.9% in monthly terms, beating expectations; Both initial and continuing jobless claims also came out below expectations, highlighting that the labor market is still tightening, and wage growth could pick up further. The Fed raised interest rates this week to 2%, and added one additional rate hike to its guidance for 2018. FOMC members once again highlighted the "symmetric" target, suggesting that the Fed expects the economy to overheat slightly. An outperforming U.S. economy relative to the rest of the world is likely to propel the greenback this year. Report Links: This Time Is NOT Different - May 25, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Economic data was largely disappointing: Italian industrial output contracted by 1.2% on a monthly basis, and grew only by 1.9% on a yearly basis; The German ZEW Survey declined substantially across all metrics; European industrial production increased by 1.7% annually, less than the expected 2.8% increase; However, Spanish headline inflation spiked up from 1.1% to 2.1%. Yesterday, ECB President Mario Draghi announced the ECB's plan to taper asset purchases to EUR 15 bn a month in September, and phase them out completely by year-end. Moreover, Draghi highlighted that the ECB was not anticipating to implement its first hike until after the summer of 2019. Furthermore, the ECB President highlighted the current slowdown in global growth, as well as the rising protectionist risk from the U.S. potentially negatively impacting the European economy and the ECB's decisions going forward, suggesting that the plans are not set in stone. 2018 is likely to remain a volatile year for the euro. Report Links: Rome Is Burning: Is It The End? - June 1, 2018 This Time Is NOT Different - May 25, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Japanese data has been strong this week: Machine orders increased on a 9.6% annual basis, and a 10.1% monthly basis, in April, outperforming expectations by a large margin; The Domestic Corporate Goods Price Index also increased by 2.7% annually, higher than the expected 2.2% increase. As political and economic risks in Europe and South America having subsided for now, the yen has lost some of its glitter. However, with ongoing uncertainty on trade and populism across the globe, we maintain our tactically bullish stance on the yen, especially against commodity currencies and the euro. However, beyond the short-term horizon, the BoJ will remain determined to cap any excess appreciation in the yen, as a strong JPY tightens Japanese financial conditions, weighing on the BoJ's ability to hit its inflation target. This will ultimately limit the yen's upside on a cyclical basis. Report Links: Rome Is Burning: Is It The End? - June 1, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Data from the U.K. was somewhat disappointing: Manufacturing and industrial production both increased less than expected, at 1.4% and 1.8%, respectively; The goods trade deficit widened to GBP 14.03bn from GBP 12bn, and the overall trade deficit widened to GBP 5.28bn from GBP 3.22bn; Average earnings grew by 2.8%, less than the expected 2.9%; However, headline inflation came in at 2.4%, less than the expected 2.5%, while retail price inflation also underperformed expectations. This means that the uptrend in real wages continues. Given the limited movement in the pound, it seems that a lot of the bad news was already priced in by last month's depreciation. However, Theresa May's ongoing blunders in parliament represent a continued source of risk for the pound. While the GBP has downside against the EUR, it is unlikely to see much upside against the greenback. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Do Not Get Flat-Footed By Politics - March 30, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was weak: NAB Business Confidence and Conditions surveys both declined, also underperforming expectations; Australian employment grew by 12,000, less than expected. Moreover, full-time employment contracted. While the unemployment rate dropped as a result, this was largely due to a fall in the participation rate. RBA's Governor Lowe, in a speech on Wednesday, announced that any increase in interest rates "still looks some time away" as the slack in the labor market does not seem to be diminishing. Annual wage growth has been constant at 2.1% for the past three quarters, and did not pick up despite an improvement in full-time employment earlier this year. We remain bearish on the AUD. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The NZD is likely to face significant downside against the greenback along with the other commodity currencies as global growth slows down. However, due to its weaker linkages to Chinese industrial demand, the kiwi is likely to see less downside than the AUD. Nevertheless, it is likely to weaken against the CAD and the NOK as the NZD is expensive against these oil currencies, and oil's is likely to continue to outperform other commodities will support this view. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 USD/CAD has been on an uptrend given the greenback generally strong performance since February year, a force magnified by the volatile rhetoric surrounding NAFTA negotiations. However, the Canadian economy has been accelerating this year, thanks to robust growth in the U.S., to a strong Quebecer economy, and to a pickup in Alberta. In addition, the Canadian labor market is tightening further and wage growth is above 3%. Furthermore, risks surrounding NAFTA seem already reflected in the CAD's behavior and valuation. There is more clarity on the CAD versus its crosses than on the CAD versus the USD. Outperforming U.S. and Canadian growth relative to the rest of the world mean that the CAD should outperform most other G10 currencies. Report Links: Rome Is Burning: Is It The End? - June 1, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Recent data out of Switzerland was decent: Industrial production increased by 9% in annual terms, albeit less than the previous 19.6% growth; Producer and import prices increased by 3.2% year on year, in line with expectations, however the monthly increase underperformed markets anticipations. With global trade tensions rising, and Germany having entered President Trump's line of sight, the CHF could experience additional upside against the euro in the coming months. However, the SNB is unlikely to deviate from its ultra-accommodative stance, which means that any downside in EUR/CHF will proved to be short lived. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 The SNB Doesn't Want Switzerland To Become Japan - March 23, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Both headline and core inflation underperformed, coming in at 2.3% and 1.2%, respectively. However, the Regional Network Survey hinted at a pickup in capacity utilization as expectations for industrial output remained robust, as well as at an additional strength in employment. This led to a forecast of a resurgence in inflationary pressures. We expect the NOK to outperform the EUR. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish inflation rose from 1.7% to 1.9%, coming in line with expectations. Additionally, Prospera 1-year inflation expectations survey rose to 1.9% from 1.8% in the March survey. This is likely to provide the Riksbank with reasons to turn gradually more hawkish, which should support the very cheap krona. Report Links: Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Who Hikes Again? - February 9, 2018 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights The chaotic conclusion to last weekend's G7 summit in Charlevoix is a reminder that the specter of trade wars will not fade quietly into the night. A trade war would hurt the U.S., but would punish the rest of the world even more. The U.S. dollar typically strengthens when global trade slows. Despite President Trump's antics, the dollar is at little risk of losing its status as the world's premier reserve currency. Fiscal stimulus should keep U.S. growth above trend well into next year, allowing the Fed to maintain its once-per-quarter pace of rate hikes. We are currently overweight global equities, but we expect to shift to neutral before the end of the year. Feature Hit First, Ask Questions Later Donald's Trump's negotiating style - hit as hard as you can and then compromise - has worked well in dealing with tin-pot dictators, at least judging by the apparent outcome of this week's Singapore summit with Kim Jong-Un. It has also worked well throughout Trump's career as a real estate developer. However, as the breakdown of last weekend's G7 summit demonstrates, it is not clear if it is a winning strategy in the realm of international trade. Down-on-their-luck creditors may be willing to settle for twenty cents on the dollar when they had been promised one hundred, but governments have their citizens to answer to, and national pride often trumps (ahem) narrow financial interests in such matters. How Not To Fight A Trade War The U.S. is a fairly closed economy and hence a trade war probably would not have severe effects on growth. However, the way Trump is waging his war ensures that whatever impact it has on the domestic economy will be negative. This is not only because Trump's tariffs are certain to invite retaliation; it is also because Trump is targeting intermediate goods - goods that are used as inputs into production of final goods - for tariffs. Chart 1Rising Productivity In The Steel Sector ##br##Caused Employment To Decline Consider the case of steel. Today, the U.S. steel industry employs just 145,000 workers, down from 203,000 workers in 2000. In contrast, there are about two million workers employed in steel-consuming sectors of the economy.1 A reasonable rule-of-thumb from the international trade literature is that a one-percent increase in foreign prices causes domestic prices to rise by about half a percent. This is mainly because domestic producers end up capturing some of the gains from tariffs through higher profit margins. A 25% increase in steel tariffs would thus raise steel prices by around 12.5%. Higher steel prices will lead to higher prices for many American goods such as automobiles, some of which are exported abroad. It is actually quite conceivable that steel tariffs would reduce exports more than they would depress imports, leading to a wider trade deficit. Ironically, foreign competition probably explains only a small fraction of the decline in U.S. steel employment. The U.S. produces roughly as much steel now as it did in 2000 (Chart 1). What has changed is that output-per-worker in the steel industry has increased by a total of 43% since then. Blame technological progress, not trade. Trade Wars, The Fed, And The Dollar Chart 2The Dollar Tends To Strengthen ##br##When Global Trade Deteriorates Even if higher tariffs did produce a one-off increase in consumer and producer prices, slower GDP growth would likely prompt the Fed to moderate the pace of rate hikes. If the stock market declined in sympathy with slower growth and rising protectionist sentiment, the resulting tightening in financial conditions would further justify a go-slow approach to monetary normalization. All things equal, a more dovish-than-expected Fed would likely translate into a weaker dollar. All things are not equal, however. A trade war would probably hurt the rest of the world more than the U.S. This is partly because the rest of the world is more open to trade, but it is also because the rest of the world runs a trade surplus with the U.S., which makes it more vulnerable to a broad-based decline in trade volumes. Chart 2 shows that the dollar tends to strengthen when global trade is weakening. Reserve Currency Status In Jeopardy? An often-heard counterargument to the "protectionism is good for the dollar" view is that at some point, rising trade tensions could undermine the dollar's standing as the world's premier reserve currency. The U.S. has run a trade deficit almost continuously for 40 years, accumulating 40% of GDP in net liabilities to the rest of the world in the process (Chart 3). If foreign buyers decide to scale back their purchases of U.S. assets, the dollar could swoon. Chart 3U.S. External Deficit: 40 Years And Counting Trump's statement at the conclusion of the G7 summit that "We're like a piggy bank that everybody's robbing" seems to imply that he thinks that foreigners are living beyond their means by draining the U.S. of its wealth. The opposite is actually the case: The U.S. has been able to spend more than it earns for decades precisely because foreigners have been willing to deposit ever more money into the U.S. piggy bank. Fortunately for the greenback, America's status as the world's piggy bank of choice is unlikely to change any time soon. The euro area remains hopelessly divided. The Italian bond market - the biggest in Europe - has once again become the object of investor angst. Japan is drowning in a sea of government debt, with debt monetization probably the only viable solution. China would like to transform the renminbi into a global reserve currency, but opacity in government decision-making, and a still largely closed capital account, will limit any progress towards that goal for some time to come. China and other countries could try to "punish" the U.S. government by buying fewer Treasury bonds, but where would that get them? The average maturity of U.S. government debt is less than six years. The Fed, not China, largely sets rates at that portion of the yield curve. Granted, a decline in Treasury purchases would reduce the demand for dollars. However, that would just put upward pressure on the value of the renminbi. China does not want a stronger currency. For all the talk about how America's rivals are keen to reduce their dollar holdings, their share of global central bank reserves has actually climbed over the past two decades, largely because they have been gobbling up dollars to keep their own currencies from appreciating (Chart 4). Today, nearly two-thirds of global currency reserves are denominated in dollars, a higher proportion than when the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 (Chart 5). Chart 4Geopolitics Is Not Driving Demand For Treasurys Chart 5The Dollar Remains The Preferred Reserve Currency A Not So Exorbitant Privilege Chart 6The U.S. Term Premium Is ##br##Higher Than Elsewhere In any case, it's not clear how much the U.S. benefits from having a reserve currency. There is little evidence that U.S. long-term bond yields are lower than they would otherwise be because of foreign reserve accumulation. Chart 6 shows that the term premium - the difference between the yield on a long-term bond and the market's expectation of the average level of short-term rates over the life of the bond - is higher in the U.S. than in the rest of the world. If foreign central bank purchases were pushing down U.S. bond yields, one would expect to see the reverse pattern. The only tangible benefit the United States gets from having a reserve currency is that the U.S. Treasury can issue currency to foreigners who hold it as a store of value rather than spending it. This amounts to an interest-free loan to the U.S. government. This so-called "seigniorage revenue" is not trivial: Last year, foreigners increased their holdings of U.S. currency by $60 billion.2 However, this is still less than one-third of one percent of U.S. GDP. What Really Explains Why The U.S. Has A Current Account Deficit? It is often argued that the dollar's reserve currency status has allowed the U.S. to run large current account deficits. However, Australia has run even bigger current account deficits than the U.S., and it does not have a reserve currency. What matters in the end is whether people trust you to pay back your debts, not whether you have a reserve currency. The rate of return that a country offers investors is also important. As we explained in our weekly report on April 6th, an often-overlooked reason for why the U.S. and Australia run current account deficits is that both countries enjoy faster trend growth than most of their peers.3 Faster growth tends to push up the neutral real rate of interest, otherwise known as r-star. A country with a relatively low neutral rate needs to have an "undervalued" currency that is expected to appreciate over time in order to compensate investors for the subpar yield that its bonds provide. As sketched out in Chart 7, this results in current account surpluses for countries with low neutral rates, and current account deficits for countries with high neutral rates. Chart 7Interest Rates And Current Account Balances Commentators who claim that the euro is cheap are barking up the wrong tree. The euro needs to be cheap to entice investors into holding low-yielding German bunds and other safe-haven euro area bond markets. Indeed, one could argue that the euro is not cheap enough. Thirty-year U.S. Treasurys currently yield 3.07% while 30-year German bunds yield 1.16%, a difference of 191 basis points. Even if one allows for the fact that investors expect euro area inflation to be lower than in the U.S. over the next 30 years, EUR/USD would need to trade at a measly 84 cents today in order to compensate German bund holders for the inferior yield they will receive.4 The euro got a good clobbering yesterday following the release of the ECB's post-meeting statement, which established a timeline for ending asset purchases by the end of this year but promised no rate hikes for at least another 12 months. We continue to expect EUR/USD to hit 1.15, with a high likelihood that it goes even lower. Lessons From The Nixon Shock We are skeptical of the argument that threatening to raise tariffs is an effective tool for talking down one's currency. It is true that the Nixon Administration imposed an across-the-board 10% tariff in August 1971, which succeeded in forcing America's trading partners to revalue their currencies within the quasi-fixed exchange-rate Bretton Woods system that prevailed at that time. Such an arrangement would be difficult to orchestrate today. For one thing, the U.S. does not have the geopolitical sway that it once did. Moreover, when exchange rates are pegged, one can often revalue a currency to the upside while cutting interest rates (if investors expect a series of revaluations, they would be willing to hold government bonds even if they yielded less than those abroad). In today's world of flexible exchange rates, a country would need to be willing to tighten monetary policy to drive up its currency. Thus, it would get hit on two fronts: From a stronger currency and from higher interest rates. This additional cost to the economy lowers the odds that any country would voluntarily undertake such measures in the hope (probably futile anyway) of placating Trump. In any case, most of the dollar's weakness in the 1970s occurred after the December 1971 Smithsonian Agreement reversed Nixon's tariff hike. What followed was a period of trade liberalization on the back of successive GATT negotiation rounds. U.S. tariffs actually fell more in the 1970s than in the prior two decades (Chart 8). The fact that the dollar weakened during that period had more to do with the Fed, which permitted inflation to get out of hand by allowing real rates to remain in chronically negative territory. The dollar also suffered from the surge in oil prices, which produced a 35% deterioration in the U.S. terms of trade over the course of the decade (Chart 9). Chart 8Two Centuries Of U.S. Tarriffs Chart 9Dollar Weakness In the 1970s: Blame Deteriorating Terms Of Trade And A Dovish Fed It is possible that the Fed will repeat the mistakes of the 1970s, but this is more of a risk for the 2020s than a near-term concern. U.S. real yields have actually risen substantially relative to those abroad since last September (Chart 10). Chart 10The Dollar Is Once Again Responding ##br##To Real Rate Differentials The outcome of this week's FOMC meeting was on the hawkish side. The median number of dots in the newly released Summary of Economic Projections now point to four rate hikes this year, up from three hikes in the March projections. In addition, the Fed increased estimates for both growth and core inflation for this year. The decision to hold press conferences following every FOMC meeting will also give the Fed greater scope to expedite the pace of rate hikes. Investment Conclusions After panicking over every Trump tweet promising more protectionism earlier this year, markets have taken the recent news of escalating trade tensions in stride. Investors presumably think that Trump will water down his rhetoric, as he has periodically done over the past few months. Such a benign outcome is entirely possible. Trump left a fig leaf at the G7 summit in the form of a challenge to other members to eliminate their tariffs in exchange for the U.S. doing the same. Reaching such a deal would not be easy, but incremental progress towards this goal could be achieved. The overall level of tariff barriers within developed countries is already quite low. The U.S. actually stands at the top end of the spectrum -- average U.S. tariffs of 1.6% are double that of Canada, for example -- so the rest of the G7 would be wise to call Trump's bluff and agree to talks to further scale back trade barriers (Chart 11). This could give risk assets some breathing space for the next year or so. Yet, such a rosy outcome is far from guaranteed. Protectionism is popular among American voters, especially among Trump's base (Chart 12). Trump's obsession with the level of the stock market was a constraint on his protectionist rhetoric, but now that investors are content to look the other way, that constraint has loosened. Chart 11Tariffs: Who Is Robbing The U.S.? Chart 12Free Trade Is Not In Vogue In The U.S., And Is ##br##Especially Disliked Among Trump Supporters The fact that Trump's macroeconomic policies are completely at odds with his trade agenda does not help matters. Fiscal stimulus will boost aggregate demand, which will suck in more imports. An overheated economy will prompt the Fed to raise rates more aggressively than it otherwise would, leading to a stronger dollar. All this will result in a wider trade deficit. What will Trump tell voters two years from now when he is campaigning in Michigan and Ohio about why the trade deficit has widened rather than narrowed under his watch? Will he blame himself or America's trading partners? No trophy for getting that answer right. The effect of a trade war on the stock market would be grave. Multinational firms have large footprints abroad, the result of decades of investment in global supply chains. Equities represent a claim on the existing capital stock, not the capital stock that might emerge after a trade war has been fought. A trade war would result in a lot of stranded capital, forcing investors to mark down the value of the companies in their portfolios. In light of these risks, we expect to downgrade our recommendation on global equities from overweight to neutral before the end of the year. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Lydia Cox and Kadee Russ, "Will Steel Tariffs put U.S. Jobs at Risk?," EconoFact, February 26, 2018. Steel-consuming industries are defined as those that devote more than 5% of their total costs to steel. 2 Considering that 80% of U.S. currency in circulation consists of $100 bills, it is safe to say that much of this overseas stash of cash belongs to those who acquired it through ill-gotten means. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "U.S.-China Trade Spat: Is R-Star To Blame?," dated April 6, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 For this calculation, we assume that the fair value for EUR/USD is 1.32, which is close to the IMF's Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) estimate. The annual inflation differential of 0.4% is based on 30-year CPI swaps. This implies that the fair value for EUR/USD will rise to 1.49 after 30 years. If one assumes that the euro reaches that level by then, the common currency would need to trade at 1.49/(1.0191)^30=0.84 today. Tactical Global Asset Allocation Recommendations Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights In line with our House view, we expect the broad USD trade-weighted index (TWIB) to continue to appreciate over the next six to 12 months, as U.S. growth outpaces that of other DMs, and the Fed's pace of rate hikes outpaces that of other systemically important central banks. Ordinarily, this would be bad news for the overall commodities complex. However, most commodity prices disconnected from the U.S. dollar in 2015 - 16. This disconnect produced a not-often-seen positive correlation between commodities and the USD, which remained in place into 2017. Fundamentals are keeping oil and base metals correlations weaker vs. the USD. Precious metals and ags are most vulnerable to a stronger USD. Highlights Energy: Overweight. Cracks in Nigeria's Bonny pipeline system will further delay loadings already curtailed by a force majeure declaration, according to local sources. Elsewhere, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) apparently boosted production ahead of the regularly scheduled OPEC meeting in Vienna on June 22, as mounting losses in Venezuela and U.S. sanctions against Iran loom.1 KSA and Russia are pushing for higher production from OPEC 2.0 ahead of the Vienna meeting. Base Metals: Neutral. Although union negotiators took a conciliatory tone in discussions, contract terms between it and BHP Billiton in Chile's Escondida mine still have not been resolved. Among other things, the union proposed a salary increase of 5% and a $34,000 one-off bonus for workers.2 Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold prices held close to $1,300/oz going into this week FOMC meeting. Ags/Softs: Underweight: The USDA revised down its ending-stocks estimates for corn and soybeans for the 2017/18 and the 2018/19 crop years in its latest WASDE, which was released earlier this week. Feature Chart of the WeekUSD TWIB Vs. Chief Commodity Indices Broadly speaking, commodity prices are negatively correlated with the USD TWIB. The principal indices we follow - the CRB, Bloomberg and S&P GSCI index - all are cointegrated with the USD, i.e., they share a long-term trend, wherein commodity prices rise as the USD falls, and vice versa (Chart of the Week). Ordinarily, we would expect the near-term appreciation of the U.S. dollar to weigh on broad commodity indices' performance. These are not ordinary times. Surprisingly, what holds for these aggregate indices does not hold for individual commodity groups within the indices. We've ranked each commodity by industry group, and found that over the long term - and this is critical - oil and base metals are most sensitive to changes in the USD TWIB, while precious metals and ags are less sensitive. A 1% change in the U.S. dollar index leads to a change in the energy sub-index of the CRB of almost 5%, while a 1% change in the TWIB leads to a change of just under 4% for the base metals sub-index of the CRB. For the precious metals sub-index of the CRB, we would expect to see prices change by just under 3% for every 1% change in the dollar index, while for the ags sub-index of the CRB, broadly speaking, we could expect a change of just under 2.5%.3 USD's Complicated Relationship With Commodities To understand what's driving the broad indices and their component sub-indexes, we ran Granger-causality tests to get a better picture of what's driving what.4 On average, the U.S. dollar drives the broad indices, from a Granger-causality perspective. However, it does not drive the individual commodity sub-indexes in the same manner (Table 1). Table 1USD Vs. Commodities: What's Driving What? We found an interesting relationship between copper and oil: Copper's relationship with oil is stronger than its relationship with the USD - likely because both commodities respond to the same demand factors (e.g., global industrial growth), and that mining and refining copper are energy-intensive processes. We still see a long-term underlying common relationship with the U.S. dollar, but copper is more strongly tied to oil. Bottom Line: We ranked the four main commodity groups with respect to their historical sensitivity to the USD using two distinct metrics. Over the long haul, we found the order from most to least sensitive is (1) Energy, (2) Base Metals, (3) Precious Metals, (4) Ags. USD And Commodities Out Of Whack While most commodity indices exhibit strong and stable negative correlations with the U.S. dollar, many of these relationships were pushed out of their long-term equilibria in 2016, and, importantly, have remained out of whack for an unusually long period (Chart 2).5 In fact, we found most individual commodities and commodity groups haven't converged back to their long-term equilibrium correlation levels with the USD TWIB, and their respective divergences are once again moving higher (Chart 3). Chart 2CRB Sub-Indices Out Of Whack With USD Chart 3Short-Term Correlations Remain In Disequilibrium As we've shown in previous research, commodity prices can remain in disequilibrium with the dollar when important fundamental (supply - demand) shocks dominate price formation.6 Table 2 shows which commodity groups are most out-of-equilibrium since 2016 relative to their long-term historical correlation. Energy, especially oil, and base metals groups are at the top of this list. Despite the fact that both of these groups are the most sensitive to the USD, based on our long-term analysis discussed above, the fact that they remain in disequilibria with the USD suggests the increase in the U.S. dollar we expect over the next 6 months will have a limited impact on these commodities. This leaves ags and, notably, precious metals, most vulnerable to the USD appreciation foreseen in our House view. Table 3 shows how the sensitivities of the different commodity groups vs. the USD TWIB have changed from 2015 to now versus the 2000 to 2015 period preceding it.7 Moreover, we see that in the shorter period between 2015 and now, the base metals and oil sensitivities (in red) are not significant. Economically, this means prices have disconnected from the USD during this period, owing to the overwhelming influence of supply-demand fundamentals on the price-formation process. Table 2Rank Of Rolling Correlation Divergences##BR##In 6-Month Vs. 5-Year Rolling Correlations Table 3Fundamentals Overwhelm##BR##USD's Influence Since 2015 The most plausible explanation for this is base metals and oil markets experienced fundamental shocks over the period - especially since 2016, e.g. OPEC launching a market-share war in 2014 and surging production, followed by the OPEC 2.0 production cuts still in force in the market. In theory, and absent important fundamental (supply-demand) shocks in base metals and energy markets (e.g., a strike at major copper mines or an unexpected outcome at the OPEC 2.0 meeting next week), these correlations should converge back to the long-term equilibrium. However, the speed of convergence is unknown. As long as we observe a disequilibrium in the short-term correlations, we can assume that the disequilibrium will be maintained over the short term. The short-term correlation movements show most of the commodity groups were converging toward equilibrium in recent months, but have since reversed course, particularly oil (Chart 4 and Table 2). Chart 4Short- Vs. Long-Term Correlations Divergence We believe the historic correlation levels between base metals and oil prices and the USD TWIB gradually will be restored. However, a number of factors will have to be monitored in order to determine the timing and the level around which the correlations will stabilize - i.e., close to the 2008 - 2013 levels or to those of the 2000 - 2007 period (Chart 5). We found that the EM/DM business cycle - i.e., the relative performance of EM to DM economies - as well as the shape of the oil forward curve generally can act as mediating factors in restoring the correlations of the USD TWIB and commodity prices.8 The stronger EM economies are relative to DM economies, or the more in contango the oil forward curve is, the more negative the correlations between commodities, especially oil and base metals, and the USD TWIB. Obviously, should the opposite occur, we would expect the weaker correlations to persist, although this might not constitute a complete disequilibrium. The mediating factors we mentioned can diminish or enhance the USD - Commodity correlations, but that does not mean they completely break them down. Chart 5Oil Vs. USD TWIB Correlation Remains Out Of Whack Bottom Line: Commodity prices disconnected from the U.S. dollar in 2015 - 16, which led to a rare environment in which the correlations between the USD TWIB and commodities became positive. Surprisingly, this disconnect remained in place for an extended period, which led us to revise our USD-elasticity ranking of commodity groups. As long as the fundamental shocks in the energy and base metals groups continue to dominate price formation in these markets, precious metals and ags will remain the most vulnerable groups to U.S. dollar appreciation. Hugo Bélanger, Senior Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "More delays to Nigerian Bonny Light as crude pipeline closes," published by Naija247 in Nigeria on June 11, 2018, and "Saudis Start to Ramp Up Oil Output, Ahead of OPEC Meeting," published by The Wall Street Journal, June 8, 2018. See also BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0 Guiding to Higher Output; Volatility Set To Rise ... Again," published on March 31, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. OPEC 2.0 is the name we coined for the oil-producer coalition led by The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia. 2 Please see "Escondida Union to Copper Investors: Bet on Quick Wage Deal," published by bloomberg.com, June 7, 2018, and "BHP responds to contract proposal from union at Chile's Escondida mine," published by uk.reuters.com on 11 June 2018. 3 These elasticities are the average coefficients for each commodity group we calculated using two different cointegrating regressions - Dynamic Ordinary Least Square and Panel - covering Jan 2000 to now. 4 Granger-causality measures the extent to which changes in one variable cause (or allow one to predict) changes in another variable. This is based on the work of the 2003 Nobel laureate, Clive Granger, who began publishing on this in 1969. Please see "Investigating Causal Relations by Econometric Models and Cross-spectral Methods," Econometrica, Vol. 37, No. 3 (Aug., 1969), pp. 424-438. 5 We make sure the correlations we estimate use cointegrated random variables, which means the empirical results we get provide consistent estimates of actual population correlations. Please see Johansen, Soren (2007), "Correlation, regression, and cointegration of nonstationary economic time series," published by the Center for Research in Econometric Analysis of Time Series at the Aarhus School of Business, University of Aarhus. 6 Please see BCA Research Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "OPEC 2.0 Vs. The Fed," dated February 08, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 7 These sensitivities are coefficients in cointegrating regressions, which, given the construction of the regressions, are elasticities. 8 Using threshold regressions, we found the USD impact on BM and energy prices is, on average, weaker when DM stock prices outperform that of EM and when the oil forward curve is backwardated. These two variables act as mediators to the USD-Commodity relationship, and can be used to project the strength of the relationship. 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
Recommended Allocation A Series Of Unfortunate Events Markets have taken a series of hits in recent months - sharp drops in emerging market currencies, a political crisis in Italy, and the ongoing trade war between the U.S. and China - not to mention a slowdown in cyclical growth. But risk assets have been remarkably resilient: the U.S. stock market is in the middle of its year-to-date range, and U.S. small cap stocks (more attuned to domestic conditions) are at record highs (Chart 1). The uncertainty is set to continue for a while. But, with global growth likely to settle at an above-trend pace, fiscal and monetary policy still accommodative, and earnings continuing to grow strongly, the recent resilience says to us that risk assets are likely to grind higher and to outperform bonds over the next 12 months. A major underlying cause of the recent volatility has been the growing disparity between growth in the U.S. and in the rest of the world (Chart 2). This is partly due to the strength of the euro and yen last year, which is now dampening activity in these regions, but the slowdown in Chinese industrial growth and a higher oil price may also be having a disproportionate effect on growth outside the U.S. This growth disparity has widened interest rate differentials, which have again become the major driver of currencies, pushing up the U.S. dollar (Chart 3). Chart 1Small Cap Stocks At A Record High Chart 2Disparity Between The U.S. And The Rest... Chart 3...Means Dollar Has Further To Rise In combination with rising U.S. interest rates (the 10-year Treasury yield rose above 3% last month, before correcting a little), dollar appreciation is a threat for emerging markets. EM assets have long shown a consistently strong inverse correlation with the dollar (Chart 4). We expect the EM sell-off to continue. Further Fed hikes and rising inflation expectations in the U.S. (relative to the euro area and Japan) will increase interest-rate differentials and push the dollar up further: we forecast 1.12 for euro/dollar. Investors are still far from capitulating on EM assets after several years of large purchases (Chart 5). Many EM central banks are being forced to raise rates to defend their currencies, which will dent growth. Some may even be forced into reintroducing capital controls. Several emerging economies besides Argentina and Turkey remain vulnerable, having worryingly high amounts of foreign currency debt (Chart 6). Chart 4Strong Dollar Is Bad For Em Assets Chart 5Em Is Still A Consensus Favorite Chart 6Worrying Levels Of FX Debt Chart 7Not Surprising That Italians Are Fed Up Geopolitics is likely to remain a drag on markets for a while, too. Italy remains the biggest threat. The discontent of the Italian population is unsurprising given the country's stagnation since it joined the euro (Chart 7). The probable coalition government of the Lega and Five Star Movement would introduce aggressive fiscal stimulus, putting it in confrontation with the EU's budgetary rules. But BCA's geopolitical strategists see little risk of Italy exiting the euro in the next two years (though 10 years might be a different story).1 Political gyrations may continue for some months, particularly if the new government persists with its plan to blow the fiscal deficit out to 7% of GDP, but the sell-off in short-term Italian bonds looks to be overdone. Developments in trade tariffs, Iran and North Korea could also weigh on markets in coming months. But ultimately economic fundamentals almost always outweigh geopolitical risk. Global growth is slowing, but to an above-trend pace. Fiscal policy is particularly stimulative this year, with 17 of the 33 OECD countries undertaking large fiscal easing, and a further 11 some easing. The overall cyclically-adjusted primary budget balance in OECD countries is forecast to ease by 0.5% of GDP this year and 0.4% next (Chart 8). Monetary policy remains accommodative almost everywhere. The FOMC, in its May statement, by adding the word "symmetric" to describe its 2% inflation objective, was clearly emphasizing that it sees no need to accelerate the pace of rate hikes, despite the recent pickup in core PCE inflation. We expect the Fed to continue to raise rates once a quarter, meaning that monetary policy will not become restrictive until around Q1 next year. With inflation expectations not yet fully normalized (Chart 9), the Fed could still exercise its "put option" by holding for a quarter or two if global risk were to rise significantly. Italy's problems also make it more likely that the ECB will stay easier for longer, and the probability is rising of its deciding to extend asset purchases into next year. Chart 8Fiscal Stimulus (Almost) Everywhere Chart 9Inflation Expectations Have Further To Rise With the consensus already forecasting global GDP to grow 3.4% this year, and U.S. earnings by 22%, there is no obvious catalyst for risk assets to rebound sharply (Chart 10). However, we find it inconceivable that equity markets will not be higher in 12 months' time - and will not have outperformed bonds over that time - if the macro environment plays out as we expect. We, therefore, continue to recommend an overweight on equities and underweight on fixed income, but might start to turn more defensive around the end of the year if the signs are in place that the recession we expect in 2020 is still on the cards. Equities: For the reasons described above, we remain cautious on EM equities. Within EM, our preference would be for markets such as China, Korea and India, which are likely to be less affected by investors' concerns about current account deficits and foreign-currency denominated debt. In DM, our preference remains for late-cyclical sectors, especially energy, financials and industrials. We mainly view regional and country selection as a derivative of the sector call: this supports our preference for euro zone and Japanese stocks over those in the U.S. and U.K. Fixed Income: A combination of quarterly Fed rate hikes, a further normalization of inflation expectations, and moderate rises in the real rate and term premium are likely to push the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield up to 3.5% by year-end (Chart 11). We, therefore, remain underweight duration and prefer TIPs to nominal bonds. We keep our overweights on spread product within the fixed-income bucket, since it should continue to outperform for another couple of quarters. U.S. high-yield spreads are likely to remain steady, giving an attractive carry even after accounting for defaults; investment grade spreads might start to recover, given that the sell-off of quality bonds by companies repatriating short-term investments held offshore ($35 Bn from the 20 largest U.S. companies in Q1) is now mostly over (Chart 12). Chart 10Can Growth Beat These Expectations? Chart 11Treasury Yield To Rise To 3.5% Chart 12Selective Spread Product Remains Attractive Currencies: Interest-rate differentials, as described above, are likely to push the dollar up further, especially against the euro. This should continue until the effect of a strong dollar/weak euro starts to rebalance growth surprises back to the euro area, perhaps around the end of the year. We see less chance of dollar appreciation against the yen (which is still undervalued against its PPP value of 98, and may benefit from its safe-haven status) and against the Canadian dollar (given the Bank of Canada's hawkish stance). Commodities: Industrial commodities are likely to continue to struggle against headwinds from the appreciating dollar, and the continuing moderate slowdown in China (Chart 13). The oil price has become a tougher call recently, with talk that OPEC may agree later this month to bring back as much as 1 million barrels/day in production, but Venezuelan and Iranian supply likely to exit the market. BCA's energy strategists now forecast WTI and Brent to average $70 and $78 in 2H18, and $67/$72 in 2019, but expect higher volatility in the price over coming months (Chart 14).2 Chart 13Continuing Signs Of China Slowdown Chart 14Forecasting Oil Is Getting Harder Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Client Note, "Italy, Spain, Trade Wars... Oh My!," dated 30 May 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0 Guiding To Higher Output: Volatility Set To Rise ... Again," dated 31 May 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights The global trade slowdown will intensify, even if U.S. domestic demand remains robust. The large emerging Asian bourses will recouple to the downside with their EM peers. Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. In Chile, receive 3-year swap rates. Continue to overweight stocks relative to the EM benchmark. Short the Colombian peso versus the Russia ruble. Stay neutral on Colombian equities and local bonds but overweight sovereign credit within their respective EM universes. Feature Performance of large equity markets in north Asia - Korean, Taiwanese and Chinese investable stocks -- has been relatively resilient compared with other EM bourses. Specifically, the EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan equity index has already dropped 16% in U.S. dollar terms, while the market cap-weighted index of investable Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks is down only 8% from its peak in late January.1 These three markets account for 60% of the MSCI EM stock index. A pertinent question is whether these North Asian markets will de-couple from or re-couple with the rest of EM. Our bias is that they will re-couple to the downside. Global equity portfolios should continue to underweight Asian stocks versus the DM bourses in general, and the S&P 500 in particular. That said, dedicated EM equity portfolios should overweight Korea and Taiwan and maintain a neutral stance on China and Hong Kong relative to the EM and Asian equity benchmarks. The Global Trade Slowdown Will Intensify Emerging Asian stock markets are very sensitive to global trade cycles. Slowing global trade is typically negative for them. There is growing evidence that the global trade deceleration will intensify: The German IFO index for business expectations in German manufacturing - a good leading indicator for global trade - is pointing to a further slowdown in global exports (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist Export volume growth has already slowed across manufacturing Asia (Chart I-2). The most recent data points for these series are as of April. Asia's booming tech/semiconductor industry is also slowing. Both Taiwan's export orders growth and Singapore's technology PMI new orders-to-inventory ratio have relapsed (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward Chart I-3Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch One of the causes of weakness in the global semiconductor cycle could be stagnating global auto sales (Chart I-4). The latter are being weighed down by weakness in auto sales in China and the U.S. Cars require a significant amount of semiconductors, and lack of improvement in global auto sales will suppress semiconductor demand. So far, China has not been at the epicenter of investors' concerns, but this will soon change as its growth slowdown intensifies. Credit conditions continue to tighten in China, which entails downside risks to mainland capital spending and consequently imports. China's imports are set to slump considerably, reinforcing the global trade downturn.2 First, China's bank loan approvals have dropped considerably in the past 18 months, suggesting a meaningful slowdown in bank financing and in turn the country's investment expenditures (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales Chart I-5China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex Second, not only are bank loan standards tightening but costs of financing are also rising. The share of loans extended above the prime lending rate has risen to a 15-year high (Chart I-6, top panel). This represents marginal tightening. Finally, onshore corporate bond yields as well as offshore U.S. dollar-denominated corporate bond yields have broken to new highs in this cycle (Chart I-6, bottom panels). Mounting borrowing costs and tighter credit standards in China point to further deceleration in credit-sensitive spending such as investment expenditures and property purchases. On the whole, rising interest rates and material currency depreciation in EM ex-China and credit tightening in China will prompt a considerable slump in imports, depressing world trade. EM including Chinese imports account for 30% of global imports, while the U.S. and EU together make up 24% of global imports values. Hence, global trade will disappoint if and as EM and Chinese imports stumble. A final word on the history of de-coupling among EM regions is in order. There have been a few episodes when emerging Asian and Latin American stocks de-coupled: In 1997-'98, the home-grown Asian crisis devastated regional markets, but Latin American stocks continued to rally until mid-1998 - when they plummeted (Chart I-7, top panel). Chart I-6China: Rising Borrowing Costs Chart I-7De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America In 2007-'08, emerging Asian equities tumbled along with the S&P 500, but Latin American bourses fared well until the middle of 2008 due to surging commodities/oil prices (Chart I-7, middle panel). Finally, the bottom panel of Chart I-7 illustrates that in early 2015, Asian stocks performed well, supported by the inflating Chinese equity bubble. Meanwhile, Latin American stocks plunged. In all of these episodes, the de-coupling between Asia and Latin America proved to be unsustainable, and the markets that showed initial resilience eventually re-coupled to the downside. Bottom Line: Global trade is set to head southward, even if U.S. demand remains robust. China's growth slump will be instrumental to this global trade slowdown. Consequently, Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese equities will be vulnerable. Heeding To Market Signals Financial markets often move ahead of economic data, and simply tracking data is not always helpful in gauging turning points in business cycles. By the time economic data change course, financial markets would typically have already partially adjusted. Besides, past economic and financial market performance is not a guarantee of future performance. This is why we rely on thematic fundamental analysis and monitor intermediate- and long-term trends in financial markets to navigate through markets. There are presently several important market signals that investors should be heeding to: EM corporate bond yields are surging, which typically foreshadows falling EM share prices (Chart I-8). Meanwhile, there is no robust correlation between EM equities and U.S. bond yields. Chart I-8EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise The basis: So long as the rise in U.S. bond yields is offset by compressing EM credit spreads, EM corporate bond yields decline and EM share prices rally. But when EM corporate (or sovereign) yields rise, irrespective of whether this is due to rising U.S. Treasury yields or widening EM credit spreads, EM equity prices come under considerable selling pressure. Lately, both EM credit spreads have been widening, offsetting the drop in U.S. bond yields. Hence, a drop in U.S. bond yields is not in and of itself sufficient to halt a decline in EM share prices. So long as EM corporate and sovereign credit spreads are widening by more than the decline in U.S. Treasury yields, EM corporate and sovereign bond yields will rise, heralding lower EM share prices. The ratio of total return (including carry) of six commodities currencies relative to safe-haven currencies3 is breaking below its 200-day moving average after having bounced from this technical support line several times in the past 12 months (Chart I-9). This could be confirming that the bull market in EM risk assets is over, and a bear market is underway. Chinese property stocks listed onshore have broken down, and those trading in Hong Kong seem to be forming a head-and-shoulder pattern (Chart I-10). In the latter case, such a technical formation will likely be followed by a considerable down-leg. Chart I-9An Important Breakdown Chart I-10Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable Further, China's onshore A-share index has already dropped by 15% from its cyclical peak in late January. Finally, both emerging Asia's relative equity performance against developed markets, as well as the emerging Asian currency index versus the U.S. dollar (ADXY) seem to be rolling over at their long-term moving averages (Chart I-11). The same technical pattern is presenting itself for global energy and mining stocks in absolute terms, and also in the overall Brazilian equity index (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Asian Equities And Currencies Are ##br##At Critical Juncture Chart I-12Commodity Equities And Brazil ##br##Are Facing Technical Resistance The failure of these markets to break above their long-term technical resistance levels may be signalling that their advance since early 2016 has been a cyclical - not structural - bull market, and is likely over. These technical chart profiles so far confirm our fundamental analysis that the EM and commodities rallies since early 2016 did not represent a multi-year secular bull market. If correct, the downside risks to EM including Asian markets are substantial, and selling/shorting them now is not too late. Bottom Line: EM including Asian stocks, currencies and credit markets are at risk of gapping down. Absolute-return investors should trade these markets on the short side. Asset allocators should underweight EM markets relative to DM in general and the U.S. in particular. A complete list of our currency, fixed-income and equity recommendations is available on pages 20-21. An EM Equity Sector Trade: Long Consumer Staples / Short Banks EM consumer staples have massively underperformed banks as well as the overall EM index since January 2016 (Chart I-13). The odds are that their relative performance is about to reverse. Equity investors should consider implementing the following equity pair trade: long consumer staples / short banks: Consumer staples are a low-beta sector because their revenues are less cyclical. As EM growth downshifts, share prices of companies with more stable revenue streams will likely outperform. Bank stocks are vulnerable as local interest rates in many EMs rise in response to the selloff in their respective currencies (Chart I-14). Consumer staples usually outperform banks when local borrowing costs are rising. Chart I-13Go Long EM Consumer Staples / ##br##Short EM Banks Chart I-14EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With##br## EM Local Bond Yields We expect more currency depreciation in EM, which will exert further upward pressure on local rates, including interbank rates. Further, growth weakness in EM economies typically leads to rising non-performing loan (NPL) provisions. Chart I-15A and Chart I-15B demonstrates that weakening nominal GDP growth (shown inverted on the charts) leads to higher provisioning. Hence, a renewed EM growth slowdown will hurt bank profits. Chart I-15AWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions Chart I-15BWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions Our assessment is that banks in many EM countries have provisioned less than what is probably necessary following years of a credit boom. Indeed, in the last 12-18 months or so, many banks have even been reducing their NPL provisions to boost profits. Hence, a reversal of these dynamics will undermine banks' earnings. Bottom Line: Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. This is in addition to our long-term strategy of shorting EM banks versus U.S. banks as well as shorting banks in absolute terms in individual markets such as Brazil, Turkey, Malaysia and small-cap banks in China. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 These calculations are done using MSCI investible stock indexes in U.S. dollars terms. 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "The Dollar Rally And China's Imports", dated May 24, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 3 Average of cad, aud, nzd, brl, clp & zar total returns (including carry) relative to average of jpy & chf total returns (including carry). Chile: Stay Overweight Equities, Receive Rates 31 May 2018 Chart II-1Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices It is often assumed that Chilean financial markets are a play on copper. While this largely holds true for the Chilean peso, it is not always correct regarding its stock market's relative performance to its EM peers. Chile has outperformed in the past amid declining copper prices (Chart II-1). Despite our negative view on copper prices, we are reiterating our overweight allocation to this bourse within an EM equity portfolio. There are convincing signs that growth in the Chilean economy is moving along fine for now (Chart II-2). While weakness in global trade will weigh on the economy, the critical variable that makes Chile stand out from other commodities producers in the EM universe is its ability to cut interest rates amid currency depreciation. Chart II-3 illustrates that interest rates in Chile can and do fall when the peso depreciates. This stands in stark contrast with many others economies in the EM universe. There are a number of factors that suggest inflationary pressures will remain dormant for some time. This will allow the Central Bank of Chile (CBC) to cut rates as and when required. Chart II-2Chile: Economic Conditions Chart II-3Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates First, the output gap is negative and has been widening, which has historically led to falling core inflation (Chart II-4). Second, a wide range of consumer inflation measures - services and trimmed-mean inflation rates - are very low and remain in a downtrend (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Chile: Output Gap And Inflation Chart II-5Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling Finally, there are no signs of wage inflation, which is the key driver of genuine inflation. In fact, wage growth is decelerating sharply (Chart II-6). Odds are that this disinflationary rout will go on for longer, given Chile's demographic and labor market dynamics. The country's labor force growth has accelerated and the economy does not seem able to absorb this excess labor supply (Chart II-7). Consistently, our labor surplus proxy - calculated as the number of unemployed looking for a job divided by the number of job vacancies - has surged to all-time highs (Chart II-8). Chart II-6Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak Chart II-7Chile: Rising Labor Force Chart II-8Chile: Excessive Labor Supply... Interestingly, this is not happening because of weak employment. Chart II-9 shows that the employment-to-working population ratio is at a record high, while employment growth is robust. This upholds that decent job growth is not sufficient to absorb the expanding supply of labor. All in all, a structural excess supply of labor as well as a cyclical slowdown in global trade and lower copper prices altogether will likely warrant a decline in interest rates in Chile. Consequently, we recommend a new fixed income trade: Receive 3-year swap rates. The recent rise provides a good entry point (Chart II-10). Chart II-9...Despite Robust Employment Growth Chart II-10Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates The ability to cut interest rates will mitigate the effect of weaker exports on the economy. We recommend dedicated EM investors maintain an overweight allocation in Chile in their equity, local currency bond and corporate credit portfolios. For absolute return investors, the risk-reward profiles for Chilean stocks and the currency are not attractive. The peso will depreciate considerably, and shorting it versus the U.S. dollar will prove profitable. Consistent with our negative view on copper prices, we have been recommending a short position in copper with a long leg in the Chilean peso. This allows traders to earn some carry while waiting for copper prices to break down. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Colombia: The Currency Will Be A Release Valve The structural long-term outlook for Colombia is positive, as a combination of pro-market orthodox policies and reform initiatives amid positive tailwinds from demographic should ensure a reasonably high potential GDP growth rate. In the first round of presidential elections held last weekend, the gap between right wing candidate Ivan Duque and left-wing candidate Gustav Petro came out large enough to make a Duque victory highly likely in the second round to be held on June 17. His election would entail a positive backdrop for the reform agenda and business investment over the coming years. Yet despite the positive structural backdrop, Colombia is still facing a major imbalance - excessive reliance on oil in sustaining stable balance of payments (BoP) dynamics. The trade balance deficit - including oil - is $8 billion, while excluding oil it stands at $20 billion, or 7.5% of GDP (Chart III-1). Hence, if oil prices drop materially in the second half of this year - as we expect - Colombia's balance of payments will be strained. Consequently, the currency will come under depreciation pressure. The peso is presently fairly valued as the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs is at its historical mean (Chart III-2). Chart III-1Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil Chart III-2The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued The central bank has adopted a "hands-off" approach toward the exchange rate, and is likely to allow the peso to depreciate if the BoP deteriorates. Weak economic conditions will likely prevent it from hiking interest rates to bolster the peso: Even though the central bank has reduced its policy rate by 350 basis points since the end of 2016, lending rates remain restrictive when compared with the nominal GDP growth rate (Chart III-3, top panel). Fiscal policy has been tight, with government expenditures subdued and the primary deficit narrowing (Chart III-3, bottom panel). This is unlikely to change for now if conservative candidate, Ivan Duque, wins the election. Consumer and business demand has failed to pick up, and shows little sign of recovery (Chart III-4). Non-performing loans (NPL) continue to rise, forcing banks to raise their NPL provisioning (Chart III-5). Weak nominal GDP growth suggests provisions may rise further. Chart III-3Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Chart III-4Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Chart III-5Colombian Banks: NPL And NPL Provision Continue Rising Overall, banks' balance sheets remain impaired, hampering their ability to extend loans. Investment Recommendations Despite a favorable structural outlook, Colombia's cyclical growth and financial market outlooks remain poor. Chances are that the peso will come under selling pressure as the external environment deteriorates - i.e., the currency will act as a release valve. We recommend staying neutral on Colombian stocks and local bonds relative to their EM peers, and to overweight Colombian sovereign credit within an EM credit portfolio. The basis is that sound and tight fiscal policies and a continuation of supply side reforms will benefit this credit market. To capitalize on potential currency depreciation while hedging for the uncertainty of oil price decline, we recommend shorting the peso against the Russian ruble. Although Colombia's structural outlook is more promising than Russia's, the latter's BoP dynamics is healthier and its cyclical growth outlook is better than Colombia's. Andrija Vesic, Research Analyst AndrijaV@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Chart of the WeekBCA's Ensemble Forecast Vs. Base Case With OPEC 2.0 signaling it will consider raising production in 2H18 to cover unexpected losses from Venezuela, and rising odds that state's output will cease, we've adopted an ensemble approach to forecast benchmark crude oil prices. This ensemble includes: i) our existing base case - steady demand and a loss of 500k b/d from Iran; ii) OPEC 2.0 restoring production cuts in 2H18; and, iii) explicit odds Venezuela's ~ 1mm b/d of exports collapse (Chart of the Week).1 We expect definitive output guidance following OPEC 2.0's June 22 meeting. For now, our base case dominates our 2H18 forecast, given our expectation any increase in production will be slowly restored to the market. Next year we see a higher probability most of OPEC 2.0's cuts will be restored. The odds that Venezuela's exports collapse goes from 20% in 2H18 to 30% in 2019. This ensemble forecast takes our 2H18 Brent forecast to $76/bbl from an average $78/bbl, and our WTI forecast to $70/bbl from $72/bbl. For next year, our Brent forecast goes to $73/bbl from $80/bbl, and our WTI expectation goes to $67/bbl from $72/bbl. We expect higher volatility, as well. Highlights Energy: Overweight. Spot Brent and WTI prices fell ~ 6% in the past week, as OPEC 2.0 signaled member states were considering restoring production. We remain long call spreads and the energy-heavy S&P GSCI, believing markets over-reacted to the news. Base Metals: Neutral. India's Tamil Nadu state government ordered the country's largest copper smelter shut, following rioting over alleged pollution from the plant, according to Bloomberg. This removes 400k MT of capacity from the market.2 Precious Metals: Neutral. Rising geopolitical risks in Italy are supporting gold prices, despite a stronger USD. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The re-emergence of U.S.-Sino trade tensions weighed on corn and soybean futures this week. This comes despite an ongoing truckers' strike in Brazil, which has been supporting soybean prices.3 Feature Just when it looked like OPEC 2.0 would keep its production cuts in place for the rest of the year, the coalition's leadership is signaling it will consider reversing production cuts during 2H18. Needless to say, this makes the task of forecasting prices more difficult. Guidance coming from the St. Petersburg Economic Forum at the end of last week was not definitive - it resembled more of a trial balloon. Press reports suggest as much as 1mm b/d of product cuts could gradually be restored to the market over 2H18, which would loosen global balances relative to our previous expectation (Chart 2). Still, Russia's energy minister Alexander Novak declined to confirm these cuts would be made.4 By our reckoning, some 1.2mm b/d of production actually has been cut by OPEC 2.0 since January 2017, mostly from KSA and Russia, which together account for close to 1mm b/d of the total. The big surprise on the production side has been the collapse of Venezuela, which went from just under 2.1mm b/d of crude output in Nov/16 - the month against which production targets were set under the OPEC 2.0 Agreement - to ~ 1.4mm b/d at present. We have Venezuela's production falling to 1.2mm b/d by the end of this year, and 1.0mm b/d by the end of 2019. We expect Iranian exports to fall ~ 200k b/d at the end of 2018, and another 300k b/d by the end of 1H19 in our base case model, as a result of the re-imposition of U.S. sanctions against it. This takes total Iranian export losses to 500k b/d by 2H19 in our base case. The only substantial growth on the production side is coming from U.S. shales in our base case, with production expected to be up 1.28mm b/d this year to 6.52mm, and 7.98mm b/d in 2019. Even this growth, however, could be constricted/delayed due to pipeline bottlenecks in the Permian. With demand expected to remain strong - growing at 1.7mm b/d this year and next in our models - market balances were tightening, and OECD inventories were falling appreciably (Chart 3). Chart 2Restoring OPEC 2.0 Production Cuts##BR##Would Loosen Global Balances Chart 3Inventories Would Draw Less If##BR##OPEC 2.0 Production Is Restored In 2018 The collapse of Venezuela's output did appreciably accelerate the tightening of the market, and lifted prices beyond the level that would have prevailed had this production not been lost to the market. This contraction, combined with the threatened re-imposition of sanctions on Iran, prompted leaders in important consumer markets to warn growth could be at risk with the oil-price rise potentially fueling inflation and inflation expectations - leading central banks, particularly the Fed, to continue tightening monetary policy. As gasoline, jet fuel and diesel prices rise, a greater share of household budgets goes toward purchasing hydrocarbons, which, all else equal, stifles growth if rising incomes cannot absorb the higher prices.5 Consumer Protests Registered With OPEC 2.0 Leaders in large oil-consuming states - particularly India, China and the U.S. - registered their dissatisfaction with high energy prices over the past month with OPEC 2.0, most notably when U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted his displeasure in April. OPEC Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo recalled the tweet at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum last week, saying, "I think I was prodded by his excellency Khalid Al-Falih that probably there was a need for us to respond. We in OPEC always pride ourselves as friends of the United States."6 Consumers in many states no longer are shielded from high oil prices, as governments around the world used the collapse in prices beginning in 2014 to remove/reduce fuel subsidies.7 This changes the dynamics of EM oil demand considerably, even if governments feel compelled to step into markets and order suppliers to not pass through the entire price increase. KSA and Russia appear largely united in their view of what is required to keep oil markets balanced over the long haul, so as not to disincentivize consumers from purchasing motor fuels. But over the short term, their goals differ. KSA is looking to IPO Saudi Aramco - next year, according to the latest reports - and this sale would most definitely benefit from higher prices. Indeed, KSA's oil minister Khalid al-Falih appeared to be comfortable with prices pushing toward $80/bbl recently. Russia's Novak has said in the past he favors an oil price somewhere between $50 and $60/bbl.8 Moving To Ensemble Forecasts Reconciling OPEC 2.0's short- and long-term goals, particularly the coalition's apparent new-found desire to be responsive to consumer interests; rising geopolitical tensions involving significant exporting states; and rising odds Venezuela implodes, and its exports are lost to the market, complicates the price-forecasting process considerably. In order to give full account to the different paths these uncertain influences will have on prices, we've adopted an ensemble model, in which we forecast three separate price paths: A base case, using our existing fundamental inputs and econometric modeling, which we published last week; A production-restoration case, where 870k b/d of production is restored to markets by OPEC 2.0 over 2H18 to compensate for the unexpected loss of Venezuela's output; The complete collapse of Venezuela's oil exports - amounting to ~ 1mm b/d - which we also published last week.9 In our base case, we use our standard fundamental model inputs - global production, consumption and OECD inventories - to forecast prices for this year and next (Table 1). The production-restoration and the Venezuela-export collapse models are boundary cases for our ensemble forecast, which is particularly important in 2019. The production restoration case leads to 870k b/d of OPEC 2.0 production coming back on line over the course of 2H18, with Venezuelan production deteriorating slowly, which is bearish for prices. The Venezuela-export collapse case results in a significant loss in production - 1mm b/d of Venezuela exports beginning in Jun/18 - which is bullish for prices, even with 1.2mm b/d of output being restored by OPEC 2.0 over the course of 2H18. Table 1BCA Global Oil Supply - Demand Balances (mm b/d) To generate the ensemble forecast, we weight the three cases above, with our base case dominating the model in 2H18, and falling off in 2019, while the production-restoration case dominates our outlook in 2019 (Chart 4). We also increase the probability of Venezuela's 1mm b/d collapsing over this interval - going from a 20% chance in Jun/18 to 30% in Dec/19. We will be continually updating these estimated probabilities (Table 2). Table 2BCA Ensemble Forecast Components As we approach OPEC 2.0's June 22 meeting in Vienna, we expect more definitive guidance from KSA and Russia, which will allow us to refine these probabilities. In addition, we expect volatility to increase, as changes in forward guidance and uncertainty in physical markets increases the rate at which speculators react to the arrival of new information (Chart 5).10 Chart 4Ensemble Forecast Accounts For##BR##Collapse In Venezuela's Exports Chart 5Spec Positioning Will##BR##Push Volatility Higher Bottom Line: OPEC 2.0 injected a new element of uncertainty into the markets this past week by signaling it would consider restoring oil-production cuts over 2H18, which could be as high as 1mm b/d, in response to consumer complaints at the highest levels. The guidance from the coalition's leadership in these early days does not allow us to definitely adjust our oil supply estimates, so we're simulating what we consider to be a highly likely schedule of production restoration. In addition, we are assigning explicit odds to the collapse of Venezuela's exports, which would remove ~ 1mm b/d of exports from the market. We combine these separate assessments with our existing forecasting model to create an ensemble forecast for prices in 2H18 and 2019. In this approach, our existing base-case model, which assumes OPEC 2.0's production cuts will be maintained this year and slowly restored over 1H19 is maintained; a production-restoration case is introduced, which assumes 870k b/d of production is brought back on line over the course of 2H18. Lastly, we assume Venezuela's production is lost to the market in Jun/18, and that OPEC 2.0 restores the 1.2mm b/d of actual production cuts it made beginning in Jan/17 over 2H18. We weight these different cases to produce our ensemble forecast. Using this approach, we are revising our 2H18 Brent forecast to $76/bbl from an average $78/bbl, and our WTI forecast to $70/bbl from $72/bbl. For next year, we are lowering our Brent forecast to $73/bbl from $80/bbl, and our WTI expectation to $67/bbl from $72/bbl. We expect higher volatility, as well. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Matt Conlan, Senior Vice President Energy Sector Strategy mattconlan@bcaresearchny.com Hugo Bélanger, Senior Analyst Commodity & Energy Strategy HugoB@bcaresearch.com 1 OPEC 2.0 is the name we coined for the producer coalition led by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia, which agreed to cut 1.8mm b/d of production. By our reckoning, some 1.2mm b/d have been cut voluntarily - mostly by KSA and Russia. Alexander Novak, Russia's oil minister, stated actual cuts are closer to 2.7mm b/d, mostly because of the freefall in Venezuela's production. Non-Gulf states also have seen significant production losses. 2 See "Copper Supply Shock Hits India As Top Plant Ordered To Close," published by Bloomberg.com, May 29, 2018. 3 See "GRAINS-Corn, Soybeans Sag On Renewed U.S.-China Trade Jitters," published by Reuters.com, May 29, 2018. 4 Please see "OPEC, Russia Prepared To Raise Oil Output Amid U.S. Pressure," published by uk.reuters.com on May 25, 2018. 5 The OECD makes this point explicitly in its just-released report "OECD sees stronger world economy, but risks loom large," published May 30, 2018. 6 Please see fn. 3 above. 7 Please see "With the Benefit of Hindsight: The Impact of the 2014 - 16 Oil Price Collapse," published by the World Bank in January 2018. See fn. 11 for a list of EM countries that reformed their oil subsidies, which includes oil exporters in OPEC like KSA, Kuwait and Nigeria. 8 We discuss this at length in "OPEC 2.0 Getting Comfortable With Higher Prices," published February 22, 2018, by BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy. It is available at ces.bacresearch.com. 9 We presented the Venezuela-production collapse simulation in last week's Commodity & Energy Strategy. Please see "Brent, WTI Average $80, $72 Next Year; Upside Risk Dominates, $100/bbl Possible In 2019." It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 10 We explore the relationship between price volatility and spec positioning in "Feedback Loop: Spec Positioning & Oil Price Volatility," published May 10, 2018, by BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy. It is available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 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