Sectors
Overweight Year-to-date, industrials stocks are the best performing GICS1 sector, outperforming the SPX by a massive 650bps. While such a breakneck pace is unsustainable and a short term breather is likely, from a cyclical perspective more gains are in store in this still underowned sector. In Monday’s Weekly Report, we highlighted the top five reasons it still pays to be overweight this deep cyclical sector. With Sunday’s news that the Trump administration is planning to delay the slate of additional Chinese tariffs that were scheduled to begin on March 1 and optimistic tweets on the progress of negotiations, one reason in particular seems most relevant: an easy credit, fiscal & monetary policy trifecta in China. Beyond the positive resolution in the U.S./China trade dispute, China has opened up its central bank liquidity tap to complement ongoing easy monetary policy. Tack on the recent monster loan origination and reaccelerating infrastructure spending and factors are falling into place for a pick up in end demand, which is a boon for U.S. capitals goods producers. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P industrials sector and see Monday’s Weekly Report for more details and the other four reasons we still like industrials.
There are high odds that the chip cycle will soon take a turn for the better. Global chip sales have been decelerating for 17 months and are now on the cusp of contracting. Over the past two decades, steep contractions have been associated with recessions.…
The capex upcycle theme remains intact. Recently, there has been some softness in the investment outlays reported in the national accounts, however, it is highly unlikely that spending plans will grind to a halt similar to the one experienced in…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The ongoing capex upcycle, resurgent credit growth, easy Chinese policy trifecta, upbeat signals from high frequency financial market data and depressed technicals, all suggest that a re-rating phase looms in the S&P industrials sector. Leading indicators of chip end-demand are flashing green, at a time when the chip liquidation phase is clearing excess supplies. It no longer pays to be bearish the S&P semiconductors index. Recent Changes Lift the S&P semiconductors index to neutral today; it is now also on upgrade alert. Table 1 Feature The SPX continued to grind higher last week, and is now within reach of the key 2,800 level. We expect stiff resistance to persist at that mark; 2,800 has served as a barrier on several occasions last year as we highlighted in recent research (please refer to Chart 1 from the January 28 Weekly Report).1 Year-to-date, we have identified three pillars that would propel the market higher – a more dovish Fed alongside a softer U.S. dollar, a year-over-year increase in SPX EPS for calendar 2019 and a positive resolution to the U.S./China trade spat. As the S&P 500 has come full circle and returned to the early December level, this slingshot recovery suggests that there is positive progress on all three pillars. However, our sense is that the bond market now has to remain tamed in order to cement these equity market gains and vault to fresh all-time highs, likely in the back half of the year. Chart 1 highlights this goldilocks macro backdrop. Chart 1Staying Divorced For A While In other words, as U.S. GDP downshifts from last year’s fiscal easing-induced sugar-high back down to trend growth and most importantly avoids recession, equities should excel. Why? Not only will this entice the Fed to stand pat for longer, but the 10-year Treasury yield will also remain on a lower trajectory than previously anticipated. Crudely put, a neither too-hot nor too-cold economic backdrop will allow equities to reflate away. As such, there are high odds that stocks stay divorced from bond yields for a while longer, and we interpret this bond market backdrop as reflationary rather than recessionary. Meanwhile on the Chinese front, following news of the PBoC’s quasi QE that we highlighted in early February as a positive SPX and cyclicals over defensives catalyst,2 it appears that Chinese authorities could not stomach a below 50 print in the Chinese manufacturing PMI for long and are aggressively opening the fiscal taps anew (Chart 2). Chart 2Chinese reflation... This enormous lending/fiscal stimulus complements ongoing monetary easing and the recent PBoC’s quasi QE, and should ensure that the Chinese economy at least steadies. The upshot is that global growth should also stabilize and put an end to its yearlong deceleration (Chart 3). Chart 3... Should Aid Global Growth In addition, as U.S. and Chinese negotiation teams race to the finish line in order to get some sort of a deal done before the March 1st deadline, it is clear that a positive outcome is already discounted by the stock market as the SPX enjoys one of the best starts to the year in recent memory. Once this trade policy uncertainty permanently dies down, then last year’s worst performing sectors that were hit hard by the trade dispute will turn into this year’s stock market champions (Chart 4). Chart 4Trade War Hit Deep Cyclicals The Most In that light, we reiterate our cyclical over defensive portfolio bent and this week we highlight that a deep cyclical sector stands to benefit greatly from China’s reflation and the apparent resolution of the U.S./China trade spat; another tech subsector weighed down by the trade tussle is also going to enjoy a reversal of fortune and it no longer pays to be bearish. Don’t Write Off Mighty Industrials Year-to-date, industrials stocks are the best performing GICS1 sector, outperforming the SPX by a massive 650bps (Chart 5). While such a breakneck pace is unsustainable and a short term breather is likely, from a cyclical perspective more gains are in store in this still underowned sector. In this report we highlight the top five reasons it still pays to be overweight this deep cyclical sector. Capex upcycle. The capex upcycle theme remains intact and while there has been some softness recently in the national accounts reported investment outlays, it is highly unlikely that spending plans will grind to a halt similar to the late-2015/early-2016 episode (third panel, Chart 6). Capital goods producers have since replenished their cash coffers and remain committed to develop their capital expenditure projects. Importantly, leading indicators of capex corroborate this backdrop; regional Fed surveys suggest that capital outlays will remain firm for the rest of the year (second panel, Chart 6). Chart 6Capex Upcycle Supports Industrials Resurgent credit growth. Loan growth is on fire in the U.S. and commercial and industrial loan growth is leading the pack, galloping higher and breaching the 10%/annum mark. Bankers are providing the needed fuel to bring to fruition industrials capex plans and, given that historically loan growth and relative profit growth have been positively correlated, the current message is upbeat (Chart 7). Chart 7Loan Growth Fueling The Fire Chinese easy policy trifecta: credit, fiscal & monetary. Beyond the positive resolution in the U.S./China trade dispute, China has opened up its central bank liquidity tap to complement ongoing easy monetary policy. Tack on the recent monster loan origination and reaccelerating infrastructure spending and factors are falling into place for a pick up in end demand, which is a boon for U.S. capitals goods producers (Chart 8). Chart 8Heed The Chinese Reflation Message... Upbeat signal from high frequency EM related financial market data. Emerging market stocks have been outperforming the MSCI ACW Index since early-October and even in absolute terms have troughed in late-October. The ultimate leading EM indicator, EM FX, put in a bottom in early September, sniffing out some sort of reflationary impulse. Meanwhile, momentum in the CRB raw industrials commodity index has also troughed, confirming the high-frequency EM data points. As a reminder, industrials stocks and the global commodity complex move in lockstep, and we heed the positive message all these financial market indicators are emitting (Chart 9). Chart 9...EM Financial Variables Concur Downtrodden sector sentiment and compelling valuations. Despite this year’s rebound in industrial equities, sour investor sentiment appears deeply ingrained. Relative EPS breadth and oversold technical conditions are contrarily positive. Relative valuations are also beaten down and still offer a compelling entry point (Chart 10). Even on a forward P/E basis industrials are trading at a 4% discount to the broad market and below the historical average. Finally, industrials profit and revenue expectations for the coming 12-months are forecast to trail the broad market according to the sell-side community. Were our thesis to pan out, these would represent low hurdles for capital goods producers to surpass. Chart 10Underowned And Unloved Nevertheless, there is a key macro variable, the U.S. dollar, that is a risk to our sanguine S&P industrials sector view. Chart 11 shows that the greenback and industrials sector fortunes are tightly inversely correlated. Not only is an appreciating U.S. dollar deflationary for global commodities that are priced in the reserve currency, but it also weighs on industrials P&Ls via negative translation effects. As a reminder, roughly 40% of industrials sales are international. Chart 11Rising Greenback Is A Risk Netting it all out, the ongoing capex upcycle, resurgent credit growth, easy Chinese policy trifecta, upbeat signals from high frequency EM related financial markets and depressed technicals, all suggest that a re-rating phase looms in the S&P industrials sector. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P industrials sector. The Chip Cycle Is Turning It no longer pays to be bearish chip stocks; lift the S&P semiconductors index to neutral from underweight today. There are high odds that the chip cycle will soon take a turn for the better. Global chip sales have been decelerating for 17 months and are now on the cusp of contraction (Chart 12). Over the past two decades, steep contractions have been associated with recession. Given that BCA’s view does not call for recession this year, it is highly unlikely for global semi sales to suffer a major setback. While we do not rule out a brief and shallow dip below zero similar to the 2011/12 and 2015/16 parallels, leading indicators of global semi sales suggest that a trough is near. Chart 12Global Semi Cycle... Namely, BCA’s Global Leading Economic Indicator (GLEI) diffusion index is in a V-shaped recovery signaling that global growth is close to a nadir (middle panel, Chart 12). Similarly the U.S. dollar is decelerating which is a boon to global growth and conducive to higher global chip sales (trade-weighted U.S. dollar shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 12). With regard to U.S. domiciled semi producers, a depreciating currency provides tremendous leverage to profits as foreign sourced revenues are roughly 80% of the total or twice as high compared with the SPX. Table 2, shows the one year trailing internationally- and China-derived revenues of the ten largest firms in the S&P semiconductors index, representing over 95% of the index. On a weighted basis, 80% of sales are sourced from overseas, including 36% of total sales coming from China. Clearly, global growth in general and Chinese growth in particular are key drivers of semi top line growth. Thus, any positive U.S./China trade dispute resolution would provide more relief for the S&P semi index. Table 2Semi Sales Geographical Exposure Moreover, electronics activity is an excellent gauge for semi end-demand. The all-important Chinese electronics imports have ticked up recently. In the U.S., consumer outlays on electronics are firing on all cylinders. Taken together, there is tentative evidence that global semi demand will soon bottom (Chart 13). Chart 13...Is Turning Importantly, the global semi inventory liquidation is ongoing and this supply backdrop should help balance the market. Already Asian DRAM prices, our pricing power gauge for the semi industry, are contracting, underscoring that the semi market is clearing (second & third panels, Chart 14). Importantly, global semi billings that tend to lead global semi sales by a few months have also ticked higher of late (top panel, Chart 14). Chart 14Improving Supply/Demand Dynamics Unfortunately, none of these positive catalysts are picked up by sell-side analysts. In fact, despite the recent rebound in relative share prices, 12-month forward EPS and revenue expectations remain in free fall. Net EPS revisions are as bad as they get, and have sunk near previous troughs that have coincided with durable relative share price rallies (second panel, Chart 15). Chart 15Analysts Have Thrown In The Towel On the relative technical and valuation fronts, pessimism reigns supreme. Our Technical Indicator hovers near one standard deviation below the historical mean and our Valuation Indicator is probing all-time lows. Interestingly, the S&P semi index sports a higher dividend yield than the SPX currently, underscoring that semi stocks are cheap (Chart 16). Chart 16Compelling Valuations And Technicals Our Chip Stock Timing Model (CSTM) does an excellent job in capturing all these moving parts and is currently sending a bullish signal (Chart 17). We heed the signal from our CSTM and are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Chart 17Prepare To Deploy Capital Bottom Line: Lift the S&P semiconductors index to neutral and it is now also on our upgrade watch list; we are looking for an opportunity to boost to overweight on a pullback, stay tuned. Finally, from a risk management perspective we are enticed to increase our trailing stop to 15% in our tactical overweight in the S&P semi equipment index, in order to protect gains. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the S&P semiconductors index are: BLBG: S5SECO – INTC, AVGO, TXN, NVDA, QCOM, MU, ADI, XLNX, AMD, MCHP, MXIM, SWKS, QRVO. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Trader’s Paradise” dated January 28, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Don’t Fight The PBoC” dated February 4, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
As this winter’s fall in bond yields boosted high dividend yielding stocks, the S&P telecom services index enjoyed a brief respite from its decade long more-or-less steady underperformance. Furthermore, the massive deflation in telco selling prices looked…
Tough Times For Telco Top Lines Underweight The S&P telecom services index had recently been enjoying a brief respite from their mostly steady relative performance decline over the past decade, as a fall in yields boosted these high dividend yielding stocks. Further, the massive deflation in selling prices looked like it had taken a breather (second panel). However, yields have since stabilized and selling prices have resumed their descent and the S&P telecom services index in 2019 has given up all the ground it made in the back half of 2018. Despite the negative pricing picture facing telcos, relative EPS growth has been fairly stable although estimates continue to trail the growth of the broad market (third panel). This sell side optimism seems misplaced as the current trajectory of selling prices resembles the fall in late-2016. Should a wave of downward revisions arrive, the sector’s valuation discount (bottom panel) would likely evaporate. Further, we continue to expect rates to rise in the back half of this year, adding another headwind to the troubled sector; stay underweight the S&P telecom services index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5TELSX - T, VZ, CTL.
Pharmaceutical companies have been nearly uninterruptedly raising prices for the past four decades. Higher selling prices have been synonymous with higher profits and thus, higher share prices. However, profit margins crested right after the late-1990’s…
Underweight S&P soft drinks index heavyweight Coke reported its results last week and though it beat earnings estimates, the stock offered its worst performance in more than a decade. This is despite solid pricing gains for the industry as a whole (second panel) and for Coke in particular. The reason for the fall was weak guidance for the year ahead; Coke flagged weakening EM consumer trends and currency headwinds as the key culprits behind the softening results. This jives with the pain all consumer products exporters are feeling (third panel), perhaps more acutely by Coke given the majority of their revenues are derived overseas. Regardless of a supportive pricing environment, S&P soft drinks sector EPS growth has been trailing the broad market for the better part of the last ten years (fourth panel). Even with the recent drubbing the index has taken, it continues to sport a more than 20% premium to the broad market (bottom panel). Stay underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFD - PEP, KO, DPS, MNST.
We doubt the merger mania is over and we continue to believe that more mega deals are in store, either intra or inter-industry, with Big Pharma hungry and in a hurry to replenish their drug pipeline. From a long-term macro perspective, biotech stocks have…
Highlights Equities can continue to outperform bonds for a few months longer. The pro-cyclical equity sector stance that has worked well since last October can also continue for a few months longer. Overweight pro-cyclical Sweden versus pro-defensive Denmark. The caveat is that these short-term trends are unlikely to persist and will viciously reverse later in the year. European ‘soft’ luxury goods companies are an excellent structural investment opportunity. Take profits on the 75 percent rally in Litecoin and 50 percent rally in Ethereum. Feature Why should European investors care so much about China? The Chart of the Week provides one emphatic answer. For Europe’s $500 billion basic resources sector, the three most important things in the world are: China, China, and China. Through the past decade, the share price performance of the resource behemoths BHP, Anglo American, Rio Tinto, and Glencore have been joined at the hip to China’s short-term credit impulse (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). Chart of the WeekFor European Basic Resources, The Three Most Important Things In the World Are: China, China, And China Chart I-2BHP, Anglo American, And Rio Tinto Have Been Rallying For Several Months Chart I-3BHP Is Joined At The Hip To China's Short-Term Credit Impulse But China has a much deeper importance to Europe. According to Mario Draghi, the recent cycle in Europe is ‘made in China’. On the euro area’s domestic fundamentals, Draghi is upbeat, citing “supportive financing conditions, favourable labour market dynamics and rising wage growth”. Yet the economic data have continued to be weaker than expected. Why? Draghi blames a “slowdown in external demand” and specifically, vulnerabilities in emerging markets. He claims that as soon as there is clarity on the exports and the trade sector, much of the euro area’s weakness will wash out. Federal Reserve Chairman, Jay Powell presented a remarkably similar narrative to justify the recent pause in the Fed’s sequential rate hikes: “The U.S. economy is in a good place… but growth has slowed in some major foreign economies.” If Powell claims that the U.S. domestic economy is in a good place and Draghi points out that the euro area domestic fundamentals are fine, then the explanation for what has happened – and what will happen – can only come from one place: China. Optimistically, Draghi adds: “everything we know says that China’s government is actually taking strong measures to address the slowdown.” The good news is that we can independently corroborate Draghi’s optimism, at least in the near-term (Chart I-4). Chart I-4China's Short-Term Credit Impulse Is Up Sharply, And Commodities Have Rebounded Why China Matters To Europe Chart I-5 shows the short-term credit impulses in the euro area, U.S., and China through the past twenty years. They are all expressed in dollars to allow an apples for apples comparison between the three major economies. The comparison reveals a fascinating transformation. The dominant short-term impulse – the one with the highest amplitude – charts the shift in global economic power and influence from Europe and the U.S. to China. Chart I-5The Shift In Global Economic Power From Europe And The U.S. To China Before 2008, the short-term impulses in the euro area and the U.S. dominated. But the global financial crisis was a major turning point: the credit stimulus from China dwarfed the responses from the western economies. Then through 2009-12 the impulse oscillations from the three major economies took it in turns to dominate. For example, the 2011-12 global downturn was definitely ‘made in Europe’. However, since 2013 China has taken on the undisputed mantle of dominant impulse. Most recently, last year’s peak to trough decline in China’s short-term impulse amounted to $1 trillion, equivalent to a 1.5 percent drag on global GDP. By comparison, the declines in the euro area and the U.S. amounted to a much more modest $200 billion. Likewise, the recent rebound in the China’s short-term impulse, in dollar terms, has been much larger than the respective rebounds in the euro area and the U.S. Credit Impulses And Speeding Tickets Clients complain that they are confused by the conflicting messages from differently calculated credit impulses. So let’s digress for a moment to present a powerful analogy which should clear the confusion once and for all. Imagine you floored the accelerator pedal of your car (analogous to a huge stimulus). After a hundred metres or so, the stimulus would become very apparent. Your speed over that short sprint would have surged, and possibly have become illegal! But your average speed measured over the previous kilometre would have barely changed. Now imagine a police officer rightfully presents you with a speeding ticket. To protest your innocence, you argue that you couldn’t have floored the accelerator pedal because your average speed over the previous kilometre had barely changed! Clearly, you would never offer such a ludicrous defence for pushing the pedal to the metal. Yet when assessing the impact of an economic stimulus, it is commonplace to make the same mistake. The crucial point is that a stimulus – like flooring the accelerator pedal of your car – will barely move the needle for a longer-term rate of change, but it will become very apparent in a short-term rate of change. For this reason, financial markets never wait for the long-term rates of change to pick up. They always move up or down on the evolution of short-term rates of change. It follows that the credit impulse calculation that is most relevant is the one that provides the best explanatory power for the cycles that we actually observe in the economic and financial market data. As we described in our Special Report, “The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles”, both the theory and evidence powerfully identify the 6-month credit impulse as the one with the best explanatory power for the oscillations that we actually observe in the economy and markets.1 For the sceptics, the charts in this report should finally dispel any lingering doubts. China’s 6-month impulse gives a spookily perfect explanation for the industrial commodity inflation cycle, and thereby the share price performance of the basic resources sector, as well as the other classically cyclical sectors (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6China's Short-Term Impulse Perfectly Explains Industrial Commodity Inflation Chart I-7Semiconductors Are A Modern Day Cyclical The good news is that China’s short-term impulse has indisputably been in a mini-upswing in recent months, and this is the reason that the classical cyclical sectors have simultaneously rebounded or, at the very least, stabilised. The bad news is that the shelf-life of such mini-upswings averages no more than eight months or so. Intuitively, this is because just as you cannot accelerate your car indefinitely, it is likewise impossible to stimulate credit growth indefinitely. The investment conclusion is that the pro-cyclical equity sector stance that has worked well since last October can continue for a few months longer. This sector stance necessarily impacts regional and country allocation. For example, it is still right to be overweight pro-cyclical Sweden versus pro-defensive Denmark (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Chart I-8Overweight Pro-Cyclical Sweden Versus Denmark... Chart I-9...And Versus Norway From an asset allocation perspective, it means that equities can continue to outperform bonds for the time being. But the caveat is that these short-term trends are unlikely to persist, and most likely, they will viciously reverse later in the year. Stay tuned for the signal to switch. Stay Structurally Overweight ‘Soft’ Luxuries A common question we get concerns the European luxury goods sector: is it, just like the basic resources sector, a direct play on China’s growth cycle? The answer is no. Recently, the connection between the fortunes of ‘soft’ luxury goods brands like LVMH, Hermes, and Kering and China’s growth cycle has been weak (Chart I-10). Broadly, this is also true for ‘hard’ luxury brands – for example, luxury watches – like Richemont (Chart I-11). Chart I-10European 'Soft' Luxuries Are No Longer A China Play... Chart I-11...Neither Are European 'Hard' Luxuries As we highlighted in Buying European Clothes: An Investment Megatrend, the much bigger driver for the ‘soft’ luxury brands is the structural increase in female labour participation rates, and the feminisation of consumer spending. We expect this trend to persist for the next decade.2 Hence, we are happy to buy and hold the European clothes and accessories companies with a dominant or significant exposure to women’s clothes and/or accessories; provided they have a top-end brand (or brands) giving pricing power, and mitigating the very strong deflation in clothes prices. In summary, while European basic resources are a good tactical investment opportunity, European ‘soft’ luxury goods companies are an excellent structural investment opportunity. Fractal Trading System* We are delighted to report that the fractal trading system perfectly identified the sharp recent rebound in cryptocurrencies. Our long Litecoin and Ethereum position has hit its 60 percent profit target with Litecoin up 75 percent and Ethereum up 50 percent since trade initiation on December 19. Additionally, long industrials versus utilities has also hit its profit target. With no new trades this week, the fractal trading system now has five open positions. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-12 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnote 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles” January 11, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Buying European Clothes: An Investment Megatrend” December 6, 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations