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Highlights China's old economy continues to slow in the leadup to the negative effect of U.S. import tariffs on Chinese export growth. Weaker trade data over the coming few months is likely to weigh further on investor sentiment. Our Li Keqiang leading indicator has risen off of its low, but not in a broad-based fashion. While the RMB depreciation has caused Chinese monetary conditions indexes to move sharply higher, money and credit growth remain weak. The recent breakdown in Chinese consumer staples stocks is an exception to the broad trend of low-beta sector outperformance. Fears have risen that the Chinese consumer is faltering, a concern that we will address in a Special Report next week. Feature Tables 1 and 2 highlight key developments in China's economy and its financial markets over the past month. On the growth front, the September update to Bloomberg's measure of the Li Keqiang index (LKI), and our newly created alternative LKI, makes it clear that China's economy continues to slow in the leadup to the negative shock from the external sector. The fact that both LKIs peaked early in 2017 highlights that the slowdown was precipitated by monetary tightening, which has only recently reversed. This easing in monetary conditions has likely improved the liquidity situation in China, but it remains to be seen whether it will prompt any meaningful acceleration in credit growth. Table 1The Trend In Domestic Demand, And The Outlook For Trade, Is Negative Table 2Financial Market Performance Summary From an investment strategy perspective, our recommendations remain unchanged. Despite deeply oversold conditions in China's stock markets, investors should avoid outright long positions for now due to the high odds of additional negative catalysts over the coming few months. We expect further weakness in the RMB, and expect USD-CNY to break through 7, suggesting that investors trading within the Chinese equity universe should only favor domestic stocks in currency-hedged terms for now. Finally, we continue to recommend an overweight stance towards low-beta sectors within the investable market, and believe that onshore corporate bonds are a buy despite pervasive default concerns. In reference to Tables 1 and 2, we provide several detailed observations concerning developments in China's macro and financial market data below: Bloomberg's measure of the Li Keqiang index (LKI) fell in September, confirming that activity in China's old economy is trending lower. A downtrend in industrial activity is even more apparent in our alternative LKI (Chart 1), which is constructed using total freight (instead of railway freight) and secondary industry electricity consumption (instead of overall electricity production). Chart 1China's Old Economy Is Slowing, Before The Trade Shock Hits Our BCA Li Keqiang leading indicator has risen somewhat from its June low, driven by the two monetary conditions indexes (MCIs) included in the indicator. Both of these MCIs have, in turn, been driven by the substantial weakness in the RMB over the past four months. This sharp improvement has not been matched by the other components of the indicator: Chart 2 illustrates that the low end of the component range remains quite weak, in contrast to mid-2015 when both the high and low ends of the range were in a clear uptrend. Chart 2A Narrow Pickup In Our LKI Leading Indicator Nearly all of the housing market indicators included in Table 1 are above their 12-month moving average, with the exception of pledged supplementary lending by the PBOC. Pledged supplementary lending itself sequentially increased quite meaningfully in October, underscoring that policymakers are keen to avoid the risk of overtightening the economy at a time when external demand is likely to weaken considerably. Still, smoothed residential sales volume growth has ticked down for two months in a row, suggesting that the extremely stretched pace of floor space started is likely to moderate over the coming months. Chinese export growth remains buoyant, despite several manufacturing and general business condition surveys showing a substantial deterioration over the past few months. As we go to press, China's October trade data has not yet been released, but we expect exports to weaken considerably in the coming few months. This could further weigh on investor sentiment if the slowdown exceeds the market's expectations. Within China's equity market universe, both domestic and investable stocks are deeply oversold in absolute terms, having declined 30% and 28% from their late-January peaks, respectively. Our technical indicators for both markets suggest that Chinese stocks have actually reached 1 standard deviation oversold, a level that has historically served as a platform for a rebound. Still, this speaks merely to the odds of a rebound, not when one will occur, and we can identify further negative catalysts for the equity over the coming 3 months. Avoid outright long positions for now. Despite having fallen significantly themselves, Taiwan and Hong Kong's equity markets have materially outperformed Chinese investable stocks since the beginning of the year (Chart 3). However, Taiwan's outperformance trend has recently moved in the opposite direction, as global investors begin to price in the fact that tensions between the U.S. and China are strategic and long-term in nature, not merely focused on trade.1 Taiwan is extremely exposed to this rivalry, warranting a higher equity risk premium. Chart 3Taiwan's Recent Outperformance Is Likely Reversing Within Chinese investable stocks, low-beta equity sectors have in general continued to outperform over the past month. Our long MSC China low-beta sectors / short MSCI China trade is up 10% since initiation on June 27, and we expect further gains in the near-term. One exception to this trend is the relative performance of domestic and investable consumer staples stocks, which have recently underperformed their respective broad markets (Chart 4). The selloff has been sharp in the case of the domestic market, and has been in response to heightened fears that household consumption is weakening, a sector of the economy that heretofore had been reliably strong. In response to these developments, please note that BCA's China Investment Strategy service will be publishing a Special Report outlook detailing the outlook for the Chinese consumer next week. Chart 4Fears About Chinese Consumers Are Growing The Chinese government bond yield curve has bull steepened considerably since the middle of the year, although it has oscillated without a trend over the past month. To the extent that traditional interpretations of the yield curve apply similarly to China, this suggests that domestic investors are pessimistic about the growth outlook, and expect monetary policy to remain easy. For now, this supports our recommendation to avoid outright long positions in Chinese stocks. Domestic Chinese and global investors remain deeply averse to Chinese corporate bonds, and we continue to disagree that aversion is warranted. Chart 5 highlights that the ChinaBond Corporate Bond total return index remains in a solid uptrend, even for bonds rated AA-. Incredibly, panel 2 of Chart 5 illustrates that global investors who have access to onshore corporate bonds have not lost money this year in unhedged terms, despite the material weakness in the RMB since the middle of the year. We continue to recommend onshore corporate bond positions over the coming 6-12 months.2 Chart 5Chinese Corporate Bonds: A Contrarian Long CNY-USD rose materially last week, in response to speculation that the U.S. is readying a possible trade deal with China. Our geopolitical strategists recommend fading the odds of a near-term trade truce, implying that the odds of USD-CNY breeching 7 over the coming months are substantial. While economically meaningless in and of itself, the threshold is psychologically important and its failure to hold could spark meaningful renewed fears of uncontrolled capital outflow from China. Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report "EMs Are In A Bear Market," published October 18, 2018. Available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Investing In The Middle Of A Trade War," published September 19, 2018. Available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Underweight Marriott International, the hotel heavyweight of the S&P hotels, resorts and cruise lines index reported results on Monday and the company's outlook was grim, calling for revenue growth below analyst forecasts on the back of higher room growth. This is confirmed by our leading data which shows capacity growth accelerating, leading us to be concerned that a recent resurgence in pricing power is primed for a collapse (second panel). Meanwhile, labor costs, which are a relatively greater part of overall industry costs, have visibly shifted higher (third panel). A top line squeeze combined with ballooning costs does not bode well for profit growth. Thus while the valuation multiple has significantly contracted (bottom panel), we remain afraid of falling into a value trap. Stay underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOTL - MAR, CCL, RCL, HLT, WYN, NCLH.
Underweight While we remain constructive on financials that benefit from higher rates, we continue to recommend investors avoid the consumer discretionary sector - the other early cyclical - that suffers when interest rates rise. The second panel of our chart depicts this inverse correlation consumer discretionary equities have with interest rates, especially the fed funds rate. Most discretionary equites are levered off of floating rates and thus any increase in the fed funds rate gets reflected immediately in banks' prime lending rate. Also, most consumer debt is floating rate debt and thus tighter monetary conditions, at the margin, dampen consumer debt uptake and, as a knock-on effect, weigh on discretionary consumer outlays. Not only are higher interest rates anchoring consumer discretionary stocks but rising energy prices are also dealing a blow to this sector. Our Consumer Drag Indicator (CDI, comprising mortgage rates and energy prices) has been an excellent leading indicator of relative share price momentum and currently, the message is clear: the sinking CDI signals that a bear market in consumer discretionary stocks has likely commenced (bottom panel). Bottom Line: The path of least resistance is lower for the S&P consumer discretionary index, stay underweight. Please see Monday's Weekly Report for more details.
The above chart depicts this inverse correlation consumer discretionary equities have with interest rates, especially the fed funds rate. Most discretionary equites are levered off of floating rates and thus any increase in the fed funds rates gets reflected…
Inter-industry M&A activity is reaching fever pitch and this frenzy is bidding up premia to stratospheric levels. The push to the cloud, SaaS and even AI has boosted the appeal of software stocks and brought them to the forefront of potential takeout…
Overweight (High-conviction) Despite recent tech stock ills, software stocks continue to defy gravity and remain in a multi-year uptrend, still above the dotcom bubble relative performance highs (top panel). We reiterate our high-conviction overweight status and within tech we continue to prefer the S&P software and S&P tech hardware, storage & peripherals indexes to the early-cyclical tech S&P semis and S&P semi equipment subgroups. While rising M&A premia have been a core driver of software stock performance, industry operating metrics are on fire which supports the elevated industry valuation multiples. Top line growth is accelerating and running at a higher clip than the broad market. The recovery in the software price deflator (middle panel), a proxy for industry pricing power, corroborates this bright demand backdrop. Impressively, labor additions have been muted, implying that margins can expand further and possibly challenge cyclical highs (bottom panel). Overall, feverish software M&A activity, the ongoing capex upcycle, firming industry operating metrics and pristine balance sheets, suggest that software stocks are a must have for equity portfolios; please see Monday's Weekly Report for more details. Bottom Line: The S&P software index remains a high-conviction overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT - MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, INTU, RHT, ADSK, CA, SNPS, CTXS, ANSS, CDNS, FTNT and SYMC.
Highlights Chart 12015 Repeat?   Credit spreads widened as Treasury yields rose in October, bringing to mind the experience of 2015 when tight monetary policy and flagging global growth combined to cause a large drawdown in spread product excess returns. Chart 1 shows the familiar pattern. The market's rate hike expectations held constant throughout most of 2015. Meanwhile, falling commodity prices signaled weakness in global demand. Eventually, the combination of tight money and slowing growth was too much for the market to bear. Junk sold off in late-2015 and didn't recover until after the Fed scaled back its rate hike plans. It's hard to ignore today's similar set-up. Commodity prices are once again falling and the Fed appears committed to lifting rates. Unless global demand rebounds, we could be in for a repeat of late-2015's ugly price performance. The best way to position U.S. bond portfolios for this risk is to maintain below-benchmark portfolio duration, and to scale back exposure to credit risk. We advocate nothing more than a neutral allocation to spread product, with an up-in-quality bias. Feature Investment Grade: Neutral Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 82 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -98 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 12 bps on the month, and currently sits at 117 bps. Recent spread widening has returned some value to the corporate bond space. The 12-month breakeven spread for Baa-rated corporate bonds is back up to its 36th percentile relative to history, while the same spread for A-rated securities is at its 18th percentile (Chart 2). Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Though spreads are somewhat more attractive, caution remains warranted in the corporate bond space. Corporate profit growth has only just managed to keep pace with debt growth during the past few quarters (bottom panel). In other words, even a mild deceleration in profits will be enough for leverage to resume its uptrend (panel 4). As we observed in last week's report, Q3's sharp decline in non-residential investment spending might signal that weak foreign growth is finally starting to weigh on profits.1 The possibility of rising leverage in the coming quarters leads us to recommend an up-in-quality bias within our neutral allocation to corporate bonds. To pick up extra spread we prefer a strategy of favoring long-maturity credits over short maturities. In last week's report we showed that the long-end of the credit curve outperforms (in excess return terms) when Treasury yields rise. High-Yield: Neutral High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 159 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +161 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread widened 55 bps on the month, and currently sits at 363 bps. Our measure of the excess spread available in the High-Yield index after accounting for default losses is currently 259 bps, above the long-run mean of 247 bps (Chart 3). This tells us that if default losses are in line with our expectations during the next 12 months and junk spreads remain constant, we should expect high-yield returns of 259 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries. If we assume that spreads tighten enough to bring our default-adjusted spread back to its long-run average, we would expect an excess return of 306 bps. Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview The main reason for continued caution on junk bonds is that the default loss expectation embedded in our excess spread calculation is extremely low relative to history (panel 4). Our assumption, derived from the Moody's baseline default rate forecast and our own forecast of the recovery rate, calls for default losses of 1.04% during the next 12 months. Default losses have rarely come in below that level. Further, the recent trend in job cut announcements makes it even more likely that default losses surprise to the upside during the next 12 months. Job cut announcements are highly correlated with the default rate, and while they remain low relative to history, they have clearly formed a trough this year (bottom panel). Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation*   Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* MBS: Neutral Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 37 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -44 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility MBS spread increased 2 bps on the month. A 4 bps widening of the option-adjusted spread (OAS) was partially offset by a 2 bps decline in the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost). The OAS has widened in recent months, though it remains tight compared to its average pre-crisis level (Chart 4). The overall nominal MBS spread remains very low, but for good reason (panel 4). Chart 4MBS Market Overview The two most important drivers of MBS excess returns are: (i) mortgage refinancing activity and (ii) bank lending standards. Refi activity is already depressed and will stay muted as interest rates rise. Bank lending standards eased in Q2 for the 17th consecutive quarter, but remain tight relative to history. In response to a special question from the Fed's July Senior Loan Officer Survey, respondents noted that mortgage lending standards are in the tighter end of the range since 2005. This suggests that further gradual easing is likely going forward. With lending standards easing and refi activity low, the macro environment is consistent with tight MBS spreads. We maintain only a neutral allocation to the sector for now, but will look to upgrade when it comes time to further pare exposure to corporate credit risk. Government-Related: Underweight The Government-Related index underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 55 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -16 bps. Sovereign debt underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 184 bps, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -118 bps. Foreign Agencies underperformed by 94 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -60 bps. Local Authorities underperformed by 28 bps, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +63 bps. Supranationals underperformed Treasuries by 3 bps, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +13 bps. Domestic Agency bonds underperformed by 4 bps, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +5 bps. Sovereign debt has underperformed this year, but spreads remain expensive compared to U.S. corporate credit. In a recent report we looked at USD-denominated Emerging Market Sovereign debt by country and found that only a few nations offer excess spread compared to equivalently-rated U.S. corporates.2 Those countries being Argentina, Turkey, Lebanon and Ukraine at the low-end of the credit spectrum and Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE at the upper-end. We continue to view the Local Authority sector as very attractive. Not only does the sector offer elevated spreads (Chart 5), but it is dominated by taxable municipal securities which are insulated from weak foreign growth and U.S. dollar strength. Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview Municipal Bonds: Overweight Municipal bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 47 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +105 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Aaa-rated Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio rose 1% in October, and currently sits at 87% (Chart 6). This is about one standard deviation below its post-crisis mean and only slightly above the average of 81% that was observed in the late stages of the previous cycle, between mid-2006 and mid-2007. Chart 6Municipal Market Overview But despite the low yield ratio, we see tax-exempt municipal yields as quite attractive, especially at the long-end of the curve. For example, we observe that a 5-year Aa-rated municipal bond carries a yield of 2.55% versus a yield of 3.62% for a comparable corporate bond index. This implies that an investor with an effective tax rate of 30% should be indifferent between the two bonds. Moving further out the curve, the breakeven tax rate falls to 23% at the 10-year maturity point and is even lower at the 20-year maturity point. Further, unlike the corporate sector, state & local government balance sheets are relatively insulated from weakening foreign economic growth and a rising U.S. dollar. While our Municipal Health Monitor has bounced in recent quarters, it remains below zero, consistent with ratings upgrades outpacing downgrades (bottom panel). Treasury Curve: Favor The 7-Year Bullet Over The 1/20 Barbell The Treasury curve bear-steepened in October. The 2/10 slope steepened 4 bps and the 5/30 slope steepened 16 bps. As a result of the large curve steepening, our position long the 7-year bullet and short the 1/20 barbell returned +67 bps on the month, and is now up +107 bps since inception. However, the curve steepening also means that steepener trades focused on the belly (5-7 year) of the curve are no longer attractive according to our models (see Tables 4 & 5). The 7-year bullet is now fairly valued relative to the 1/20 barbell, meaning that the butterfly spread is priced for an unchanged 1/20 slope during the next six months (Chart 7). Our baseline macro assessment is that the yield curve slope will remain near current levels during that timeframe. As such, we close our position long the 7-year bullet and short the 1/20 barbell. Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview Absent attractive value, the only reason to focus curve exposure on the 5-7 year maturity point is as a hedge against an unexpected pause in Fed rate hikes. In prior research we showed that the belly of the curve performs best when the 12-month discounter falls.3 But with our discounter priced for only 61 bps of rate hikes for the next 12 months, this risk may not be worth hedging. Instead, we prefer to go long the 2-year bullet and short a duration-matched 1/5 barbell. This trade is attractively priced on our model (bottom panel) and should outperform in a rising yield environment. The 1/5 slope tends to steepen when our 12-month discounter rises, and vice-versa. TIPS: Overweight TIPS underperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 61 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +76 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate fell 9 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.06%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate also fell 9 bps on the month and currently sits at 2.21%. Both the 10-year and the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates remain below the 2.3% to 2.5% range that has historically been consistent with inflation expectations that are well-anchored around the Fed's 2% target. We think it is only a matter of time before inflation expectations adjust higher into that range, and we therefore maintain an overweight position in TIPS versus nominal Treasuries. The catalyst for wider TIPS breakevens will be persistent inflation readings near the Fed's 2% target. Trimmed mean inflation has only just returned to the Fed's 2% target (Chart 8), but will probably remain close to that level for the next six months. While base effects will pose a higher hurdle for year-over-year inflation during this time, pipeline inflation pressures are also building, as evidenced by the prices paid component of the ISM Manufacturing survey (panel 4).4 Chart 8Inflation Compensation ABS: Neutral Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 6 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +23 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS widened 5 bps on the month and now stands at 38 bps, 4 bps above its pre-crisis low. The excess return Bond Map on page 15 shows that consumer ABS offer attractive return potential compared to both Supranationals and Domestic Agencies, but carry a substantially higher risk of losses. Agency CMBS appear much more attractive than consumer ABS on a risk/reward basis, offering approximately the same expected return with less risk. From a credit quality perspective, the consumer credit delinquency rate remains low by historical standards but has clearly put in a bottom (Chart 9). The household interest coverage ratio has been rising for 10 consecutive quarters, suggesting that the delinquency rate will continue to increase. Chart 9ABS Market Overview We remain neutral on consumer ABS for now, but prefer Local Authorities, Municipal Bonds and Agency-backed CMBS when it comes to high-quality spread product. If consumer credit delinquencies continue to rise without a commensurate increase in ABS spreads, then our next move will likely be a reduction to underweight. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 47 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +120 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS widened 10 bps on the month and currently sits at 94 bps (Chart 10). Chart 10CMBS Market Overview A typical negative environment for CMBS is characterized by tightening bank lending standards on commercial real estate loans as well as falling demand. The Fed's Q2 Senior Loan Officer Survey showed that both lending standards and demand are close to unchanged. In other words, the macro picture for CMBS is decidedly mixed. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 31 basis points in October, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to +23 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 7 bps on the month and currently sits at 51 bps. The Bond Maps on page 15 show that Agency CMBS offer high potential return compared to other low risk spread products. An overweight allocation to this sector continues to make sense. The BCA Bond Maps The following page presents excess return and total return Bond Maps that we use to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the U.S. fixed income market. The Maps employ volatility-adjusted breakeven spread/yield analysis to show how likely it is that a given sector will earn/lose money during the subsequent 12 months. The Maps do not impose any macroeconomic view. The Excess Return Bond Map The horizontal axis of the excess return Bond Map shows the number of days of average spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps versus a position in duration-matched Treasuries. Sectors plotting further to the left require more days of average spread widening and are therefore less likely to see losses. The vertical axis shows the number of days of average spread tightening required for each sector to earn 100 bps in excess of duration-matched Treasuries. Sectors plotting further toward the top require fewer days of spread tightening and are therefore more likely to earn 100 bps in excess of Treasuries. The Total Return Bond Map The horizontal axis of the total return Bond Map shows the number of days of average yield increase required for each sector to lose 5% in total return terms. Sectors plotting further to the left require more days of yield increases and are therefore less likely to lose 5%. The vertical axis shows the number of days of average yield decline required for each sector to earn 5% in total return terms. Sectors plotting further toward the top require fewer days of yield decline and are therefore more likely to earn 5%. Chart 11Excess Return Bond Map (As Of November 2, 2018)   Chart 12Total Return Bond Map (As Of November 2, 2018)   Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation (As Of September 28, 2018)   Table 5Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs) Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "What Kind Of Correction Is This?", dated October 30, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Oil Supply Shock Is A Risk For Junk", dated October 9, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "More Than One Reason To Own Steepeners", dated September 25, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 For details on our base effects indicator for PCE inflation, please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Powell Doctrine Emerges", dated September 4, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
The dramatic decline in semi equipment stocks has not been arrested in the Q3 earnings season, despite relatively positive results. We think the overall negative sentiment around global tech stocks in general and valuation high-flyers in particular has been…
There is no denying that the U.S. housing market has softened this year. There is little mystery as to why the housing market has been on the back foot. The Trump tax bill capped the deduction on state and local property taxes, while reducing the amount of…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Frenzied software M&A activity, the ongoing capex upcycle, firming industry operating metrics and pristine balance sheets suggest that software stocks are a must have for equity portfolios. Rising interest rates along with the Fed's quantitative tightening, the return of volatility, higher gasoline prices, stretched technicals and a lack of a valuation cushion all suggest that it pays to remain bearish consumer discretionary stocks. Recent Changes We lifted the S&P Industrial Conglomerates index to overweight in a Sector Insight on Wednesday last week.1 Table 1 Feature Chart 1Stocks Are... The S&P 500 found its footing last week, but the volatility comeback assures more violent oscillations before equities resume their upward trajectory. Crash-prone October lived up to its reputation but it is now over, and once the midterm election uncertainty passes this week, investors will refocus their attention on the U.S./China trade war and U.S. economic growth. Trump's moderating approach on the former was welcome news last week, and any further de-escalation signs in the trade tussle will breathe a huge sigh of relief for equities. On the investment front, the 10% SPX drawdown triggered our "buy the dip" strategy on Friday October 26 (please see the "Time To Bargain Hunt" Sector Insight), when we put to work longer-term oriented capital. Our "buy the dip" view remains intact, as we still do not foresee a recession in the coming 9-12 months. On the volatility front, the CBOE SKEW index, a measure of tail risk,2 is sending a positive message as investors are no longer buying tail risk protection as they did in August. Interestingly, as the nominal level of the SPX has been increasing over the decades so has the price of tail risk protection (Chart 1). We view the recent collapse in the CBOE SKEW index as a positive indication that the worst may be behind the equity market. With regard to global flows to U.S. shores, the Treasury International Capital (TIC) System data revealed that global portfolio managers were not chasing U.S. equities this summer as they had been at the beginning of the year. The likely current trough in net foreign portfolio flows into U.S. equities should, at the margin, underpin U.S. stocks (Chart 2). Chart 2... Likely Out Of The Woods... On the U.S. economic front, the latest GDP release revealed that housing is indeed softening. This is the first time since the GFC that residential investment's contribution to real GDP growth turned negative for three consecutive quarters. Tack on decelerating house prices and collapsing lumber prices (Chart 3) and residential real estate confirms the yellow flag from our recently introduced Economic Impulse Indicator.3 Chart 3...But Housing Poses A Risk While house prices are decelerating, corporate pricing power remains upbeat. True, investors focused on anecdotes about input cost inflation this earnings season and all but ignored evidence that companies across different sectors have been able, and will continue, to raise selling prices by more than the rise in wage and commodity costs. Thus, corporate profit margin squeeze fears are overblown; they are likely a risk for the back half of 2019, especially if volume growth suffers a setback. This week we are updating our corporate pricing power gauge. While our overall proxy has ticked down, it is still clocking higher than wage inflation. In fact, our pricing power diffusion index shows excellent breadth (second panel, Chart 4). This firming corporate inflation backdrop suggests that businesses have been successful in passing on rising input costs down the supply chain or to the consumer, and thus suggests that investors are mistakenly fretting about a looming profit margin squeeze. Chart 4No Margin Pressures Yet While labor cost inflation is trending higher, wage growth remains contained near 3% despite a multi-decade low in the unemployment rate. According to our wage growth diffusion index, just over half of the 44 industries we track have to contend with rising wages, a visible fall from earlier in the year (middle panel, Chart 4). In addition, the Atlanta Fed Wage Growth Tracker remains tame and the switcher/stayer index recently nosedived to multi-year lows. The switcher/stayer index provides a reliable leading indication for the trend in overall labor expenses (fourth panel, Chart 4). Put differently, corporate pricing power is rising on a broadening basis while leading indicators of wage inflation suggest an easing in wage pressures in the coming months. As a result, there are rising odds that expanding forward operating margin expectations are likely, extending the two year margin expansion phase (bottom panel, Chart 4). Digging deeper into our corporate pricing power update is revealing. Table 2 summarizes the results. As a reminder, we calculate industry group pricing power from the relevant CPI, PPI, PCE and commodity growth rates for each of the 60 industry groups we track. Table 2 also highlights shorter term pricing power trends and each industry's spread to overall inflation. Table 2Industry Group Pricing Power 73% of the industries we cover are lifting selling prices, while another ten industries are experiencing only mild price deflation (less than a 0.6% decline). If we include those ten industries then 90% of sectors are maintaining or raising selling prices. One third of the industries are lifting prices at a faster clip than overall inflation. This is lower than our early-July report. Outright deflating sectors increased by four to sixteen since our last update but only six are deflating at 1% or more. On a slightly negative note, fourteen industries are experiencing a downtrend in selling price inflation, twice as many since our most recent report (Table 2). Deep cyclicals/commodity-related industries continue to dominate the top ranks, occupying the top 7 slots (top panel, Chart 5). Despite the ongoing global export softness, intensifying trade tussle with China and 5% year-to-date appreciation in the trade-weighted U.S. dollar, the commodity complex's ability to increase prices is impressive especially given that the base effects from the late-2015/early-2016 manufacturing recession have filtered out. On the flip side, tech industries dominate the bottom ranks of Table 2. Chart 5Cyclicals Have The Upper Hand In sum, accelerating business sector selling prices will continue to underpin top line growth into 2019. As long as wage inflation rises gradually and does not gallop higher and the corporate sector sustains its pricing power, then profit margins and earnings will remain upbeat. This week we update a high-conviction overweight tech subgroup and reiterate our below benchmark allocation to an early cyclical sector. Software Is In High Demand Despite recent tech stock ills, software stocks continue to defy gravity and remain in a multi-year uptrend, still above the dotcom bubble relative performance highs (top panel, Chart 6). We reiterate our high-conviction overweight status and within tech we continue to prefer the S&P software and S&P tech hardware, storage & peripherals indexes to the early-cyclical tech S&P semis and S&P semi equipment subgroups. Chart 6Software Fever It did not take long for the large CA acquisition to get surpassed by RHT. Inter-industry M&A activity is reaching fever pitch and this frenzy is bidding up premia to stratospheric levels (fourth panel, Chart 6). The push to the cloud, SaaS and even AI has boosted the appeal of software stocks and brought them to the forefront of potential takeout candidates. These are secular trends and will likely continue to gain steam irrespective of the different stages in the business cycle. As a result, software stocks should remain core tech holdings in equity portfolios. Chart 7Capex Gains... Beyond the positive M&A angle that we have been exploring for quite some time in our research, software stocks are particularly levered on capital spending. Chart 7 shows that relative capital outlays and the share price ratio are joined at the hip. Software upgrades offer the simplest, quickest and most effective capital deployment especially when productivity gains ground to a halt. Importantly, leading indicators of overall capex remain upbeat and should continue to underpin software profits (Chart 8). Chart 8...Say Stick With Software Moreover, industry operating metrics are on fire. Top line growth is accelerating and running at a higher clip than the broad market. The recovery in the software price deflator (middle panel, Chart 9), a proxy for industry pricing power, corroborates this bright demand backdrop. Impressively, labor additions have been muted, implying that margins can expand further and possibly challenge cyclical highs (bottom panel, Chart 9). Chart 9Operating Metrics Are Firing On All Cylinders With regard to financial statements, software stocks have pristine balance sheets with more cash on hand than debt, which sustains the net debt-to-EBITDA ratio in negative territory. Interest coverage is great at 10x and free cash flow generation is expanding smartly (Chart 10). Chart 10Pristine Balance Sheets Nevertheless, all of these positives have pushed several valuation metrics to a premium to the broad market and leave little space for any mishaps. On a forward P/E, trailing P/S, and even EV/EBITDA basis, software equities are pricey, but we think for good reason (bottom panel, Chart 10). This rerating phase will likely continue until there is evidence of an end either to the M&A frenzy, or capex upcycle or business cycle. In sum, feverish software M&A activity, the ongoing capex upcycle, firming industry operating metrics and pristine balance sheets, suggest that software stocks are a must have for equity portfolios. Bottom Line: The S&P software index remains a high-conviction overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT - MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, INTU, RHT, ADSK, CA, SNPS, CTXS, ANSS, CDNS, FTNT and SYMC. Consumer Discretionary Stocks Are Still A Sell While we remain constructive on financials that benefit from higher rates, we continue to recommend investors avoid the consumer discretionary sector - the other early cyclical - that suffers when interest rates rise. Chart 11 depicts this inverse correlation consumer discretionary equities have with interest rates, especially the fed funds rate. Most discretionary equites are levered off of floating rates and thus any increase in the fed funds rates gets reflected immediately in banks' prime lending rate. Also, most consumer debt is floating rate debt and thus tighter monetary conditions, at the margin, dampen consumer debt uptake and, as a knock-on effect, weigh on discretionary consumer outlays. Chart 11Rising Fed Funds Rates... Last week we highlighted that, now that the Fed has been raising rates and allowing bonds to roll off its balance sheet, volatility is making a comeback. Unsurprisingly, the consumer discretionary share price ratio is inversely correlated with the VIX index, signaling that more pain lies ahead for this early cyclical index (VIX shown inverted, Chart 12). Chart 12...The Volatility Comeback... Money aggregates also corroborate that the time to buy consumer discretionary equities is when the money supply is galloping higher and shed exposure when both M1 and M2 are decelerating as we have shown in previous research. Importantly, the velocity of M2 money stock is inversely correlated with relative share prices and the current message is negative for consumer discretionary stocks as GDP is finally growing faster than M2 money growth (velocity of M2 money stock shown inverted, Chart 13). Chart 13...And Money Velocity Point To More Losses In Consumer Discretionary Not only are higher interest rates anchoring consumer discretionary stocks but rising energy prices are also dealing a blow to this sector. Chart 14 shows our Consumer Drag Indicator (CDI, comprising mortgage rates and energy prices). Historically, our CDI has been an excellent leading indicator of relative share price momentum. Currently, the message is clear: the sinking CDI signals that a bear market in consumer discretionary stocks has likely commenced. Chart 14Heed The Message From The Consumer Drag Indicator Sentiment and technical indicators also point to more downside ahead for this interest-rate sensitive index. Our sector advance/decline line is waning and EPS breadth has plunged (Chart 15). Worrisomely, sell-side analysts are penciling in an extremely optimistic 5-year outlook with EPS growth north of 30%/annum or twice as high as the overall market. Clearly this is not realistic as it assumes a near quadrupling of EPS in the coming 5 years. Chart 15Bad Breadth... In the near-term, analysts are more cautious (bottom panel, Chart 15). Relative EPS estimates have already given way as AMZN commands very little EPS weight, despite its massive market cap weight (30% of the S&P consumer discretionary sector), and suggests that relative share prices will converge lower (top panel, Chart 16). As a result, the 12-month forward P/E ratio is trading at a 27% premium to the broad market and significantly above the historical mean. Technicals are almost as extended as relative valuations and cyclical momentum has likely peaked, warning that a downdraft in relative share prices looms (Chart 16). Chart 16...With Poor Technicals And No Valuation Cushion Adding it up, a rising interest rate backdrop along with the Fed's quantitative tightening, the return of volatility, higher gasoline prices, stretched technicals and a lack of a valuation cushion, all suggest that it pays to remain bearish consumer discretionary stocks. Bottom Line: The path of least resistance is lower for the S&P consumer discretionary index, stay underweight. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Sector Insight, "A Rout For Conglomerates Opens A Buying Opportunity," dated October 31, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 "The crash of October 1987 sensitized investors to the potential for stock market crashes and forever changed their view of S&P 500® returns. Investors now realize that S&P 500 tail risk - the risk of outlier returns two or more standard deviations below the mean - is significantly greater than under a lognormal distribution. The Cboe SKEW Index ("SKEW") is an index derived from the price of S&P 500 tail risk. Similar to VIX®, the price of S&P 500 tail risk is calculated from the prices of S&P 500 out-of-the-money options. SKEW typically ranges from 100 to 150. A SKEW value of 100 means that the perceived distribution of S&P 500 log-returns is normal, and the probability of outlier returns is therefore negligible. As SKEW rises above 100, the left tail of the S&P 500 distribution acquires more weight, and the probabilities of outlier returns become more significant. One can estimate these probabilities from the value of SKEW. Since an increase in perceived tail risk increases the relative demand for low strike puts, increases in SKEW also correspond to an overall steepening of the curve of implied volatilities, familiar to option traders as the "skew"." Source: CBOE, http://www.cboe.com/products/vix-index-volatility/volatility-indicators/skew 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Icarus Moment?" dated October 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps