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We do not want to overstay our welcome on the S&P rails index for a number of reasons. First, it is quite perplexing why this capital-intensive industry has been cutting capex as the rest of the non-financial corporate sector has been growing gross…
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Overbought technicals, pricey valuations, decelerating global growth, declining capex, rising indebtedness and softening operating metrics argue for hopping off the S&P railroads index. Rising refined product stocks, ebbing gasoline demand, and excessive analyst profit optimism underscore that more pain lies ahead for refiners. Recent Changes Book profits of 15% in the S&P railroads index and downgrade to neutral today. TABLE 1 FEATURE Equities continue to digest the recent healthy pullback, and should remain range-bound before building a base in order to resume their bull market run. As we highlighted in our October 9thWeekly Report, "stock market crash-prone October is upon us, and thus a pick-up in volatility would not come as a surprise".1 Simply put, the difference between perception and reality propagates as volatility. Volatility has indeed come roaring back. There are high odds that vol will settle at a higher level, and bouts of volatility will be more frequent. The most important determinant of vol is interest rates, as we first highlighted on March 5th this year.2 For almost a decade, the Fed kept the fed funds rate close to zero in order to suppress volatility. QE and excess liquidity injections into the financial system and in the economy also aided in bringing down volatility across assets classes. Now this process is working in reverse. Not only is the Fed tightening monetary policy by increasing the fed funds rate, but it is also allowing maturing bonds to fall off its balance sheet (what some market participants have defined as quantitative tightening). In other words, as the Fed is mopping up excess liquidity, volatility is making a comeback (Chart 1). Chart 1VIX The Comeback Kid A relatively flat yield curve also points to higher volatility in the months ahead. This relationship is intuitive, given that a flat curve signals that the cycle is long in the tooth and a recession may be approaching. While both of these interest rate relationships with vol have a long lead time, the message is clear: investors should get accustomed to higher volatility at this stage of the cycle (yield curve shown on inverted scale, Chart 2). Chart 2Yield Curve And Vol Joined At The Hip Following up from last week, our Economic Impulse Indicator (EII) caught the attention of a number of our clients, igniting a healthy exchange. One criticism is that this Indicator has had some big misses in the past. This is true, but the recent history (since mid-1990s) has enjoyed an extremely high correlation. Importantly, if we show SPX profits as an impulse, the fit with the EII increases considerably (bottom panel, Chart 3). In addition, the EII moves in lockstep with the impulse of S&P 500 momentum (second panel, Chart 3). Chart 3Economic Impulse Yellow Flag Nevertheless, our worry remains intact and the risk of modest economic disappointment sometime early next year is rising (Chart 4). On that front, another indicator that continues to show signs of stress is the credit card chargeoff rate of U.S. commercial banks, excluding the 100 largest outfits. According to the Fed, both delinquencies and chargeoffs are near recessionary levels, a message large banks do not corroborate, at least not yet (Chart 5). Chart 4Economic Growth Trouble Chart 5Watch Credit Quality True, we do not think the consumer is at the cusp of retrenching as a tight labor market and rising wage inflation should boost disposable income, but rising interest rates are a clear headwind. Importantly, the fact that regional banks are sniffing out some credit quality trouble is disconcerting especially given the recent anecdote of commercial real estate (CRE) chargeoffs at Bank OZK, a regional bank that epitomizes the CRE excesses of the current cycle. We will continue to monitor our Indicators for further evidence of deteriorating credit quality. While all these risks are worrisome, and a surge in the U.S. dollar is a key EPS risk for 2019, last Friday we triggered our "buy the dip" strategy for long-term oriented capital that we have been touting recently - as the SPX hit the 10% drawdown mark since the late-September peak - predicated on BCA's view of no recession in the coming 12 months.3 In fact, none of the boxes in the three signposts we track to call the end of the cycle have been checked yet (please refer to last week's report for a recap).4 In addition, the multiple has reset significantly lower (down 20% from the cyclical peak set in January) flirting with the late-2015/early-2016 lows (Chart 6), leaving the onus on EPS to do the heavy lifting. Chart 6Wholesale Liquidation Should Bring Out Bargain Hunters On that front, Q3 earnings season has been solid, despite the input cost inflation worries that MMM and CAT rekindled recently (please look forward to reading next week's pricing power update where we gauge if the U.S. corporate sector will be in a position to pass on input cost inflation down the supply chain or to the consumer). This week we downgrade a transportation sub-group that has been on fire, and update our view on an energy index we continue to dislike. Time To Get Off The Rails We have been riding the rails juggernaut for roughly 16 months, but the time has come to get off board. Chart 7 shows that technical conditions are overbought and relative valuations are pricey, hovering near previous extremes as investors are extrapolating good times far into the future. Such euphoric readings have historically been synonymous with a high relative performance mark for this key transportation sub-index and are a cause for concern. Chart 7Overvalued And Overbought We do not want to overstay our welcome on the S&P rails index for a number of reasons. First, its is quite perplexing why this capital intensive industry has been cutting capex as the rest of the non-financial corporate sector has been growing gross fixed capital formation at near double-digit rates (second panel, Chart 8). Chart 8Capex Blues Adding insult to injury, railroad CEOs have been changing the capital structure of their respective firms by borrowing extensively in order to retire equity (in order to satisfy shareholders) and thus artificially massaging EPS higher. Going through the recent history of the constituents' financial statements is worrying. Net debt-to-EBITDA is up 75% since early-2015 near 2.2x and higher than the overall market, largely driven by rising indebtedness (Chart 8). Taken together, lack of investment and a higher debt burden are painting a grim backdrop, especially if cash flow growth suffers a mishap. Second, the global manufacturing outlook has downshifted on the back of Trump's trade rhetoric and China's larger than anticipated slowdown. Tack on our souring margin proxy and relative EPS euphoria resting mostly on equity retirement is under attack (second panel, Chart 9). Chart 9Warning Signals... Third, two of our key industry Indicators have suddenly turned south. Our Railroad Indicator has dropped into the contraction zone and our Rail Shipment Diffusion Indicator has fallen off a cliff lately (Chart 10). The implication is that rail freight demand is likely on the verge of cresting. Chart 10...Abound... Fourth, industry operating metrics are deteriorating, at the margin. Intermodal rail shipments have rolled over. In fact, toppy consumer confidence alongside decreasing traffic at the Port of Los Angeles signal that the path of least resistance is lower for this key rail freight category, comprising 50% of total carloads (Chart 11). In addition, coal shipments are moribund, despite the recent slingshot recovery in natural gas prices that should have enticed utilities to switch out of nat gas and into coal for electricity generation (not shown). Chart 11...Even In Intermodel... However, there are some positive offsets that prevent us from turning outright bearish on the S&P rails index. This transportation sub group is an oligopoly and is in the driver's seat with regard to pricing power (middle panel, Chart 12). In other words, it has the ability to pass rising diesel costs through to its clients as a fuel surcharge. Alternative modes of transportation like air freight and trucking are available, at least for some rail categories, but the switching costs are typically prohibitive and the relative price advantages few and far between. Chart 12...But There Are Offsets Further, rail pricing power is a key input to our railroad EPS model and the message from our model is that EPS have more upside, at least until Q1/2019. Thus, we refrain from swinging all the way to a below benchmark allocation. Adding it up, overbought technicals, pricey valuations, declining capex rising indebtedness and softening operating metrics argue for hopping off the rails. Bottom Line: Lock in gains of 15% since inception in the S&P rails index and downgrade to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5RAIL - UNP, CSX, NSC, KSU. Refiners Crack Under Pressure Pure-play refiners remain our sole underweight within the energy space, and despite recent M&A activity, they have trailed the broad market by 9% since the early-July inception. More downside looms, and we continue to recommend a below benchmark allocation in the S&P oil & gas refining & marketing index. We remain puzzled with sell-side analysts' extreme long-term EPS euphoria in this niche energy space. Historically, when an index catapults to a 25%/annum 5-year forward EPS growth rate, it is time to run for cover: the tech sector in the late 1990s, biotech stocks in the early-2000s and in 2014 and, most recently, semi equipment stocks in late-2017 all painfully demonstrate that stocks hit a wall when profit euphoria is so elevated (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chart 13Too Good To Be True Refiners are currently trading at a 45%/annum long-term EPS growth rate. While at first we thought base effects were the culprit, a closer inspection reveals that those effects were filtered out late last year and the recent increase in expected growth rate from 20% to north of 45% defies logic (middle panel, Chart 13). We expect a sharp revision to a rate below the broad market in the coming months, as refining stocks also continue to correct lower. There are a few reasons why we anticipate such a gravitational pull back down to earth. Refined product consumption is falling and that exerts a downward pull on refining profitability. This letdown in demand is materializing at a time when gasoline inventories are rising at a high mid-single digit rate (gasoline inventories shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 14). Chart 14Bearish Supply Demand Backdrop Not only have light vehicle sales crested, but also vehicle miles driven are flirting with the contraction zone, weighing heavily on gasoline demand prospects (second panel, Chart 15). Chart 15No Valuation Cushion Ultimately, pricing discovery resolves any supply/demand imbalances and most evidence currently points to at least an easing in crack spreads. Chart 16 highlights that crude oil inventories are trailing the buildup in refined products stocks and that is pressuring refining margins. Chart 16Mixed Signals... The implication is that refining industry profits will underwhelm, which will catch investors and analysts by surprise given their near and long-term optimistic EPS assessment. If our weak profit backdrop pans out, then a lack of a valuation cushion suggests that relative share prices will likely suffer a significant drawdown (bottom panel, Chart 15). Nevertheless, there are two related positive offsets. And, if they were to persist then our bearish view on refiners would be offside. The widening Brent-WTI crude oil spread suggests that crack spreads could reverse course if it stays stubbornly elevated. This wide oil price differential has pushed refining net exports close to all-time highs and represents a profit relief valve as the energy space has, up to now, escaped the trade wars unscathed (Chart 17). Chart 17...On Crack Spreads Netting it out, rising refined product stocks, softening gasoline demand, and excessive analyst profit optimism underscore that more pain lies ahead for refiners. Bottom Line: Continue to avoid the S&P oil & gas refining & marketing index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5OILR - PSX, VLO, MPC and HFC. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, "The "FIT" Market" dated October 9, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Top 10 Reasons We Still Like Banks" dated March 5, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Time To Bargain Hunt" dated October 26, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy 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
Overweight The recent global move away from risk assets has been a headwind for the high-beta S&P investment bank and brokers index that thrives when risk appetites are healthy. Still, the return of volatility should be a boon to sector earnings; trading volumes have recently spiked, perhaps heralding the end of the decade-long withdrawal of trading liquidity from domestic bourses (second panel). Tack on a recovery in new and secondary issues and the equity desks promise to be busy for the rest of the year (third panel). Advisory revenues too are in recovery as the late-cycle rise in mergers appears to be upon us (bottom panel). As we have previously written, we continue to await merger mania as an anecdotal indicator on our checklist for the end of the cycle; we are still not there yet. Overall, despite the vagaries of the market, earnings in the S&P investment bank and brokers index should overwhelm; stay overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5INBK - ETFC, SCHW, GS, RJF, MS.
Highlights Five risks to our bullish dollar stance need to be monitored: further weakness in the S&P 500; rebounding gold prices; stabilizing EM exchange rates and bond prices; Spanish bank stocks at multi-decade lows; and large, long-exposure by speculators to the greenback. However, China's lackluster response to stimulus and the U.S.'s domestic strength still favor the dollar. In fact, the key force likely to cause U.S. growth to converge toward weaker global growth will be a stronger U.S. dollar. Feature BCA has a positive bias toward the dollar for the coming six to nine months. Admittedly, the dollar is expensive, but cyclical determinants still favor a rally. The Federal Reserve is hiking rates as the U.S. economy is at full capacity and goosed up by fiscal injections. Yet global growth is very wobbly. This combination is a potent cocktail for USD strength. Despite these key sources of support, we cannot be dogmatic, especially as financial markets are anticipatory mechanisms, and therefore the dollar could have already priced in some of these developments. As such, this week we explore the key risks to our dollar view. While serious threats for the dollar exist over the upcoming two to three quarters, the key macro and financial drivers remain dollar bullish. The Threats 1) The S&P Sells Off Further The MSCI EAFE index, expressed in USD terms, is down nearly 20% since its January 2018 highs. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 has fallen 9% since its recent all-time high, or 7% vis-Ã -vis where it stood in late January. The risk is that as the global economic slowdown deepens, investors end up selling their good assets along with their bad ones. This means the S&P 500 could fall more. In fact, our colleague Peter Berezin writes in BCA's Global Investment Strategy that U.S. equities could fall an additional 6% from current levels before finding a durable support.1 The problem for the dollar is not whether stock prices fall. It is about what it means for the Fed. Until earlier this week, equity weakness had no impact at all on bonds. However, now, weak stock prices are dragging down U.S. bond yields. Moreover, while the U.S. yield curve slope steepened between August 24 and October 5, it is flattening anew (Chart I-1). All these market moves suggest investors are beginning to price out anticipated interest rate hikes. If U.S. stocks were to fall further, these dynamics would most likely deepen. However, since there is little monetary tightening to price out of the European or Japanese interest rate curves, such a move would likely lead to a dollar-bearish narrowing of interest rate differentials. Chart I-1It Took A Stock Market Rout For Investors To Reconsider The Fed's Path 2) Gold Is Rebounding Keynes might have called gold a barbarous relic of a bygone era, but as an extremely long-duration asset with no cash flow, the yellow metal remains an important gauge of global monetary and liquidity conditions. As the stock of dollar foreign-currency debt is large, a strong dollar is synonymous with tightening global liquidity conditions. Unsurprisingly, since 2017, gold and the dollar have been tightly negatively correlated (Chart I-2). However, since October, this correlation has been breaking down. Both the dollar and gold are moving up. This suggests that the recent increase in U.S. interest rates and in the dollar might not be as deleterious for the world as markets are currently anticipating. Chart I-2Is Gold Not Hating A Strong Dollar Anymore? Moreover, gold prices often lead EM asset prices. Since gold prices are highly sensitive to global liquidity, this makes sense. When the yellow metal sniffs out whiffs of reflation, it is only a matter of time before EM assets do as well. Since a rally in EM assets would lead to an easing in EM financial conditions, this easing would improve the global growth outlook (Chart I-3). Hence, rising gold prices might be a sign that while investors are increasingly negative on global industrial activity, the light at the end of the tunnel could be around the corner. The dollar would suffer if the outlook for global growth were to improve. Chart I-3EM Financial Conditions Hold The Key To Global Growth 3) EM Currencies And EM High-Yield Bonds Stabilizing Something strange is happening. While EM equity prices are still falling, EM high-yield bonds and currencies are not. In fact, EM FX and EM debt prices bottomed at the beginning of September, despite rising U.S. interest rates. However, since then, EM stock prices denominated in USD terms have fallen nearly 10% (Chart I-4). EM exchange rates and yields are the most important determinants of EM financial conditions. This suggests that despite EM stock prices falling fast, EM financial conditions may not be deteriorating as quickly as assumed. Chart I-4Are EM Financial Conditions Easing? This market action is in fact consistent with the development we highlighted in the gold market. We must therefore maintain a watchful eye on EM bonds and EM FX. Further meaningful improvement in these assets, while not BCA's base-case, would dangerously challenge our view that global industrial activity slows further, undermining our dollar-bullish view. 4) Spanish Banks Near Post-2008 Lows As we highlighted in August, Spanish banks are the most exposed major banks in the world to EM woes (Chart I-5).2 The exposure of the Spanish banking sector to the weakest EM economies represents 170% of capital and reserves, which is driving the entire euro area's exposure to these markets to 32% of Eurozone banks' capital and reserves. Chart I-5Who Has More Exposure To EM? The weakening in EM expected growth and the fall in EM currencies is a risk for Spanish banks. However, Spanish banks also maintain a large chunk of their EM exposure in wholly or partly owned subsidiaries. This means that while an EM crisis will definitely have an important impact on Spanish bank earnings, the impact on the balance sheet of Spanish banks is likely to be more limited. However, Spanish banks now trade in line with the levels that prevailed in Q1 2009, Q3 2012 and Q1 2016 (Chart I-6). In other words, Spanish banks are already pricing in a crisis, especially after the Spanish Supreme Court ruled that banks - not customers - must pay mortgage duties. Chart I-6Spanish Banks Are Discounting Plenty Of Bad News While markets may not be the most efficient mechanism when it comes to pricing future shocks, markets are very efficient at lateral pricing - i.e. the pricing of an event in one market, even if wrong, will be equally reflected in other markets. If the impact of an EM crisis is fully priced into Spanish banks, the impact of such a crisis is likely to also be reflected in the expectations of what the European Central Bank will do over the coming quarters, and thus it is also priced into the euro. The pessimism already present in Spanish banks and euro area financial equities may explain why the euro has not cracked below its August 17 lows, while global stock prices have. The bad news could simply already be baked into the cake! If Spanish bank stocks rebound, the dollar is likely to suffer; if they break down, the dollar will likely rally more. 5) Speculators Are Already Long The Dollar For the dollar to rise further, someone needs to buy it. The problem is that speculators have already been buying the greenback, and they are now aggressively long the dollar (Chart I-7). This means that it may become more difficult to find new buyers for U.S. dollars, especially as investors may be in the process of unloading their U.S. equities. To be fair, while it is true that the net speculative positions are elevated, they also can remain so for extended periods. Chart I-7Investors Are Long The Dollar Bottom Line: There are important risks to our dollar-bullish view that we need to closely monitor. They are: the global stock selloff migrating to the U.S., which could prompt investors to price out Fed rate hikes; gold rebounding, which might indicate marginal improvement in global liquidity conditions; EM exchange rates and high-yield bonds not weakening anymore, which could result in an easing in financial conditions, ending the deterioration in global growth; Spanish banks potentially already pricing in a dire outcome in EM; and speculators being already long the dollar. Despite these Risks, Why Do We Still Like The Dollar? The first reason relates to global growth. Ultimately, the dollar is a counter-cyclical currency. When global growth weakens, the dollar strengthens. China continues to generate potent headwinds for the world economy. Beijing has been stimulating the Chinese economy, but this stimulus is having a muted impact. As Arthur Budaghyan writes in the week's Emerging Market Strategy report, China's monetary stimulus is falling flat.3 Not only are excess reserves in the banking sector rather meager, Chinese banks are not showing a deep propensity to lend. It is not just about the behavior of Chinese banks: Chinese firms are also not displaying a high propensity to spend and borrow, which is weighing on the velocity of money in China (Chart I-8). As a result, this means that liquidity injections are not generating much impact in terms of loan growth and economic activity. Chart I-8Chinese Stimulus Is Falling Flat Because Economic Agents Are Cautious This is evident when looking at two variables. China's Li-Keqiang Index, our preferred measure of Chinese industrial activity, has stopped rebounding. In fact, it is currently weakening anew, which suggests that Chinese growth, despite all the supposed easing in monetary conditions, is not responding (Chart I-9, top panel). Moreover, Chinese infrastructure spending is also contracting at its fastest pace in 14 years (Chart I-9, bottom panel). Further, the slowing in Chinese real estate sales suggests that construction will not come to the rescue, especially as vacancy rates in Chinese major cities currently stand at elevated levels. Chart I-9Chinese Growth Outlook Is Deteriorating Anew We continue to monitor our China Play index (Chart I-10) to see if China is showing any underlying improvement, but the rally evident from June to October is now dissipating. The impact of stimulus thus looks like it is leaving investors wanting for more. Yet, as Matt Gertken and Roukaya Ibrahim argue in this week's Geopolitical Strategy service, additional stimulus will be limited as Xi Jinping is not yet abandoning his three battles against indebtedness, pollution and poverty.4 Hence, we expect China to remain a significant drag on global growth over the coming two to three quarters. Chart I-10China-Related Plays Are Losing Momentum The second issue that supports our bullish-dollar stance is the mechanism required for U.S. and global growth to converge. As Ryan Swift argues in BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service, U.S. growth will not be able to avoid the gravitational pull of a weaker global economy.5 The type of divergence currently on display between the global and U.S. Leading Economic Indicators (LEIs) is generally followed by a deteriorating U.S. growth outlook (Chart I-11). Chart I-11U.S. Growth Ultimately Converges With The Rest Of The World However, this weakening in U.S. growth won't happen out of nowhere. Either there will be domestic vulnerabilities that prompt the U.S. to become more sensitive to foreign shocks, or the dollar will force this adjustment. Today, unlike in 2015 and 2016, the sales-to-inventory ratio does not point to any imminent decline in U.S. industrial activity; to the contrary, it suggests further improvements in the coming months (Chart I-12). This leaves the dollar as the main culprit to put the brakes on U.S. growth. Chart I-12U.S. Domestic Fundamentals Are Fine Since 2009, the greenback has been very responsive to the relative growth outlook between the U.S. and the rest of the world. The accumulated gap between the U.S. and global LEIs shows the total impact of growth divergences. This indicator has done a good job at foretelling how the dollar will trade (Chart I-13). The dollar tends to respond to U.S. growth outperformance. Only once the dollar has rallied enough to meaningfully tighten U.S. financial conditions does the U.S. growth outlook deteriorate vis-Ã -vis the rest of the world. Currently, this chart suggests we are nowhere near having reached a chokepoint for U.S. growth. Chart I-13A Higher Dollar Needed For U.S. Growth To Resist The Gravitational Pull From The Rest Of The World Since the Fed remains quite unconcerned by the weakness in global growth and global stock prices, we expect that world financial markets will have to plunge deeper, the dollar to rally higher and U.S. financial conditions to tighten further before the FOMC shows enough concern to hurt the dollar. We are not there yet. Bottom Line: The absence of a meaningful response by the Chinese economy to stimulus suggests that China may have hit a debt wall. This implies that Chinese growth remains fragile and therefore a drag on global growth. Hence, international economic activity and trade will continue to provide an important tailwind for the U.S. dollar. Meanwhile, the U.S. economy is not displaying enough domestic vulnerabilities to be overly sensitive to the softness in global growth. Instead, more rounds of dollar strength will be required to force U.S. growth to converge lower toward global economic activity. As such, these two forces remain powerful enough to overweight currency exposure to the USD within global portfolios. That said, the five risks described in the previous section must be kept in mind. At the current juncture, they only warrant buying a few hedges, such as our long NZD/USD recommendation, but they do not warrant underweighting the greenback. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Chinese Stimulus: Not so Stimulating", dated October 26, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "The Bear And The Two Travelers", dated August 17, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "China: Stimulus, Deleveraging And Growth", dated October 25, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China Sticks To The "Three Battles", dated October 24, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Waiting For Peak Divergence", dated October 23, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. has been mixed: Markit Services PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 54.7. This measure also increased from the previous month's reading of 53.5. However, durable good ex-defense month-on-month growth underperformed expectations, coming in at -0.6%. Finally, monthly new homes sales underperformed expectations, coming in at an annualized pace of 553 thousand. DXY has appreciated by 0.8% this week. We are bullish on the U.S. dollar on a cyclical basis. Furthermore, momentum, one of the strongest predictive factors for the dollar continues to be positive. Finally, global growth should continue to slowdown, as the monetary tightening by Chinese authorities starts to weigh on the global industrial cycle. Report Links: In Fall, Leaves Turn Red, The Dollar Turns Green - October 12, 2018 Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 The Dollar And Risk Assets Are Beholden To China's Stimulus - August 3, 2018 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area has been negative: Markit Manufacturing PMI surprised to the downside, coming in at 52.1. Moreover, Markit Services PMI also underperformed expectations, coming in at 53.3. Finally, private loan yearly growth surprised negatively, coming in at 3.1%. EUR/USD has fallen by 0.8% this week. We are bearish on the euro on a cyclical basis, as inflationary pressures continue to be too weak in the euro area for the ECB to start raising rates. Moreover, the fact that the euro area's economy is highly dependent on exports, makes it very sensitive to global growth and emerging markets. This means that the tightening by Chinese authorities should impact the euro area economy negatively, and consequently, put downward pressure on EUR/USD. Report Links: Will Rising Wages Cause An Imminent Change In Policy Direction In Europe And Japan? - October 5, 2018 Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 Time To Pause And Breathe - July 6, 2018 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan has been mixed: The leading economic Index outperformed expectations, coming in at 104.5. However, the coincident index surprised to the downside, coming in at 116.7. USD/JPY has been flat this week. We are neutral on the yen on a tactical basis, given that the current risk-off environment should continue to help safe havens like the yen. However, we are bearish on the yen on a cyclical basis, as inflation expectations are not well anchored in Japan. This means that the BoJ will continue to conduct ultra-dovish monetary policy for the foreseeable future, putting a cap on how high the yen can rise. Report Links: Will Rising Wages Cause An Imminent Change In Policy Direction In Europe And Japan? - October 5, 2018 Rhetoric Is Not Always Policy - July 27, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP/USD has decreased by 1.5% this week. Given the lack of a geopolitical risk premium embedded into the pound, we expect GBP volatility to remain elevated. This means that any hiccups in Brexit negotiations could bring about some downside for the pound. Furthermore, inflation should remain contained, even amid a tight labour market. This is mainly because inflation dynamics in the U.K. are much more driven by the external sector, as imports represent a very large portion of British final demand. Given that the pound has remained stable this year, inflation will remain subdued. We are currently short GBP/NZD in our portfolio, to take advantage of the dynamics mentioned above. Report Links: Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Inflation Is In The Price - June 15, 2018 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD/USD has been flat this week. We are most bearish on this currency within the G10, given that the AUD is highly sensitive to the Chinese industrial cycle, which will continue to slow down, as Chinese authorities keep cleaning credit excesses in the economy. Moreover, policy tightening by the Fed will provide a further headwind to cyclical plays like the AUD. We are short AUD/CAD within our portfolio, as we believe that the oil currencies should fare better than other commodity currencies, given that OPEC supply cuts, as long as Iranian sanction in oil will keep upward pressure on oil prices. Report Links: Policy Divergences Are Still The Name Of The Game - August 14, 2018 What Is Good For China Doesn't Always Help The World - June 29, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD/USD has been flat this week. We are positive on the New Zealand dollar, particularly against the GBP, as there is very little room for kiwi rate expectations to fall. Moreover, this currency should also outperform the Australian dollar, given that New Zealand is less exposed to the Chinese industrial cycle than Australia. Nevertheless, we remain bearish on the NZD on a long-term basis, given that the new government proposals to reduce immigration and add an unemployment mandate to the RBNZ will lower the neutral rate in New Zealand, which will limit the central bank's ability to tighten monetary policy. Report Links: Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 In Fall, Leaves Turn Red, The Dollar Turns Green - October 12, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada has been negative: Core inflation underperformed expectations, coming in at 1.5%. This measure also decreased form 1.7% last month. Headline inflation also surprised to the downside, coming in at 2.2%. This measure decreased significantly, coming down from 2.8% the previous month. The Bank of Canada increased rates to tk% on Wednesday, and highlighted the potential for additional rate hikes over the coming 12 months. USD/CAD has been mostly flat this week. The upside in the CAD versus the USD is likely to be limited as the policy tightening by the BoC now seems well anticipated by market participants. To take advantage of this reality, we went short CAD/NOK in our portfolio. This cross also serves as a hedge to our long dollar view, given its positive correlation to the DXY. Despite some headwinds, the CAD should outperform the AUD, as we expect that oil will do better than base metals within the commodity complex. Report Links: Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Inflation Is In The Price - June 15, 2018 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 EUR/CHF has fallen by 0.5% this week, as investors have grown worried with the recent sell off in equities. We are bearish on the franc on a cyclical basis, given that inflation in Switzerland is still too weak for the SNB to move away from their ultra-dovish monetary policy. Moreover, Helvetic real estate prices should continue to fall, as the restrictions on immigration put forth by the Swiss government since 2014 should continue to weigh on housing demand. This will further hamper the ability of the SNB to tighten its extraodinarly accommodative monetary policy. That being said, EUR/CHF could continue to fall in the near term, as money flows into safe heaven assets amid the current sell off in equities. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 USD/NOK has risen by 0.9% this week. As expected, yesterday the Norges Bank left rates unchanged at 0.75%. In its report, the Norwegian central bank highlighted that although economic growth has been a little lower than anticipated, inflation has been somewhat higher than expectations. We are bullish on the krona against the Canadian dollar, given that rate hike expectation in Canada are much more fully priced in than in Norway even though the inflationary backdrop is very similar. Moreover, we are positive on the krone relatively to other commodity currencies like the AUD or the NZD, as we expect oil to outperform other commodities thanks to supply cuts by OPEC and sanctions against Iran. Report Links: Clashing Forces: The Fed And EM Financial Conditions - October 19, 2018 Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 USD/SEK has rallied by 1% this week. We are positive on USD/SEK on a short-term basis, given that the SEK is the currency which is most negatively affected by the strength of the U.S. dollar. Furthermore, tightening by Chinese authorities should also weigh on the krona, given that the Swedish economy is very levered to the global industrial cycle, as many of its exports are intermediate goods that are then re-exported to emerging markets. That being said, we are bullish on the krona on a longer-term basis, as the Riksbank is on the verge of beginning a tightening cycle as imbalances in the Swedish economy are only growing more dangerous. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term FX Fair Value Models - June 22, 2018 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - May 18, 2018 Value Strategies In FX Markets: Putting PPP To The Test - May 11, 2018 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Overweight - High Conviction The S&P construction machinery & heavy truck (CMHT) index has been waylaid this week and last following earnings reports that the market did not digest well, first from PCAR and most recently by CAT. With respect to the latter, fears over high dealer inventories and tariff-driven input cost increases outweighed surging volumes and margins and the stock fell dramatically. While investor worries about future growth seem to dominate the equity risk premium in the market's meta-analysis, we remain focused on the fundamentals. That is to say, while spectacular volume growth at CAT is decelerating by virtue of lapping last year's powerful results, a decline (or even diminished upward trajectory) in relative profits is not part of the conversation (second panel). This is a result of the company's success in passing through price increases to offset rising input costs as volumes take the driver's seat in sales outgrowing the broad market by a wide margin (third panel). Meanwhile, the pullback in stock prices has pushed the S&P CMHT index' valuation to very affordable levels (bottom panel). We think such buying opportunities are rare and reiterate our high-conviction overweight recommendation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CSTF - CAT, CMI, PCAR.
Overweight The S&P household products index got a solid lift last week on the back of upbeat earnings from sector heavyweight Procter & Gamble (PG), though this was also part of a greater rotation into consumer staples. PG noted volume increases across all of their consumer staples segments with the global consumer remaining remarkably resilient. Despite a clearly healthy quarter, the company maintained their guidance for the next three quarters, suggesting the positive trend has some longevity. This broadly matches the macro signal, with exports of consumer goods staging a multi-year recovery, which should further underpin recent earnings outperformance (second panel). One minor negative anecdote, however, was the reference to the rising greenback that should eat into margins especially in early 2019, but rising volumes on the back of resilient demand should provide an offset. An appreciating U.S. dollar is an earnings risk we have been flagging in recent research for SPX exporters, especially if an EM accident materializes. Still, sector valuations remain depressed, implying bargains are still to be found in household products. We reiterate our overweight recommendation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: PG, CL, CLX, KMB.
Overweight We have been overweight the pure-play BCA defense index since late-2015 and our strategy is to add exposure on any meaningful pullbacks and keep this index as a structural overweight within the GICS1 S&P industrials index. In the U.S., where military spending in absolute terms is greater than the rest of the world put together, defense spending and investment have bottomed and will continue to accelerate. In fact, the CBO continues to project that defense outlays will jump further next year (second panel). While such a breakneck pace is clearly unsustainable, this administration appears serious about upgrading and updating the U.S. military. The upshot is that defense outlays will continue to expand into the 2020s. Still, undoubtedly valuations are on the expensive side. Not only is recent M&A fever the culprit, but global investors' insatiable appetite for pure-play defense stocks has also driven valuations into overshoot territory (bottom panel), though if our thesis pans out, then these stocks will grow into their pricey valuations as happened in the back half of the 1960s.1 Bottom Line: The secular advance in pure-play defense stocks remains in place. We continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation; please see Monday's Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the BCA defense index are: LMT, LLL, NOC, GD and RTN. 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Brothers In Arms," dated October 31, 2016, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Debt saddled small caps have to wrestle with rising interest rates at a time when they lack a valuation cushion. Tack on their high beta status and investors should continue to avoid small caps and instead prefer large caps. Upbeat global demand for U.S. defense goods, firming defense industry operating metrics and a flurry of M&A will more than offset the defense contractors' valuation overshoot. Stay structurally overweight. Recent Changes There are no changes to the portfolio this week. Table 1 Feature In Greek mythology, Daedalus warned his son Icarus not to fly too close to the sun when the pair of them were escaping from Crete, as his wax-made wings would melt. Icarus ignored his father's warning and soared toward the sun that eventually led to his drowning in the Aegean Sea when his wings melted. Is the equity market experiencing an Icarus moment? The S&P 500 is undergoing a healthy reset during crash-prone October, but post-midterms it should make an attempt to vault to fresh all-time highs into year-end. The selloff in the bond market (largely driven by the real component) most likely caused the consternation in stocks, but our sense is that the backup in yields is reflective and not yet restrictive both for stocks and, most importantly, the economy. In the coming weeks we expect a retest, and hold, of the recent lows before waving the all clear sign. Nevertheless, the latest bout of volatility is a cause for concern especially given that the SPX pullback is not sentiment/technical driven as it was earlier in the year when on January 221 and again on January 292 we cautioned clients that the equity market advance was too good to be true and complacency reigned supreme. As a reminder in late-January, equities looked extremely stretched on a number of sentiment and technical indicators. This was not the case, however, heading into October (Charts 1 & 2), and it raises the question: what are stocks discounting with regard to the economic backdrop? Chart 1Leading Into The Recent Pullback Sentiment And Technicals... Chart 2...Were Not As Extended As In Late-January Our biggest worry is that the 2018 goosing of the economy will soon fall flat as President Trump runs out of firepower to further buoy the economy. In other words, we have likely brought demand/consumption forward which should get reflected in softer 2019 output data, especially if there is gridlock in Congress post the midterms. Keep in mind, that most of the fiscal easing that pertains to stocks is front loaded to this year. The drop in corporate taxes is a one-off EPS boost for 2018, as is the surge in buybacks that was driven by cash repatriation. Buybacks are on pace to reach $1tn in 2018, but are likely to fall back to the more typical $400bn/annum rate next year. The U.S. economy and stock market will have to grapple with both of these fading tailwinds in 2019. One simple way to depict this is our newly conceived BCA Economic Impulse Indicator (EII). Chart 3 shows six economic indicators gauging the state of the U.S. economy. The EII comprises housing, capex, manufacturing, confidence, employment and credit; it is equally weighted shown as a Z-score. At present it is wobbling and diverging negatively from euphoric SPX EPS growth rates. Chart 3 Mind The Gap Not only is the economy humming at an unsustainable pace, but the Fed is also tightening monetary policy and letting maturing securities run off its balance sheet at approximately $50bn/month. If the Fed hikes rates three more times by June 2019, as both the bond market and our fixed income strategists expect, the fed funds rate will reach a range of 2.75%-3%. It then becomes plausible that any letdown in economic data could cause the yield curve to invert. The elimination of the unemployment gap increases the probability of curve inversion (see Chart 1 from the October 23, 2017 Weekly Report), as does another indicator of labor market tightness that recently dropped below zero (Chart 4). Chart 4Full Employment And Yield Curve Joined At The Hip But, we are not there yet and want to be systematic in calling the end of the business cycle, and thus equity bull market, using the three signposts we deemed most important earlier in the year: a yield curve inversion (leading indicator), doubling in year-over-year oil prices based on monthly dataset (coincident indicator) and a mega-merger announcement either in tech or biotech space (confirming anecdotal indicator). With regard to the latter, the rumored Uber IPO fetching a valuation of $120bn may also qualify as an end of cycle anecdotal indicator. Still, none of these three boxes have yet been ticked. Moreover, two other catalysts may assist in prolonging the cycle and breathe a sigh of relief not only in U.S. equities, but also in global bourses: a trade deal with China, and/or a reversal in U.S. dollar strength that would boost global ex-U.S. growth. Netting it all out, while the recent equity market swoon is worrisome it is still too early to call the end of the cycle and we do not think we are in an "Icarus moment". Our broad equity market strategy is to "buy the dip" as we expect EPS to do all the heavy lifting next year with the multiple drifting lower, and we continue to recommend a cyclical over defensive portfolio bent. This week we highlight a deep cyclical capital goods subsector and revisit our size bias. The Bigger The Better The days in the sun are over for small cap stocks. Similar to the double top formation in the early 1980s, small cap stocks have hit a wall and are giving in to their larger brethren. There are high odds that the small over large multi-year ascendancy is over and a reversion, at least, to the historical time trend mean is in order (Chart 5). Chart 5Double Top Since changing our size bias to a large cap bias on May 10, 2018, the S&P 500 has bested the S&P 600 index by over 300bps. Small caps however remain fully valued using different metrics and are extremely overvalued versus the SPX according to the Shiller P/E (or cyclically adjusted P/E, CAPE) methodology of smoothing the earnings cycle over a decade (Chart 6). In fact, this 40% CAPE premium leaves no space for any small cap profit mishaps. Chart 6Small Caps Valuations Are Stretched... Unfortunately, on a number of fronts small cap EPS will underwhelm and significantly trail SPX EPS, the opposite of what optimistic sell-side analysts expect. First, small caps are severely debt saddled as we have highlighted in our recent research. Sustained small cap balance sheet degradation is worrying, with S&P 600 net debt-to-EBITDA close to 4 (compared with 1.5 for the SPX, middle panel, Chart 7). Such gearing is fraught with danger as the default rate has nowhere to go but higher. Chart 7...Amidst Balance Sheet Degradation... Second, small and medium businesses have a higher dependency on bank credit as opposed to the bond market access that mega caps enjoy. Most bank credit is floating rate debt and so are lines of credit, and as the Fed remains firm on tightening monetary policy, interest expense costs are skyrocketing for SMEs. In a relative sense this will weigh on net profits. More generally, given the high indebtedness, small caps are a lot more sensitive to interest rates, and the selloff in the 10-year Treasury note heralds more pain in 2019 (10-year Treasury yield shown inverted, Chart 8). Chart 8 ...And With Rates Rising... Third, relative wage costs are flashing red for small caps. Small cap margins are thin - roughly mid-single digits or 800bps below large caps, and rising labor costs (according to the latest NFIB survey) are warning that this delta will widen, further suppressing relative margins and profitability as large cap wage costs are still well contained (Chart 9). Chart 9...And Labor Costs Perking Up, A Margin Squeeze Looms Fourth, small caps are high(er) beta stocks and when volatility spikes they underperform large caps. When the Fed ballooned its balance sheet and dropped the fed funds rate to zero it suppressed volatility. Now that the Fed has been decreasing the size of its balance sheet and raising interest rates, this is working in reverse and volatility is making a comeback as we have been highlighting in our research, and will continue to weigh on small caps (VIX shown inverted, top panel, Chart 10). Chart 10Large Caps Have The Upper Hand Another way to showcase small caps' riskier status is the close correlation they have with the relative EM equity share price ratio. When EMs outperform the SPX, small caps follow suit and vice versa. Importantly a wide gap has opened recently and we suspect that it will narrow via small caps following the EM higher beta stocks lower (SPX vs. EM ratio shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 10). Adding it up, a high small cap debt burden, rising interest rates, lack of a valuation cushion, and their high beta status all signal that investors should continue to avoid small caps and instead prefer large caps. Bottom Line: Stick with a large cap bias. Stay With Defense Stocks For The Long-Term We have been overweight the pure-play BCA defense index since late-2015 and there are high odds that this juggernaut that really commenced with the George Walker Bush presidency remains in a secular growth trajectory (top panel, Chart 11). Our strategy is to add exposure on any meaningful pullbacks and keep this index as a structural overweight within the GICS1 S&P industrials index. Chart 11Defense Stocks Are A Secular Growth Play The rise of global "multipolarity" - or competition between the world's great nations - and the decline of globalization, along with a global arms race and increased risk of cyber-attacks, have been documented in our "Brothers In Arms" Special Report. These trends all signal that global defense related spending will remain upbeat in the coming decade.3 In the U.S. in particular, where military spending in absolute terms is greater that the rest of the world put together, defense spending and investment have bottomed and will continue to accelerate. In fact, the CBO continues to project that defense outlays will jump further next year (middle panel, Chart 12). While such a breakneck pace is clearly unsustainable, President Trump is serious about upgrading and updating the U.S. military in order to keep China's geopolitical and military ascendancy in check (as well as to deal with Russia and Iran).4 The upshot is that defense outlays will continue to expand into the 2020s. Chart 12Upbeat Defense Outlays... Such a buoyant demand backdrop is music to the ears of defense contractor CEOs, and represents a boost to defense equity revenue growth prospects. This capital goods sub-industry has extremely high fixed costs and thus any increase in top line growth flows straight to the bottom line. Put differently, defense contractors enjoy high operating leverage. No wonder M&A activity is robust: at least four large deals have been announced in the past year that are underpinning both takeout premia and relative share prices (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chart 13 ...And A Flurry Of M&A Is A Boon For Defense Stocks A closer look at operating metrics corroborates that defense goods manufacturers are firing on all cylinders. New orders recently jumped to fresh all-time highs and the industry's shipments-to-inventories ratio is rising, on track to surpass the 2008 peak. Unfilled orders are also running at a high rate, signaling that factories will keep on humming at least for the next few quarters (Chart 14). Chart 14Firming Operating Metrics Importantly, the industry is not standing still and is making significant investments. U.S. defense capex as reported in the financial statements of constituent firms is growing at roughly 20%/annum or twice as fast as overall capex (Chart 15). Chart 15Industry Is Not Standing Still True, industry indebtedness is also on the rise as some of the expansion has been debt financed, but net debt-to-EBITDA trails the overall market (ex-financials). Similarly, interest coverage has been modestly deteriorating, but is twice as high as the overall market. Impressively, defense ROE is running near 30%, again roughly double the rate of the broad market (Chart 16). Chart 16Healthy B/S With High ROE... Nevertheless, undoubtedly valuations are on the expensive side. Not only is recent M&A fever the culprit, but global investors' insatiable appetite for pure-play defense stocks has also driven valuations into overshoot territory (Chart 17). This is a clear risk to our secular overweight view, however, if our thesis pans out, then these stocks will grow into their pricey valuations as happened in the back half of the 1960s.5 Chart 17 ...But Valuations Are Expensive In sum, upbeat global demand for U.S. defense goods, firming industry operating metrics and a flurry of M&A will more than offset the defense contractors' valuation overshoot. Bottom Line: The secular advance in pure-play defense stocks remains in place. We continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the BCA defense index are: LMT, LLL, NOC, GD and RTN. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Too Good To Be True?" dated January 22, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Corporate Pricing Power Update," dated January 29, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Brothers In Arms," dated October 31, 2016, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "A Global Show Of Force?" dated October 10, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Brothers In Arms," dated October 31, 2016, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
  Overweight (High-Conviction) We have written frequently about trade tensions keeping a lid on trade-exposed sectors, with the S&P air freight index chief among them. As such, we have been anticipating a rally following the recent signing of the USMCA, negotiations over which had been causing downdrafts for the index. However, the index has continued to move sideways to lower. Meanwhile, the macro backdrop has improved; sector pricing power is at a seven year-high with no signs of slowing down, reflecting extremely positive demand for transportation services in a booming economy (second panel). Anecdotally (and only tangentially comparable), both rail and trucking pricing power are showing the same shift higher. The pricing power potency is reflected in forward profit margins, which are also pushing against post-recession highs (third panel), though the market appears skeptical, possibly due to high jet fuel costs. While that is a risk, particularly given BCA’s sanguine WTI oil market view, the result is that the valuation has been driven to a decade-low (bottom panel). Such a divergence is not sustainable and, in the absence of a recession on the horizon, we think it will be resolved by a catch-up in index share prices; we reiterate our high-conviction overweight recommendation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AIRF - UPS, FDX, CHRW, EXPD.
Production of both crude steel and steel products will rise considerably next year, as the steel sector's de-capacity target is almost reached and new advanced capacity will come quickly on stream to replace old or inefficient capacity that has already exited…