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In early October, we initiated a pair trade long S&P industrials/short S&P consumer discretionary, underpinned by four key drivers: interest rates, relative demand, relative export backdrop and relative sentiment. Importantly, recent consumer credit data reinforces our expectation that, despite a solid showing out of the gate, this late-cycle trade should deliver outsized returns. In the most recent Fed Senior Loan Officer Survey, consumer lenders are firmly in tightening mode, a trend that has been ongoing since the middle of last year (second panel). Insipid personal consumption expenditure (PCE), which has trailed surging capital expenditures by a wide margin, corroborates this trend. The consequence of a shift from PCE to capex should be a swing in earnings growth in favor of S&P industrials (bottom panel); maintain a long S&P industrials/short S&P consumer discretionary sector pair trade and see our Weekly Report from October 9 for more details.
Highlights Chart of the WeekChina Developments Significant##BR##To Base Metal Prices Reading the tea leaves following China's 19th National Communist Party Congress suggests a looming shift in President Xi Jinping's second term from pro-growth to pro-reform. Having consolidated power, Xi now has the capacity to implement his agenda over the next five years. Given China's outsized role in global base metals production and consumption, the direction of Xi's policy changes will have a profound impact on these markets (Chart of the Week).1 The Party Congress set the tone for economic policy and reforms going forward, from which we can extrapolate future policy direction. However, concrete plans and details will not be revealed until the National People's Congress, scheduled in March 2018. In this report we highlight the main takeaways of the Congress specifically those relevant to base metals. Broadly, these can be summarized as: Xi now has the political capital needed to implement real reform in his second term. Based on Xi's remarks at the Congress during his work-report commentary, we believe the environmental and supply-side reforms initiated during his first five-year term will be continued in his second term. Because these reforms will shrink the domestic production capacity for base metals and steel in China, they likely will be a tailwind for these commodities' prices. However, a focus on sustainable growth - i.e., organic growth that is not dependent on regular injections of credit to keep it going - and the elimination of GDP targets past 2021 risk weighing down base metals demand. Real-estate market fundamentals are more supportive than most perceive. This will prevent tighter policies from triggering a significant construction downturn, which will be supportive for steel and copper prices. China's efforts to expand its economic influence globally through the Belt and Road initiative (BRI) will be insufficient in offsetting a mainland slowdown, should one occur. Feature Balancing Stability And Reform Chart 2Stability Was A Priority...Not Anymore Despite reiterating a need for economic reforms, the focus of Xi's first term was maintaining stability and garnering the political capital necessary to implement his desired reforms. Emphasizing stability is a recurrent theme in Chinese politics, regardless of who is at the helm. The 2015-16 state interventions in the economy - including higher infrastructure spending, provincial government bailouts, currency depreciation and capital controls - illustrated the dominance of stability over reforms, during Xi's first term (Chart 2).2 The 19th Party Congress was the capstone event in Xi's effort to accumulate the support needed to implement long-sought reforms. BCA's Geopolitical Strategy points to three outcomes that support this assessment: With the inscription of Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era in China's constitution, the president has cemented his position as one of the most powerful leaders of modern China. In fact, according to our geopolitical strategists, this induction signals that he is "second only to Chairman Mao as a philosophical guide in the party."3 Practically speaking, this means his economic initiatives will carry more weight than anything China has seen since at least the 1998-99 intense reform period. The leanings of members of the new Politburo Standing Committee (PSC) also are telling. Each of the three most recent presidents is represented by two protégés on the PSC. This is an almost-ideal configuration for reform.4 Finally, the appointment of Xi loyalist Zhao Leji as chief of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CDIC), and the creation of the National Supervisory Commission to oversee the anti-corruption campaign give Xi the tools he needs to implement his policies. Thus, Xi has garnered sufficient ammunition to be much more effective in implementing reform policies during his second term. As such, we expect the pace of reform to accelerate. While the policy details are yet to be known, many of the takeaways from the party congress point toward supply- and demand-side changes. Supply-Side Reforms: Short-Term Sacrifice For Long-Term Benefit? While the aim for environmental regulation is not new - an "ecological" section was included in the work report for the first time by Xi's predecessor Hu Jintao in 2012 - we have reason to believe that, given Xi's focus on sustainable development, he will tackle environmental policies with more fervor than in the past. This signals that Xi may prioritize environmental preservation and pollution-reduction measures going forward, which would continue the efforts begun in his first term. In fact, environmental spending was the fastest growing category in central-government spending at the beginning of Xi's first term (Table 1). Table 1Xi Jinping Favors A Greener China Xi's environmental agenda will get an assist from his anti-corruption campaign. Our Geopolitical strategists highlight Xi's use of the CDIC - the anti-corruption watchdog - in enforcing the reforms as a signal of his resolve to implement change. The stakes are high for noncompliant managers who now risk not only financial penalties, but also arrest and jail time. Chart 3Shifting Gears: From Pro-Growth To Pro-Reform This reinforces the message that Xi is still keen on implementing the supply-side structural reforms first announced in 2015, and that he is willing to change the old-line economic model, forgoing potential growth drivers from traditional industries in favor of greener sectors (Chart 3). As the leading base metals producer in the world, a continuation - and potential intensification - of these reforms will weigh on global production and prop up base metal prices, as they have since last year. In fact, some of these reforms have already materialized in the form of earlier-than-anticipated winter production cuts. Steel production in Tangshan - China's largest steel-producing city - will be halved over the winter, with three other top steel producing cities - Shijiazhuang, Anyang, and Handan - expected to announce similar cuts.5 Similarly, the government of Shandong - a major producer of alumina and aluminum - recently instituted a crackdown program that includes production cuts during the winter months.6 Bottom Line: Xi used his platform at the Party Congress to reiterate his resolve to set China's economy on a more sustainable growth path through supply-side reform. Given that he has accumulated the political capital necessary to implement these changes, we expect to see a renewed push toward a "greener" China. Ceteris paribus, this will weigh on base metals production by reducing global supply and will support prices. "Houses Are Built To Be Inhabited, Not For Speculation" During the party congress, Xi reiterated his resolve to tighten control of the real estate market. In fact, the Chinese government has been trying for years to rein in demand for real estate, which typically involves raising mortgage rates. Tightening measures announced in late September include controls on home sales in eight major cities, which, among other things, prevent the resale of homes within five years of purchase. These controls have weighed on both prices and sales of real estate (Chart 4). More recently, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development and the National Development and Reform Commission announced that they will jointly inspect real estate developers and commercial property sales agents, looking for "irregularities," including artificially inflating prices and hoarding unsold homes.7 Nonetheless, our China Investment Strategy desk does not foresee a major slowdown in construction activity.8 Simply put, they argue that strong demand amid declining inventories will prevent a construction slowdown, even in face of tighter policies (Chart 5). In fact, they do not see much excess in China's current property market to begin with, and thus doubt we will witness a major downturn. This will be important to bear in mind going forward, given that construction is the most important source of demand for base metals - copper in particular - and steel in China, accounting for about one-third of copper demand and half of steel demand. Chart 4Real Estate Policies Weigh##BR##On Prices And Sales Chart 5Housing Destocking Becomes Advanced Fundamentals##BR##Will Prevent A Major Real Estate Downturn Bottom Line: Despite efforts to tighten the property market, a sharp downturn in the construction sector, which is a major metals consumer, is unlikely. Structural tailwinds - most notably from China's continued urbanization - will eventually prevail, and the construction sector will remain a major contributor to China's economy, and base metals and steel consumption. Quality Over Quantity: Deleveraging The renewed focus on "sustainable and sound" growth, especially given the elimination of GDP growth targets beyond 2021, elevates the risk of a potential economic slowdown. The Xi administration has signaled that it is not afraid to prioritize financial regulation - targeting excessive risk and under-regulation - over economic growth. It is likely that it will continue doing so. In fact, Xi singled out systemic financial risk as a hazard to overall stability. While this is not China's first time to announce a deleveraging campaign, given that Xi has consolidated power and will use the CDIC to implement reforms, we expect these efforts to be more effective this time around. Furthermore, China has bounced back from the 2015 - 16 deflationary spiral so well that interest rate hikes and tighter financial controls are now on the table (Chart 6). Chart 6Interest Rate Hikes Are Now On The Table While the reforms are expected to improve Chinese productivity in the long-run, they may shake up the economy in the short run. We are somewhat reassured by the fact that traditionally, Chinese leaders have boosted fiscal spending when faced with slowing credit growth in periods when they aim to combat the negative effects of supply-side structural reforms and deleveraging. However, we remain cautious that, as Xi's priorities have shifted, fiscal stimulus may not be used with the same enthusiasm going forward. Given China's outsized role as a consumer of base metals, a slowdown would have serious repercussions on global markets. Researchers at the IMF find that surprises in the strength of China's economy - measured as the scaled deviation of year-on-year industrial production growth from the median Bloomberg consensus estimates immediately prior to the announcements - have significant impacts on base metals prices.9 This is true for all metals they studied - copper, nickel, lead, tin, and aluminum - with the exception of iron ore, which they put down to the relatively recent financialization of iron ore markets. In fact, they find that the more important China is to a specific base metal's fundamentals, the stronger the impact on prices. Using China's import share as a percent of world total as their measure of China's footprint in each individual market, they find that copper is most impacted by Chinese IP shocks, followed by nickel, lead, tin, and aluminum.10 Bottom Line: Beijing is continuously reassuring markets it will push for reforms - in the form of deleveraging the financial sector, restructuring industry, eliminating overcapacity, and environmental controls - without sacrificing growth. Nonetheless these reforms, which we believe are forthcoming following Xi's consolidation of power post-19th Congress, will be headwinds to growth. It is true that Xi may be willing to tolerate slower growth going forward in order to see his policies go through. Yet in all likelihood, fiscal stimulus will be used if social stability is threatened by reform measures. That said, reform is definitely in the cards. The Revival Of China's Silk Road - Enshrined In The Constitution Along with supply-side reforms, the Belt and Road initiative (BRI) - Xi's solution to a global slowdown through the physical integration of China's trading partners - was written into the constitution. This is a reiteration of Xi's intent to shift China away from being the factory of the world and toward playing a key role in global development. The ambition of the BRI plan is to connect many of China's trading partners in Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and Africa through a modern infrastructure of roads, ports, railway tracks, pipelines, airports, transnational electric grids, and fiber-optic lines. The objectives of the project, although speculative, are believed to be two-fold: It is an opportunity to create new markets for Chinese goods - giving the Chinese economy a push even in the event of a mainland slowdown. This is especially relevant, given the need to export excess capacity, most notably in the cases of steel and cement. In fact, Chinese industrial production will also benefit from the secondary effects of an improvement in demand for consumer goods from countries receiving economic aid from China. Furthermore, Xi hopes the project will help revive the economies of China's border regions. There is a possible ancillary benefit, in that heavy industry - e.g., steel mills and aluminum smelters - could be moved away from population centers to support the BRI. Chart 7BRI Investments On The Ascent Policymakers foresee the project - which was initiated in 2013 - injecting an estimated $150 billion annually into the construction of massive amounts of infrastructure (Chart 7). BCA's Frontier Markets Strategy (FMS) projects the value of Chinese BRI project investments will reach $168 billion in 2020.11 While this would boost China's economy in general, and base metals, steel and iron ore demand in particular, our FMS strategists argue that at ~ $102 billion, China-funded BRI investment expenditure in 2016 is dwarfed in comparison to China's gross fixed-capital formation (GFCF), which amounted to ~ $4.8 trillion last year. Simply put, the BRI is incapable of offsetting a general slowdown in China, were it to occur. In fact, our FMS desk estimates that a 0.4% contraction in GFCF is all that will be needed to offset BRI-related investments in 2018. Bottom Line: With the Belt and Road Initiative written into the constitution, we expect greater follow-through directed toward meeting the goals specified in it. On its own, this is positive for base metals, which will benefit from greater demand from infrastructure projects, as well as the secondary effects in the form of demand for consumer goods from trading partners. However, the BRI, in and of itself, will not super-charge base metals demand. The BRI will counteract some of the negative impacts of a slowdown in China growth on commodity markets generally. However, since the size of BRI investment expenditure accounts for only a small fraction of China's fixed capital formation, we are skeptical of the extent to which it can offset a slowdown, were it to occur in the mainland. Roukaya Ibrahim, Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com 1 In our modelling of base metal prices, we find China's PMI has a large and significant impact on metal prices. Using year-on-year growth rates since 2010, a 1% increase in China's PMI is associated with a 0.54% increase in the LMEX base metals price index. 2 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy's Special Report titled "China: Party Congress Ends...So What?," dated November 1, 2017. It is available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report titled "Xi Jinping: Chairman Of Everything," dated October 25, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Li Keqiang and Wang Yang are both from Hu Jintao's Communist Youth League, Han Zheng and Wang Huning are Jiang Zemin followers, and Li Zhanshu and Zhao Leji are Xi Jinping loyalists. 5 While this is positive for steel prices, it would dampen demand for iron ore, weighing down on its prices. 6 Alumina, aluminum, and carbon producers that meet emission discharge standards are ordered to cut production by over 30%, around 30%, and over 50%, respectively. Producers that do not meet emission discharge standards are ordered to halt production. 7 Please see "China to launch nationwide inspection on commercial housing sales," published October 25, 2017, available at www.chinadaily.com.cn. Noted "irregularities" include fabricating information on housing sales, publishing fake advertisements and artificially inflating housing prices, market manipulation, and hoarding unsold homes. 8 Please see BCA Research's China Investment Strategy Weekly Report titled "Chinese Real Estate: Which Way Will The Wind Blow?," dated September 28, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see IMF Spillover Notes, Issue 6 "China's Footprint in Global Commodity Markets," published September 2016, available at www.imf.org. 10 Interestingly, given the U.S.'s role as a harbinger of the global economy, U.S. IP surprises have a similar impact on commodity prices. 11 Please see BCA Research's Frontier Markets Strategy Special Report titled "China's Belt And Road Initiative: Can It Offset A Mainland Slowdown?," dated September 13, 2017, available at fms.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Neutral The news that talks between Sprint and T-Mobile over a possible merger had ceased has hurt the S&P telecom services index this week (top panel). The potential tie-up would have created a much stronger competitor to the AT&T/Verizon oligopoly in the mobile industry. This summer, when rumors of the merger were first circling, we posited that reducing competition at the low end of the market would be margin accretive, particularly as U.S. consumer spending on telecom services was surging (second panel); in that context, we upgraded the index to neutral. Spending has now fallen back into deflation as competition has intensified; earnings seem likely to suffer in the near term. Anecdotally, both T and VZ reported earnings contractions in Q3 despite solid subscriber growth, corroborating the deflationary price environment. However, the weak earnings outlook has been priced into the index, which is now trading at its cheapest level in more than a decade (bottom panel). Accordingly, our neutral thesis is dented, but not broken; we recommend staying on the sidelines to watch the industry shake out. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: T, VZ, CTL. Telecoms Are Cheap For A Good Reason
Highlights Chart 1Fed Must Fall Behind The Curve Jerome Powell will assume the Fed Chairmanship at a critical juncture for monetary policy. Core PCE inflation is still well below the Fed's 2% target, and yet, the slope of the 2/10 Treasury curve is a mere 71 bps (Chart 1). Such a flat yield curve alongside such low inflation suggests that the market believes the Fed will tighten the yield curve into inversion before inflation even regains the Fed's target. That would be an unprecedented policy mistake that the new Chairman will seek to avoid at all costs. This means either inflation will soon rise, justifying the FOMC's median rate hike projections, or inflation will stay low and the Fed will be forced to take a dovish turn. Either way the Fed must "fall behind the curve" and start chasing inflation higher. The act of falling behind the inflation curve means that long-maturity TIPS breakevens are likely to widen, the yield curve will steepen and the policy back-drop will stay accommodative for spread product. We recommend positioning for all three of these outcomes. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 52 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 288 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread tightened 6 bps on the month, and now sits at 97 bps. Two weeks ago we noted that there is simply not much room for investment grade corporate spreads to tighten.1 Looking at 12-month breakeven spreads shown as a percentile rank relative to history, we see that A-rated paper has only been more expensive than it is today 7% of the time. Baa-rated paper has been more expensive only 9% of the time (Chart 2).2 Further, we calculate that at current duration levels Baa-rated option-adjusted spreads can only tighten another 36 bps before the sector is more expensive than it has ever been. Similarly, A-rated spreads can tighten another 14 bps, Aa-rated spreads another 17 bps and Aaa-rated spreads another 7 bps. All this to say that corporate bonds are essentially a carry trade at this stage of the cycle. The important question is how much longer we can pick up the carry before a period of significant spread widening. With low inflation keeping monetary policy accommodative and accelerating profit growth putting downward pressure on leverage (bottom 2 panels), the carry trade appears safe for now (Table 3). Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Table 3B Corporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 51 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 580 bps. The index option-adjusted spread (OAS) tightened 9 bps on the month, and currently sits at 339 bps. Based on our current forecast for default losses we calculate that, if junk spreads remain flat, high-yield excess returns will be 230 bps for the next 12 months. If spreads tighten by 100 bps we should expect excess returns of 606 bps, and if spreads widen by 100 bps we should expect excess returns of -145 bps (Chart 3). Given that the OAS for the high-yield index can only tighten another 139 bps before it reaches all-time expensive valuations, 606 bps is a fairly optimistic excess return projection. But equally, with inflation pressures still muted and monetary policy still accommodative, more than 100 bps of spread widening is also unlikely. Our base case forecast is that high-yield excess returns will be between 2% and 5% (annualized) on a 6-12 month investment horizon.3 In a recent report we noted that high-yield generally looks more attractive than investment grade after adjusting for differences in spread volatility between the two sectors.4 Specifically, we calculate that it will take 39 days of average spread tightening before B-rated bonds reach all-time expensive levels. The same calculation shows it will take 19 days for A-rated debt. MBS: Neutral Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 4 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 31 bps. The conventional 30-year zero-volatility MBS spread was roughly flat on the month, as was the option-adjusted spread (OAS) and the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost). Last month we upgraded Agency MBS from underweight to neutral, noting that OAS have become significantly more attractive during the past year, particularly relative to corporate credit (Chart 4). The spread widening likely resulted from the market pricing-in the impact of the Fed's balance sheet run-off. Now that the run-off has begun, and its future pace has been well telegraphed, its impact has probably also been fully priced. While OAS is the correct measure of MBS carry because it adjusts for expected losses due to prepayments, it is the change in the nominal spread that determines capital gains and losses. With that in mind, it is difficult to see a catalyst for significantly wider nominal MBS spreads on a 6-12 month horizon. The two factors that correlate most closely with nominal MBS spreads - credit spreads and mortgage refinancings - are likely to stay depressed (bottom panel). Higher mortgage rates would obviously prevent refinancings from rising. But we showed in a recent report that even if rates move lower the coupon and age distribution of outstanding mortgages has made refi activity much less sensitive to rates than in the past.5 Government-Related: Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The Government-Related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 12 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 193 bps. Sovereign bonds underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 5 bps on the month. Foreign and Domestic Agency bonds outperformed by 2 bps and 9 bps, respectively. Supranationals outperformed by 4 bps. The underperformance in Sovereigns was concentrated in Mexican debt, which sold off as the White House took a hard line on NAFTA negotiations. Local Authority bonds outperformed by 62 bps in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 367 bps (Chart 5). Excess returns for Local Authority debt - mostly taxable municipal debt and USD-denominated Canadian provincial debt - have exceeded excess returns from Baa-rated corporate debt so far this year, despite the sector's average credit rating of Aa3/A1. In a recent report we looked at whether USD-denominated Emerging Market Sovereign debt is an attractive alternative to U.S. high-yield corporates.6 We observed that hard currency EM sovereigns and similarly rated U.S. corporate bonds offer almost exactly the same breakeven spread, and also that EM Sovereigns have been getting comparatively cheaper since early last year. Further, we observed that periods when EM Sovereigns outperform U.S. corporates tend to coincide with falling U.S. rate hike expectations, as measured by our 24-month fed funds discounter. At present, our 24-month discounter is at 74 bps, meaning the market expects less than three Fed hikes during the next two years. We anticipate a better opportunity to move into EM Sovereigns once U.S. rate hike expectations have adjusted higher. Municipal Bonds: Underweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 43 basis points in October (before adjusting for the tax advantage). Munis have outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 251 bps, year-to-date. The average Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio edged down in October and currently sits at 87%, still extremely tight relative to its post-crisis trading range. M/T yield ratios look much more attractive at the long-end of the curve (Chart 6), and we continue to recommend that investors extend maturity within their municipal bond allocations. Congress released its first draft of proposed tax legislation last week, and while it will certainly undergo some changes in the coming months, it appears as though it will not be very negative for municipal bondholders. Crucially, the top marginal personal tax rate remains unchanged at 39.6% and demand for munis should benefit from the removal of other deductions. A reduction of the corporate tax rate to 20% remains a risk, but that will likely be revised higher as the bill is re-written. Fundamentally, state & local government health improved sharply in Q3, with net borrowing likely falling to $157 billion from $211 billion in Q2, assuming that corporate tax revenues are unchanged (Chart 6).7 The rate of growth in state & local tax revenues now exceeds expenditures and that should put further downward pressure on borrowing in the coming quarters. However, a decline in state & local government borrowing is already reflected in historically tight M/T yield ratios. Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve bear-flattened in October alongside a sharp move higher in the expected pace of Fed rate hikes (Chart 7). The 2/10 Treasury slope flattened 8 bps and the 5/30 slope flattened 7 bps. The upward adjustment in rate hike expectations benefited our recommendation to short the July 2018 fed funds futures contract. That trade is now 13 bps in the money since it was initiated on July 10. Further, the July 2018 contract is still discounting fewer than two rate hikes between now and next July. If two more hikes are delivered by July our trade will earn an additional 5 bps. If three more hikes are delivered it will earn an additional 31 bps. In a recent report we discussed why the Fed must soon "fall behind the curve" on inflation and allow the yield curve to steepen.8 Essentially, unless the Fed starts to chase inflation higher it will soon invert the yield curve without having met its inflation goal. That would be a severe policy mistake. This means that either inflation must start to rise, or the Fed must slow its pace of rate hikes. Both scenarios lead to a steeper yield curve. We continue to position for a steeper curve via a long position in the 5-year bullet versus a short position in the 2/10 barbell. At the moment our model shows the 5-year bullet trading roughly in-line with its fair value, or alternatively that the 2/5/10 butterfly spread is priced for an unchanged 2/10 slope on a 6-month horizon.9 TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 33 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to -99 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 4 bps on the month but, at 1.86%, it remains well below its pre-crisis trading range of 2.4% to 2.5%. As was pointed out on the front page of this report, the Fed must "fall behind the curve" on inflation if it wants to avoid a policy mistake. Our expectation is that this will occur because inflation will move higher in the coming months. The 6-month rate of change in trimmed mean PCE has already bounced off its lows (Chart 8) and pipeline measures of inflation are soaring (panels 3 & 4). However, even if inflation remains stubbornly low, we think any downside in long-maturity TIPS breakeven rates will prove fleeting. We are approaching an inflection point where if inflation does not rise the Fed will have to adopt a much more dovish policy stance. This should limit any downside in long-dated breakevens. As long as the Fed can maintain interest rates low enough for realized inflation to eventually recover to its target, then we anticipate that long-maturity TIPS breakeven rates will settle into a range between 2.4% and 2.5% by the time that occurs. According to our model, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is currently trading in-line with other financial market variables - oil, the trade-weighted dollar and the stock-to-bond total return ratio (panel 2). ABS: Neutral Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 13 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 81 bps. Aaa-rated ABS outperformed the Treasury benchmark by 10 bps on the month, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 71 bps. Non-Aaa ABS outperformed the benchmark by 32 bps, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 176 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS tightened 5 bps in October and, at 33 bps, it remains well below its average pre-crisis trading range. We continue to favor credit cards over auto loans within Aaa-rated ABS, despite the modest additional spread pick-up available in autos (Chart 9). The main reason is that auto loan net losses have been trending steadily higher for several years while credit card charge-offs are still depressed (panel 4). However, even the credit card space is starting to see rising delinquency rates, albeit off a low base, and banks are tightening lending standards on both auto loans and cards (bottom panel). We expect that tight labor markets and solid income growth will prevent a surge in consumer delinquencies, but these are nonetheless troubling signals that bear monitoring. From a valuation perspective, with the 33 bps OAS offered from Aaa-rated Consumer ABS now only slightly higher than the 29 bps offered by Agency Residential MBS, we advocate a neutral allocation to consumer ABS. Further increases in delinquencies could warrant an eventual downgrade, stay tuned. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 71 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 182 bps. The index option-adjusted spread (OAS) for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS tightened sharply in October, from 74 bps to 65 bps. At current levels it is now one standard deviation below its pre-crisis average (Chart 10). With spreads at such low levels in an environment of tightening commercial real estate (CRE) lending standards and falling CRE loan demand, we view the risk/reward trade-off in non-Agency CMBS as quite unfavorable. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 34 basis points in October, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to 96 bps. The index OAS for Agency CMBS tightened 6 bps on the month but, at 46 bps, the sector continues to offer an attractive spread pick-up relative to other low-risk spread product. The Aaa-rated consumer ABS OAS is only 33 bps, and the OAS on conventional 30-year Agency MBS is a mere 29 bps. Such an attractive spread pick-up in a sector that benefits from Agency backing is probably worth grabbing. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Treasury Fair Value Models The current reading from our 2-factor Treasury model (based on Global PMI and dollar sentiment) pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.69% (Chart 11). Our 3-factor version of the model (not shown), which also incorporates the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, places fair value at 2.67%. The Global Manufacturing PMI increased to 53.5 in October, its highest level in six-and-a-half years. Bullish sentiment toward the dollar also edged higher, but not by enough to prevent the fair value reading from our 2-factor Treasury model from climbing. Last month's fair value reading was 2.65%. The U.S. and Eurozone PMIs continued to trend up, while the Chinese PMI held flat. The Japanese PMI ticked down from 52.9 to 52.8. Most importantly, of the 36 countries we track 34 now have PMIs above the 50 boom/bust line. The global economic recovery has become incredibly broad based, a bearish development for U.S. Treasury yields. For further details on our Treasury models please refer to U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Models", dated October 11, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.33%. 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed Will Fall Behind The Curve", dated October 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 We use breakeven spreads to adjust for the changing duration of the index over time. We calculate the 12-month breakeven spread as option-adjusted spread divided by duration. We ignore the impact of convexity. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Living With The Carry Trade", dated October 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed Will Fall Behind The Curve", dated October 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Yet Another Update", dated October 10, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Living With The Carry Trade", dated October 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "How Much Higher For Yields?", dated October 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed Will Fall Behind The Curve", dated October 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 For further details on our model please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies", dated July 25, 2017, 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)
Special Report Highlights Three factors point to stable or narrower USD cross-currency basis swap spreads: the improving health of global banks, the end of the adjustment to the regulatory change affecting prime-money market funds, and the relaxation to the Supplementary Leverage Ratio rules by the U.S. Treasury. Four factors point to wider basis swap spreads: BCA's forecast that U.S. loan growth will pick up, our view on U.S. inflation, the coming decline in the Federal Reserve's balance sheet, and the potential for U.S. repatriation. We expect USD basis swap spreads to widen again, which suggests increasing FX vol. This would hurt carry trades, EM currencies and dollar bloc currencies. Feature The rather arcane topic of cross-currency basis swap spreads has periodically surfaced in the news in the past few years. The widening in cross-currency basis swap spreads has been highlighted as one of the key factors explaining why covered interest rate parity relationships (the link between the price of FX forward, spot prices and interest rate differentials) have not held as closely after the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) as before. The widening of cross-currency basis swap spreads has also been highlighted as a factor behind the strength in the U.S. dollar in 2014 and 2015. Similarly, the recent narrowing in the cross-currency basis swap spread has been highlighted as a factor behind the weakness in the USD this year. This week we delve a little deeper into what cross-currency basis swap spread measures, and what some of its major determinants are. We ultimately expect the USD cross-currency basis swap spread to widen again, which should contribute to a stronger dollar and increased global FX volatility. What Is A Cross-Currency Basis Swap? To examine what drives cross-currency basis swap spreads, one first needs to understand what these instruments are. Let's begin with a regular FX swap. An FX swap in EUR/USD is a contract through which two counterparties agree to exchange EURs for USDs today, with a reversal of that exchange at the maturity of the contract - a reversal set at a predetermined exchange rate simply equal to the forward value of the EUR/USD. So, if counterparty A lends X million EURs to counterparty B, the former receives in U.S. dollars the equivalent of X million EURs times the prevalent EUR/USD spot rate from counterparty B today. The transaction does not end there. Simultaneously, the FX swap forces B to give back the X million EURs to counterparty A at maturity, while counterparty A gives back X million EUR times the EUR/USD forward rate in U.S. dollars to counterparty B. This forward rate is the rate prevalent when the contract was agreed upon. The transactions are illustrated in the top panel of Chart 1. Chart 1FX Swaps Vs. Cross Currency Basis Swaps The problem with regular FX swaps is that they offer little liquidity at extended maturities. If market players want to hedge long-term liabilities and assets, they tend to do so using a cross-currency basis swap, where much more liquidity is available at long maturities. A EUR/USD cross currency basis swap begins in the same way as a regular FX swap: counterparty A lends X million EURs to counterparty B, and the former receives in U.S. dollars the equivalent of X million EURs times the prevalent EUR/USD spot rate from counterparty B today. However, this is where the similarities end. A cross-currency basis swap has exchanges of cash flows through its term. Counterparty B, which provided USDs to counterparty A, receives 3-month USD Libor, while counterparty A, which provided EURs to counterparty B, received 3-month EUR Libor + a (alpha being the cross-currency basis swap spread). At the maturity of the contract, counterparty A and B both receive their regular intermediary cash flows, and also re-exchange their respective principal - but this time at the same spot rate as the one that existed at the entry of the contract (Chart 1, bottom panel). Chart 2A Bigger Funding Gap Equals##BR##A Wider Basis Swap Spread In both regular FX and cross-currency basis swaps, counterparties have removed their FX risks, except that in the latter, the interest differentials have been paid during the life of the contract instead of being factored through the forward premium/discount. This is fine and dandy, but it leaves a unexplained. The cross currency basis swap spread (a), is a direct function of the relative supply and demand for each currency. If investors demand a lot of EUR in the swap market relative to its supply, a will be positive. If they demand more USDs, a will be negative. A good example of this dynamic is the funding gap of banks. Let's take the Japanese example. Japanese banks have a surplus of domestic deposits (thanks to the massive savings of the Japanese corporate sector) relative to their yen lending. As a result, they have large dollar lending operations. To hedge their dollar assets, Japanese banks borrow USD in large quantities in the cross-currency swap market. This tends to result in a negative swap spread in the yen (Chart 2). This is particularly true if both the banking sector and the other actors in the economy (institutional investors and non-financial firms) also borrow dollars in the swap market to hedge dollar assets, which is the case in Japan (Chart 3). Chart 3Japanese Investors Are Accumulating Assets Abroad Additionally, if there are perceived solvency risks in the European banking sector, this should further weigh on the cross-currency basis swap spread, pushing it deeper into negative territory, as the viability of the main EUR counterparties becomes at risk. The same dance is true for any currency pair. The other factor that affects USD cross-currency basis swap spreads is the supply of U.S. dollars, especially the room on large banks' balance sheets to service these markets. The cross-currency basis swap spread could be close to zero if large arbitrageurs take offsetting positions to arbitrage the spread away, doing so until the spread disappears. However, with the imposition of Basel III and Dodd-Franks, banks have been constrained in their capacity to do this. Indeed, increased leverage ratio requirements (now banks need to post more capital behind repo transactions as well as collateralized lending and other derivatives) mean that arbitraging cross-currency basis swap spreads and deviations from covered interest rate parity has become much more expensive. Furthermore, the increase in Tier 1 capital ratios associated with these regulations has forced banks to de-lever; however, engaging in arbitrage activities still requires plenty of leverage (Chart 4). Chart 4The Structural Gap In The Basis Swap##BR##Spread Reflects Regulation Economic Factors Driving The Spread The factors that we look at essentially relate to the supply of USD available for lending in offshore markets, as well as determinants of relative counterparty risks between the U.S. and the rest of the world. Factors Arguing For Narrower Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads 1. Global Banks Health Chart 5Banks Perceived Health##BR##Determines Basis Swap Spreads The price-to-book ratio of global banks outside the U.S. has been largely correlated with USD cross-currency swap spreads. When global banks get de-rated, spreads widen, and it becomes more expensive to hedge USD positions in the swap market (Chart 5). This is because as investors perceive the solvency of global banks deteriorating, they impose a penalty as the Herstatt risk increases. Additionally, solvency problems can force banks to scramble to access USD funding, prompting deeper spreads. BCA is positive on global financials and sees continued improvement in European NPLs. This means that solvency risk concerns are likely to remain on the backburner for now, pointing to narrower basis swap spreads. 2. Supplementary Leverage Ratio Changes In June, the U.S. Treasury announced a relaxation of some of its rules on supplementary leverage ratios, lowering the amount of capital required to support activity in the repo market behind initial margins for centrally cleared derivatives, and behind holdings of Treasurys. This means that commercial banks in the U.S. can have bigger balance sheets and more room to engage in arbitrage activity, implying a greater supply of dollars in the USD cross-currency basis swap market. In response to last June's proposal, basis swap spreads narrowed by 11 basis points. BCA believes these changes will continue to support dollar liquidity, and will further help in narrowing cross-currency basis swap spreads. 3. Prime Money-Market Funds Debacle Is Over Chart 6More Expensive Bank Funding##BR##= Wider Basis Swap Spreads In October 2016, regulatory changes were implemented that allowed prime money market funds to have fluctuating net asset values. Obviously, this meant that prime money-market funds would be not-so-prime anymore. As a result, to remain the ultra-safe vehicles that they once were, prime money-market funds de-risked. As a result, they cut their exposure to risky activities in anticipation of these changes. In practice, a key source of short-term funding for banks evaporated from the market, putting upward pressure on bank financing costs. As the LIBOR-OIS spread increased, so did basis-swap spreads (Chart 6): as it became more expensive for banks to finance themselves, they had to curtail the supply of USDs provided to the swap market, an activity normally requiring intense demand on banks' balance sheets. This adjustment is now over, suggesting limited potential widening in USD basis swap spreads. Factors Arguing For Wider Cross-Currency Basis Swap Spreads 1. U.S. Loan Growth When U.S. banks increase their loan formation activity, USD cross-currency basis swap spreads widen (Chart 7). As banks increase their extension of credit through loans, they decrease the amount of securities they hold on their balance sheets (Chart 8). This means there is less supply of liquidity available for balance sheet activities, particularly providing dollar funding in the offshore market. In the Basel III / Dodd-Frank world, less-liquid bank balance sheets are synonymous with wider USD basis-swap spreads. As we argued last week, increasing U.S. capex, easing lending standards for firms and rising household income levels should result in increasing loan growth in the U.S. which will result in lower abundance of liquid assets and a widening basis swap spreads.1 Chart 7More Bank Loans Lead##BR##To Wider Swap Spreads Chart 8More Debt Equals Less##BR##Securities In Bank Credit 2. U.S. Inflation There is a fairly close relationship between U.S. inflation and the USD basis swap spread, where a higher core CPI tends to lead to a wider spread (Chart 9). The fall in U.S. inflation this year likely contributed to the narrowing in basis swap spreads. Our take on this is that as inflation falls, it gives an incentive for banks to hold low-yielding liquidity on their balance sheets as real returns on cash improve. This fuels a gigantic carry trade through the basis-swap market. We expect inflation to pick up meaningfully by mid-2018, which should widen cross-currency basis swap spreads.2 Chart 9When U.S. Inflation Increases, Swap Spreads Widen 3. Central Bank Balance Sheets When the Federal Reserve increases the size of its balance sheet relative to other balance sheets, this tends to lead to a narrowing of the USD basis swap spread as the global supply of dollars relative to other currencies increases. The opposite is also true. This relationship did not work after late 2016 (Chart 10). However, during that episode, as the change in prime money-market funds caused a dislocation in banks' funding, commercial banks exhibited cautious behavior and increased their reserves with the Fed. As Chart 11 illustrates, there is a tight relationship between the change in commercial banks' reserves held at the Fed and cross-currency basis swap spreads. Going forward, as the Fed lets it balance sheet run off, we expect to see a decrease in commercial banks' excess reserves. This could contribute to upward movement in the basis swap spread. Chart 10Smaller Fed Balance Sheet Leads##BR##To Wider Basis Swap Spreads Chart 11Fed Runoff Could Widen##BR##Basis Swap Spreads 4. U.S. Repatriations Chart 12U.s. Repatriations Support Wider##BR##Basis Swap Spreads The most revealing relationship unearthed in our study was that when U.S. entities repatriate funds at home, this tends to put strong widening pressure on the USD cross-currency basis swap spread (Chart 12). U.S. businesses hold large cash piles abroad - by some estimates more than US$2.5 trillion. However, most of these funds are held in highly liquid, high-quality U.S.-dollar assets offshore. These assets are perfect collaterals for various transactions in the interbank market. The funds held abroad by U.S. firms are a source of supply for U.S. dollars in the offshore markets. When U.S. entities bring assets back home, the widening in the basis swap spread essentially reflects a decline in the supply of USD in offshore markets, and vice versa when Americans export capital abroad. BCA's base case is that tax cuts are likely to hit the U.S. economy in 2018, even if the growing feud between Trump and the establishment Republican party members is a growing risk. BCA still views a tax repatriation as a higher-likelihood event, as it is the easiest way for the U.S. government to bring funds into its coffers. The 2004 tax repatriation under former President George W. Bush did result in substantial fund repatriation in the U.S. This time will not be different. We expect any such tax repatriation to cause a potentially large deficit of supply in the USD offshore markets, which could create a strong widening basis on the cross-currency basis swap spread in favor of the dollar. Bottom Line: Three factors argue for USD cross-currency basis swap spreads to stay at current levels, or even narrow further. These factors are the health of global banks, the easing in U.S. supplementary leverage ratios and the end of the adjustment of U.S. bank funding to new regulations affecting prime money-market funds. On the other hand four factors points to wider USD cross-currency basis swap spreads: BCA's positive outlook for U.S. credit growth; BCA's positive outlook on U.S. inflation; the run-off of the Fed's balance sheet; and the potential for U.S. entities repatriating funds from abroad. Potential Direction And Investment Implications We anticipate USD cross-currency basis swap spreads to widen over the coming 12 months. We think the easing in the Supplementary Leverage Ratios rules by the U.S. Treasury is the most important factor pointing to narrower USD cross-currency basis swap spreads. However, Basel III rules and most of Dodd-Frank are still in place, which suggest there remains large constraints on the balance-sheet activities of global banks, which will limit the potential for a narrowing of the USD basis swap spread as U.S. banks will remain constrained in their ability to supply U.S. dollars in the offshore market. Chart 13Wider Basis Swap Spreads Equals Higher Vol On the other hand many factors support wider USD cross-currency basis swap spreads, most important of which is the potential for more credit growth. This is in our view a very strong force as it requires banks to ration the use of their balance sheets, limiting their activity in the offshore market. Moreover, we do foresee a high probability of tax repatriation, which would put strong widening pressure on the swap spreads. In terms of implications, wider USD basis swap spreads tend to be associated with rising FX vols (Chart 13). As we highlighted in a Special Report last year, higher FX vols are poison for carry trades.3 As such, we think that widening swap spreads could spur a period of trouble for traditional carry currencies. This means EM and dollar-block currencies are likely to suffer in this environment. Additionally, in China, Xi Jinping is consolidating power and has taken control of the Politburo. This implies he now has more room to implement reforms. Removal of growth targets after 2020, removal of growth as a criterion for grading local officials, a focus on balanced growth, and a focus on combatting pollution all suggest that Chinese growth is unlikely to follow the same debt-fueled, capex-led model.4 This will weigh on Chinese imports of raw materials, and hurt export volumes and prices for many EM countries and commodities producers. This means these policies represent a headwind for many carry currencies. Moreover, historically, wider USD funding costs have been associated with a stronger dollar, as it makes it more expensive to hedge dollar assets. Thus, in an environment where U.S. interest rates are rising relative to the rest of the world - making U.S. assets attractive - wider basis swap spreads are an additional factor that could lift the dollar. Bottom Line: We anticipate the USD cross-currency basis swap spread to widen over the next 12 months. This will be associated with higher FX vols, which hurt carry trades, EM currencies and dollar-block currencies. Chinese reforms will reinforce these risks. Additionally, wider basis swap spreads will create support for the USD. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "All About Credit", dated October 20, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Conflicting Forces For The Dollar", dated September 8, 2017, and "Is The Dollar Expensive?", dated October 13, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled "Carry Trades: More Than Pennies And Steamrollers", dated May 6, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Xi Jinping: Chairman Of Everything", dated October 25, 2017 and Special Report, titled "How To Read Xi Jinping's Party Congress Speech", dated October 18, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Appendix Implications For The Global Fixed Income Investor Chart A1FX Basis Swaps Boosting##BR##Hedged European Yields The outlook for cross-currency basis swap spreads has important implications for global fixed income investors. Chiefly, a wider (more negative) basis swap spread makes it more profitable for U.S. investors to lend U.S. dollars. For example, the top panel of Chart A1 shows that if a U.S.-based investor swaps dollars for euros on a 3-month horizon, and then invests those euros in 10-year German bunds, they will earn a hedged yield of 2.5% (annualized). This compares to a current yield of 2.3% on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note. If the basis swap spread were zero, then the U.S. investor would face a hedged German 10-year yield of only 2.1%. Conversely, a deeply negative basis swap spread works against non-U.S. investors looking to gain exposure to the U.S. bond market. If a Eurozone-based investor swaps euros for dollars on a 3-month horizon and then invests those dollars in 10-year U.S. Treasuries, he will earn a hedged yield of 0.1% (annualized). This compares to a current yield of 0.4% on 10-year German bunds. If the basis swap spread were zero, then the European investor would face a more enticing hedged U.S. 10-year yield of 0.6%. The middle three panels of Chart A1 show the 10-year yields in other Eurozone bond markets from the perspective of a U.S.-based investor who has hedged his currency risk on a 3-month horizon, as per the strategy explained above. The bottom panel of Chart A1 shows that the deviation of the EUR/USD basis swap spread from zero currently adds 42 basis points to the hedged yields faced by a U.S. investor. Charts A2, A3, A4 and A5 present the same analysis for other major bond markets, again from the perspective of a U.S. based investor.5 Chart A2FX Basis Swaps Boosting Hedged Gilt Yields Chart A3FX Basis Swaps Boosting Hedged JGB Yields Chart A4FX Basis Swaps Boosting##BR##Hedged Canadian Yields Chart A5FX Basis Swaps Are NOT Boosting##BR##Hedged Australian Yields The Impact Of Hedging Costs On Returns Of course, the basis swap spread is only one input to hedging costs. Once again, using the example of a U.S.-based investor looking for exposure in European bond markets, we calculate the hedging cost as: (1 + Hedging Cost) = (1 + 3-month EUR LIBOR + basis swap spread) / (1 + 3-month USD LIBOR) Right now the hedging cost in the above example is below zero. This is why German bund yields actually appear more attractive to U.S. investors after taking hedging costs into account. But what's more interesting is that total returns in 7-10 year German bunds (hedged into USD) relative to total returns in 7-10 year U.S. Treasury notes track hedging costs very closely over time (Chart A6). Chart A6Hedging Costs Will Continue To Boost Hedged German Bond Returns As The Fed Hikes Rates This is highly logical. As hedging costs become more negative, it means that U.S.-based investors make more money swapping U.S. dollars for euros. Therefore, a strategy of swapping dollars for euros, and then placing the proceeds in 7-10 year German bunds should continue to be a profitable one for U.S. investors as long as hedging costs continue to decline. Fortunately for U.S. investors, hedging costs should become even more negative during the next 12 months. In our base case scenario, we assume that the Federal Reserve will lift rates by 100bps by the end of 2018. We also assume that the ECB will not lift rates during this timeframe. That divergence in policy rates on its own will drive hedging costs further into negative territory, and it will only be exacerbated if the cross-currency basis swap spread widens as we anticipate. We illustrate the impact of the cross-currency basis swap spread on hedging costs in the bottom panel of Chart A6. The panel shows where hedging costs will go between now and the end of 2018, assuming policy rates move as we described above, and that the basis swap spread either widens to -100 bps or tightens back to zero. It is evident that a sharp widening in basis swap spreads would be a boon for U.S. investors in foreign bond markets. Bottom Line: Deeply negative basis swap spreads make it more profitable to lend dollars on a short-term horizon. This presents an opportunity for U.S. investors to swap dollars for foreign currencies and invest in non-U.S. bond markets. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 5 While the basis swap spread between the U.S. and most countries is negative, it is actually positive between the U.S. and Australia. So in this case the basis swap spread makes Australian bonds look less attractive to U.S. investors. Conversely, the basis swap spread makes U.S. bonds look slightly more attractive to Australian investors.
The biotech complex has had a tough earnings season, having given up almost all of the gains made earlier this year as companies warned that intensifying competition would hurt top line growth. This corresponds with pharma pricing power hitting a five-year low, typically a strong predictor of the index's top line growth prospects (second panel). Tack on a tougher government-related pricing stance and a margin squeeze is likely. There is a bull case to be made that bad news in the biotech square has largely been priced in to the index, which has seen significant compression since the heady heights of 2013-14 (third panel). We disagree; relative to its growth prospects, and compared with the broad market, the S&P biotech index valuation has spiked well above normal levels. This leaves room for further margin compression as investors digest the bleak outlook. Biotech stocks remain a high-conviction underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BIOTX-AMGN, ABBV, GILD, CELG, BIIB, REGN, ALXN, VRTX.
Highlights London house prices have dropped 7% since the U.K. Government started the formal process of Brexit seven months ago. Stay underweight U.K. real estate and consumer services versus German real estate and consumer services. The global bond yield mini-cycle is driving asset allocation, sector allocation, value/growth allocation and country allocation. We are more than half way through the current mini-upswing in global bond yields. Look for opportunities to cut back overall portfolio cyclicality towards the end of the year. Feature London house prices have dropped 7% since the U.K. Government started the formal process of Brexit seven months ago (Chart of the Week). The average London home is now worth £584,000,1 down from £628,000. Moreover, our leading indicator for London house prices which compares the number of new viewings (demand) with the number of new listings (supply) suggests no imminent end to the sharpest price decline since the 2008 financial crisis (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Brexit Begins To Bite In London Chart I-2The Sharpest Decline In London House Prices Since 2008... Unsurprisingly, the many uncertainties surrounding the unfolding Brexit process are having a much greater impact on the London housing market than on the U.K. housing market as a whole. Outside London, the housing market is broadly flat-lining (Chart I-3). The average U.K. home outside London is now worth £256,500, modestly down from £260,000. Chart I-3 ...But Outside London, Prices Are Flat-Lining U.K. Households Squeezed We are writing ahead of the Bank of England monetary policy meeting, at which the BoE may deliver its first interest rate hike since July 2007. But hike or no hike, we can confidently say one thing: U.K. households will be squeezed. If the BoE does hike the base rate in an attempt to counter overshooting inflation, it could tip the precariously flat-lining housing market outside London into a downturn - as this market is much more exposed to mortgage affordability than it is to Brexit uncertainties. Alternatively, if the BoE does not hike the base rate, the boost to sterling from recent hawkish rhetoric will be priced out, and the pound will come under renewed downward pressure. This would keep U.K. inflation elevated, and further choke U.K. households' real incomes. Absent the post Brexit vote slump in the pound, U.K. inflation would be substantially lower than it is (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5). So the pound's weakness explains why the U.K. is one of the few major economies where inflation is running well north of 2%. Unfortunately for U.K. households, nominal wage inflation has not followed price inflation higher. And as we explained in Why Robots Will Kill Middle Incomes,2 nor is it likely to in the near future. Chart I-4The Weaker Pound Lifted U.K. Headline Inflation... Chart I-5...And U.K. Core Inflation But doesn't textbook economic theory say that the pound's weakness should make U.K. exports more competitive - thereby boosting the net export contribution to economic growth? Yes, the theory does say that a currency devaluation should allow firms to trade in markets that were previously unprofitable to them. However, to trade in these newly profitable markets, firms first need to invest - for example, in marketing and distribution. The trouble is that, post-Brexit, many of the newly profitable markets may be unavailable, or come with heavy tariffs. So firms will hold off making the necessary investments, unless the currency devaluation is massive. But in this case, the corresponding surge in inflation and choke on households' real incomes would also be massive. In summary, U.K. consumer spending faces a continued squeeze. If the BoE delivers a rate hike, household borrowing is likely to fade as a driver of spending. But if the BoE does not deliver the rate hike, the pound will once again weaken, keeping inflation elevated and weighing on real incomes. Stay underweight U.K. consumer services versus German consumer services (Chart I-6). And stay underweight U.K. real estate versus German real estate - expressed either through direct real estate exposure or through real estate equities (Chart I-7). Chart I-6U.K. Consumer Services Equities Are Underperforming Chart I-7U.K. Real Estate Equities Are Underperforming Investment Reductionism Illustrated Turning to markets more generally, it is crucial to understand that most of the moves in most financial markets reduce to a very small number of over-arching macro drivers. We call this very important principle Investment Reductionism. Investment Reductionism emerges from two guiding philosophies: Occam's Razor - which says that when there are competing explanations for the same effect, the simplest explanation is usually the best; and the Pareto Principle (the 80:20 rule) - which says that a small minority of causes usually explain a large majority of effects. The upshot of Investment Reductionism is that the seeming complexity of asset allocation, sector selection, the choice between value or growth, and country allocation usually reduces to something much simpler. Let's illustrate this. The global 6-month credit impulse leads the cyclical direction of the global bond yield, and thereby determines asset allocation (Chart I-8). The direction of the global bond yield drives sector selection: for example Banks versus Healthcare. This is because higher bond yields imply higher net interest margins for banks as well as an improving growth outlook, favouring cyclicals over defensives. And vice-versa (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Investment Reductionism Step 1: ##br##The Global Credit Impulse Leads The Bond Yield Cycle Chart I-9Step 2: The Bond Yield Drives ##br##Sector Performance Banks versus Healthcare determines the European Value versus Growth decision. This is because in Europe, Banks and Healthcare are the dominant value sector and growth sector respectively (Chart I-10). Banks versus Healthcare also determines the country allocation between, say, Italy's MIB - which is bank heavy - and Denmark's OMX - which is healthcare heavy (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Step 3: Sector Performance Drives Value ##br##Vs. Growth Chart I-11Step 4: Sector Performance Drives ##br##Country Performance Therefore, the important lesson from Investment Reductionism is to ignore the hundreds of things that matter little, and to focus on the very small number of things that matter a lot. And one of the things that matters a lot is the global bond yield mini-cycle. Where Are We In The Bond Yield Mini-Cycle? Empirically, the acceleration and deceleration of global bank credit flows - as measured in the global credit impulse - exhibits a remarkably regular wave like pattern, with each half-cycle lasting about 8 months (Chart I-12). The global bond yield shows a similarly regular wave like pattern with each half-cycle also averaging about 8 months (Chart I-13). Chart I-12The Global Credit Impulse Has Also Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern Chart I-13The Global Bond Yield Has Shown A Regular Wave Like Pattern It is not a coincidence that the bank credit impulse and bond yield exhibit near identical half-cycle lengths. The global credit impulse and global bond yield are inextricably embraced in a perpetual mini-cycle. A stronger credit impulse boosts economic growth. In response to the stronger economic data, the bond yield rises, which slows credit growth. A weaker credit impulse weighs down economic growth. In response to the weaker economic data, the bond yield declines, which re-accelerates credit growth. Go back to step 1 and repeat ad perpetuam. At this moment, from an investment perspective, there are three points worth making: first, bond yield mini-upswings tend to occur mostly within the credit impulse upswing; second, credit impulse mini-upswings have a consistent duration lasting about 8 months; and third, the current mini-upswing started in May. What does this mean for investment strategy? It means that we are more than half-way through the current mini-upswing which we would expect to end around January/February. And at some point early next year we are likely to enter a mini-downswing. So it is slightly premature to cut back cyclical exposure right now. But we would certainly consider opportunities as we move to the end of the year - especially if our now tried and tested fractal timing indicators signal that the price action in specific investments has reached a technical tipping point. Stay tuned. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Source: LSL Acadata 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Why Robots Will Kill Middle Incomes", dated August 10 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model* This week, our model suggests that the New Zealand dollar is oversold and ripe for a technical rebound. The recommended trade is long NZD/USD with a profit target/stop loss set at 3%. In other trades, long Canada 10-year bond/short German 10-year bund achieved its profit target while short Norway/long Switzerland hit its stop loss. This leaves five open trades. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-14 * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
This week has seen the beleaguered packaged foods index finally catch a bid, driven by exceptional earnings at two of the larger constituents, MDLZ and K. Both highlighted organic volume growth and a better pricing backdrop as the key drivers of top line outperformance. This corroborates with both the overall industry picture (second panel) and our rationale for moving the index to overweight earlier this year (see our Weekly Report of 23 May, 2017 for more details). We continue to expect that a durable top line recovery will expand packaged foods margins. In the context of the significant restructuring the industry has undertaken over the past year and early margin improvements (third panel), packaged foods manufacturers should see outsized earnings growth. Adding on a mouth-watering valuation (bottom panel) makes this index looks particularly appetizing. Stay overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5PACK - MDLZ, KHC, GIS, TSN, K, HSY, CAG, SJM, MKC, CPB, HRL.
GAA DM Equity Country Allocation Model Update The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of October 31st, 2017. There are no significant changes in country allocations, but minor changes are the reductions in the overweight of Germany, Sweden and Switzerland in favor of Spain and Italy, which were already overweight, and Australia which was underweight, as shown in Table 1. As shown in Table 2 and Chart 1, Chart 2 and Chart 3, the overall model underperformed its benchmark by 73 bps in October, largely due to the underperformance (110 bps) of Level 2 model, resulting from the large underweight of Japan, which was the best performer in October. The underweight of Australia and Canada worked very well too, but not enough to offset the overweight in the euro zone countries. The strength of the USD against the euro also hurt the performance. Since going live in January 2016, the overall model has outperformed the benchmark by 247 bps, largely from the allocation among the 11 non-U.S. countries, which have outperformed their benchmark by 599 bps. Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level1) Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD) Please see also on the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see the January 29th, 2016 Special Report, "Global Equity Allocation: Introducing the Developed Markets Country Allocation Model." http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/articles/view_report/18850. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model (Chart 4) is updated as of October 31st, 2017. Chart 4Overall Model Performance Table 3Allocations Table 4Performance Since Going Live The growth component in the model has turned cautious on the global recovery. The aggregate cyclical sector overweight has been reduced to 2.5% from 8% last month. However, cyclical sectors such as energy, materials and industrials have seen an increase in overweight driven by favorable liquidity and momentum backdrop. On the other hand, financials and technology have been downgraded to underweight. Finally, as a result of the bearish outlook from the growth component, the model has turned overweight on utilities. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report "Introducing The GAA Equity Sector Selection Model," July 27, 2016 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoli@bcaresearch.com Aditya Kurian, Research Analyst adityak@bcaresearch.com
The key theme that has been driving our investment thesis in U.S. Equity Strategy in the past quarter has been accelerating global industrial production and trade, with a corresponding rotation out of defensive and into cyclical stocks. We have been adjusting our portfolio accordingly and it now has a deep cyclical bent with leverage to a burgeoning capex cycle. Industrial conglomerates capitalize on most of these themes: they are globally-oriented and capex-driven, and leading indicators of final demand suggest that earnings should accelerate in the near-term (second panel). However, the index has underperformed the broad market, dragged down by heavyweight GE (third panel) and its specific headwinds, most notably fears of a looming dividend cut. Further, the index's highest exposure sectors (namely aerospace, health care equipment, energy equipment & services and utilities) are mostly weighted negatively in our overall sector view. Adding it up, the negatives offset the positives and, in the context of fair valuations (bottom panel), we expect the S&P industrial conglomerates index to perform in line with the overall market. We are initiating coverage with a neutral rating; please see yesterday's Special Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5INDCX - GE, MMM, HON, ROP.