South Korea
Highlights The global trade slowdown will intensify, even if U.S. domestic demand remains robust. The large emerging Asian bourses will recouple to the downside with their EM peers. Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. In Chile, receive 3-year swap rates. Continue to overweight stocks relative to the EM benchmark. Short the Colombian peso versus the Russia ruble. Stay neutral on Colombian equities and local bonds but overweight sovereign credit within their respective EM universes. Feature Performance of large equity markets in north Asia - Korean, Taiwanese and Chinese investable stocks -- has been relatively resilient compared with other EM bourses. Specifically, the EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan equity index has already dropped 16% in U.S. dollar terms, while the market cap-weighted index of investable Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks is down only 8% from its peak in late January.1 These three markets account for 60% of the MSCI EM stock index. A pertinent question is whether these North Asian markets will de-couple from or re-couple with the rest of EM. Our bias is that they will re-couple to the downside. Global equity portfolios should continue to underweight Asian stocks versus the DM bourses in general, and the S&P 500 in particular. That said, dedicated EM equity portfolios should overweight Korea and Taiwan and maintain a neutral stance on China and Hong Kong relative to the EM and Asian equity benchmarks. The Global Trade Slowdown Will Intensify Emerging Asian stock markets are very sensitive to global trade cycles. Slowing global trade is typically negative for them. There is growing evidence that the global trade deceleration will intensify: The German IFO index for business expectations in German manufacturing - a good leading indicator for global trade - is pointing to a further slowdown in global exports (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist Export volume growth has already slowed across manufacturing Asia (Chart I-2). The most recent data points for these series are as of April. Asia's booming tech/semiconductor industry is also slowing. Both Taiwan's export orders growth and Singapore's technology PMI new orders-to-inventory ratio have relapsed (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward Chart I-3Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch One of the causes of weakness in the global semiconductor cycle could be stagnating global auto sales (Chart I-4). The latter are being weighed down by weakness in auto sales in China and the U.S. Cars require a significant amount of semiconductors, and lack of improvement in global auto sales will suppress semiconductor demand. So far, China has not been at the epicenter of investors' concerns, but this will soon change as its growth slowdown intensifies. Credit conditions continue to tighten in China, which entails downside risks to mainland capital spending and consequently imports. China's imports are set to slump considerably, reinforcing the global trade downturn.2 First, China's bank loan approvals have dropped considerably in the past 18 months, suggesting a meaningful slowdown in bank financing and in turn the country's investment expenditures (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales Chart I-5China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex Second, not only are bank loan standards tightening but costs of financing are also rising. The share of loans extended above the prime lending rate has risen to a 15-year high (Chart I-6, top panel). This represents marginal tightening. Finally, onshore corporate bond yields as well as offshore U.S. dollar-denominated corporate bond yields have broken to new highs in this cycle (Chart I-6, bottom panels). Mounting borrowing costs and tighter credit standards in China point to further deceleration in credit-sensitive spending such as investment expenditures and property purchases. On the whole, rising interest rates and material currency depreciation in EM ex-China and credit tightening in China will prompt a considerable slump in imports, depressing world trade. EM including Chinese imports account for 30% of global imports, while the U.S. and EU together make up 24% of global imports values. Hence, global trade will disappoint if and as EM and Chinese imports stumble. A final word on the history of de-coupling among EM regions is in order. There have been a few episodes when emerging Asian and Latin American stocks de-coupled: In 1997-'98, the home-grown Asian crisis devastated regional markets, but Latin American stocks continued to rally until mid-1998 - when they plummeted (Chart I-7, top panel). Chart I-6China: Rising Borrowing Costs Chart I-7De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America In 2007-'08, emerging Asian equities tumbled along with the S&P 500, but Latin American bourses fared well until the middle of 2008 due to surging commodities/oil prices (Chart I-7, middle panel). Finally, the bottom panel of Chart I-7 illustrates that in early 2015, Asian stocks performed well, supported by the inflating Chinese equity bubble. Meanwhile, Latin American stocks plunged. In all of these episodes, the de-coupling between Asia and Latin America proved to be unsustainable, and the markets that showed initial resilience eventually re-coupled to the downside. Bottom Line: Global trade is set to head southward, even if U.S. demand remains robust. China's growth slump will be instrumental to this global trade slowdown. Consequently, Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese equities will be vulnerable. Heeding To Market Signals Financial markets often move ahead of economic data, and simply tracking data is not always helpful in gauging turning points in business cycles. By the time economic data change course, financial markets would typically have already partially adjusted. Besides, past economic and financial market performance is not a guarantee of future performance. This is why we rely on thematic fundamental analysis and monitor intermediate- and long-term trends in financial markets to navigate through markets. There are presently several important market signals that investors should be heeding to: EM corporate bond yields are surging, which typically foreshadows falling EM share prices (Chart I-8). Meanwhile, there is no robust correlation between EM equities and U.S. bond yields. Chart I-8EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise The basis: So long as the rise in U.S. bond yields is offset by compressing EM credit spreads, EM corporate bond yields decline and EM share prices rally. But when EM corporate (or sovereign) yields rise, irrespective of whether this is due to rising U.S. Treasury yields or widening EM credit spreads, EM equity prices come under considerable selling pressure. Lately, both EM credit spreads have been widening, offsetting the drop in U.S. bond yields. Hence, a drop in U.S. bond yields is not in and of itself sufficient to halt a decline in EM share prices. So long as EM corporate and sovereign credit spreads are widening by more than the decline in U.S. Treasury yields, EM corporate and sovereign bond yields will rise, heralding lower EM share prices. The ratio of total return (including carry) of six commodities currencies relative to safe-haven currencies3 is breaking below its 200-day moving average after having bounced from this technical support line several times in the past 12 months (Chart I-9). This could be confirming that the bull market in EM risk assets is over, and a bear market is underway. Chinese property stocks listed onshore have broken down, and those trading in Hong Kong seem to be forming a head-and-shoulder pattern (Chart I-10). In the latter case, such a technical formation will likely be followed by a considerable down-leg. Chart I-9An Important Breakdown Chart I-10Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable Further, China's onshore A-share index has already dropped by 15% from its cyclical peak in late January. Finally, both emerging Asia's relative equity performance against developed markets, as well as the emerging Asian currency index versus the U.S. dollar (ADXY) seem to be rolling over at their long-term moving averages (Chart I-11). The same technical pattern is presenting itself for global energy and mining stocks in absolute terms, and also in the overall Brazilian equity index (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Asian Equities And Currencies Are ##br##At Critical Juncture Chart I-12Commodity Equities And Brazil ##br##Are Facing Technical Resistance The failure of these markets to break above their long-term technical resistance levels may be signalling that their advance since early 2016 has been a cyclical - not structural - bull market, and is likely over. These technical chart profiles so far confirm our fundamental analysis that the EM and commodities rallies since early 2016 did not represent a multi-year secular bull market. If correct, the downside risks to EM including Asian markets are substantial, and selling/shorting them now is not too late. Bottom Line: EM including Asian stocks, currencies and credit markets are at risk of gapping down. Absolute-return investors should trade these markets on the short side. Asset allocators should underweight EM markets relative to DM in general and the U.S. in particular. A complete list of our currency, fixed-income and equity recommendations is available on pages 20-21. An EM Equity Sector Trade: Long Consumer Staples / Short Banks EM consumer staples have massively underperformed banks as well as the overall EM index since January 2016 (Chart I-13). The odds are that their relative performance is about to reverse. Equity investors should consider implementing the following equity pair trade: long consumer staples / short banks: Consumer staples are a low-beta sector because their revenues are less cyclical. As EM growth downshifts, share prices of companies with more stable revenue streams will likely outperform. Bank stocks are vulnerable as local interest rates in many EMs rise in response to the selloff in their respective currencies (Chart I-14). Consumer staples usually outperform banks when local borrowing costs are rising. Chart I-13Go Long EM Consumer Staples / ##br##Short EM Banks Chart I-14EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With##br## EM Local Bond Yields We expect more currency depreciation in EM, which will exert further upward pressure on local rates, including interbank rates. Further, growth weakness in EM economies typically leads to rising non-performing loan (NPL) provisions. Chart I-15A and Chart I-15B demonstrates that weakening nominal GDP growth (shown inverted on the charts) leads to higher provisioning. Hence, a renewed EM growth slowdown will hurt bank profits. Chart I-15AWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions Chart I-15BWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions Our assessment is that banks in many EM countries have provisioned less than what is probably necessary following years of a credit boom. Indeed, in the last 12-18 months or so, many banks have even been reducing their NPL provisions to boost profits. Hence, a reversal of these dynamics will undermine banks' earnings. Bottom Line: Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. This is in addition to our long-term strategy of shorting EM banks versus U.S. banks as well as shorting banks in absolute terms in individual markets such as Brazil, Turkey, Malaysia and small-cap banks in China. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 These calculations are done using MSCI investible stock indexes in U.S. dollars terms. 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "The Dollar Rally And China's Imports", dated May 24, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 3 Average of cad, aud, nzd, brl, clp & zar total returns (including carry) relative to average of jpy & chf total returns (including carry). Chile: Stay Overweight Equities, Receive Rates 31 May 2018 Chart II-1Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices It is often assumed that Chilean financial markets are a play on copper. While this largely holds true for the Chilean peso, it is not always correct regarding its stock market's relative performance to its EM peers. Chile has outperformed in the past amid declining copper prices (Chart II-1). Despite our negative view on copper prices, we are reiterating our overweight allocation to this bourse within an EM equity portfolio. There are convincing signs that growth in the Chilean economy is moving along fine for now (Chart II-2). While weakness in global trade will weigh on the economy, the critical variable that makes Chile stand out from other commodities producers in the EM universe is its ability to cut interest rates amid currency depreciation. Chart II-3 illustrates that interest rates in Chile can and do fall when the peso depreciates. This stands in stark contrast with many others economies in the EM universe. There are a number of factors that suggest inflationary pressures will remain dormant for some time. This will allow the Central Bank of Chile (CBC) to cut rates as and when required. Chart II-2Chile: Economic Conditions Chart II-3Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates First, the output gap is negative and has been widening, which has historically led to falling core inflation (Chart II-4). Second, a wide range of consumer inflation measures - services and trimmed-mean inflation rates - are very low and remain in a downtrend (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Chile: Output Gap And Inflation Chart II-5Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling Finally, there are no signs of wage inflation, which is the key driver of genuine inflation. In fact, wage growth is decelerating sharply (Chart II-6). Odds are that this disinflationary rout will go on for longer, given Chile's demographic and labor market dynamics. The country's labor force growth has accelerated and the economy does not seem able to absorb this excess labor supply (Chart II-7). Consistently, our labor surplus proxy - calculated as the number of unemployed looking for a job divided by the number of job vacancies - has surged to all-time highs (Chart II-8). Chart II-6Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak Chart II-7Chile: Rising Labor Force Chart II-8Chile: Excessive Labor Supply... Interestingly, this is not happening because of weak employment. Chart II-9 shows that the employment-to-working population ratio is at a record high, while employment growth is robust. This upholds that decent job growth is not sufficient to absorb the expanding supply of labor. All in all, a structural excess supply of labor as well as a cyclical slowdown in global trade and lower copper prices altogether will likely warrant a decline in interest rates in Chile. Consequently, we recommend a new fixed income trade: Receive 3-year swap rates. The recent rise provides a good entry point (Chart II-10). Chart II-9...Despite Robust Employment Growth Chart II-10Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates The ability to cut interest rates will mitigate the effect of weaker exports on the economy. We recommend dedicated EM investors maintain an overweight allocation in Chile in their equity, local currency bond and corporate credit portfolios. For absolute return investors, the risk-reward profiles for Chilean stocks and the currency are not attractive. The peso will depreciate considerably, and shorting it versus the U.S. dollar will prove profitable. Consistent with our negative view on copper prices, we have been recommending a short position in copper with a long leg in the Chilean peso. This allows traders to earn some carry while waiting for copper prices to break down. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Colombia: The Currency Will Be A Release Valve The structural long-term outlook for Colombia is positive, as a combination of pro-market orthodox policies and reform initiatives amid positive tailwinds from demographic should ensure a reasonably high potential GDP growth rate. In the first round of presidential elections held last weekend, the gap between right wing candidate Ivan Duque and left-wing candidate Gustav Petro came out large enough to make a Duque victory highly likely in the second round to be held on June 17. His election would entail a positive backdrop for the reform agenda and business investment over the coming years. Yet despite the positive structural backdrop, Colombia is still facing a major imbalance - excessive reliance on oil in sustaining stable balance of payments (BoP) dynamics. The trade balance deficit - including oil - is $8 billion, while excluding oil it stands at $20 billion, or 7.5% of GDP (Chart III-1). Hence, if oil prices drop materially in the second half of this year - as we expect - Colombia's balance of payments will be strained. Consequently, the currency will come under depreciation pressure. The peso is presently fairly valued as the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs is at its historical mean (Chart III-2). Chart III-1Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil Chart III-2The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued The central bank has adopted a "hands-off" approach toward the exchange rate, and is likely to allow the peso to depreciate if the BoP deteriorates. Weak economic conditions will likely prevent it from hiking interest rates to bolster the peso: Even though the central bank has reduced its policy rate by 350 basis points since the end of 2016, lending rates remain restrictive when compared with the nominal GDP growth rate (Chart III-3, top panel). Fiscal policy has been tight, with government expenditures subdued and the primary deficit narrowing (Chart III-3, bottom panel). This is unlikely to change for now if conservative candidate, Ivan Duque, wins the election. Consumer and business demand has failed to pick up, and shows little sign of recovery (Chart III-4). Non-performing loans (NPL) continue to rise, forcing banks to raise their NPL provisioning (Chart III-5). Weak nominal GDP growth suggests provisions may rise further. Chart III-3Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Chart III-4Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery Chart III-5Colombian Banks: NPL And NPL Provision Continue Rising Overall, banks' balance sheets remain impaired, hampering their ability to extend loans. Investment Recommendations Despite a favorable structural outlook, Colombia's cyclical growth and financial market outlooks remain poor. Chances are that the peso will come under selling pressure as the external environment deteriorates - i.e., the currency will act as a release valve. We recommend staying neutral on Colombian stocks and local bonds relative to their EM peers, and to overweight Colombian sovereign credit within an EM credit portfolio. The basis is that sound and tight fiscal policies and a continuation of supply side reforms will benefit this credit market. To capitalize on potential currency depreciation while hedging for the uncertainty of oil price decline, we recommend shorting the peso against the Russian ruble. Although Colombia's structural outlook is more promising than Russia's, the latter's BoP dynamics is healthier and its cyclical growth outlook is better than Colombia's. Andrija Vesic, Research Analyst AndrijaV@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights In this Weekly Report, we review all of the individual trades in our Tactical Overlay portfolio. These are positions that are intended to complement our strategic Model Bond Portfolio, typically with shorter holding periods, and sometimes in smaller or less liquid markets that are outside our usual core bond coverage (like Swedish government bonds or euro area CPI swaps). This report includes a summary of the rationale for each position, as well as a decision on whether to retain the position, close it or switch it into a new trade that has more profit potential for the same theme underlying the original trade (Table 1). Table 1Global Fixed Income Strategy Tactical Overlay Trades Feature U.S. Long 5-year U.S. Treasury bullet vs. 2-year/10-year duration-matched barbell (CLOSE AND SWITCH TO NEW TRADE) Long U.S. TIPS vs. nominal U.S. Treasuries (HOLD) Short 10-year U.S. Treasuries vs. 10-year German Bunds (HOLD) Chart 1UST Curve Trading More Off The Funds##BR##Rate Than Inflation Expectations We have three U.S.-focused tactical trades that are all expressions of our core views on U.S. inflation expectations and future Fed monetary policy moves. We first recommended a U.S. butterfly trade, going long the 5-year U.S. Treasury bullet and short a duration-matched 2-year/10-year Treasury barbell (Chart 1), back on December 20th, 2016. We have kept the recommendation during periodic reviews of our tactical trades since then. This is a position that was expected to benefit from a bearish steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve as the market priced in higher longer-term inflation expectations. The trade has not performed according to our expectations, however, generating a loss of -0.40% since inception.1 There was a positive correlation between the slope of the Treasury curve, the butterfly spread and TIPS breakevens shortly after trade inception. However, the Treasury curve flattened through 2017 as the Fed continued to hike rates, even as realized inflation fell (2nd panel), pushing the real fed funds towards neutral levels as measured by estimates like r* (3rd panel). This has left the 2/5/10 Treasury butterfly cheap on our valuation model (bottom panel), Looking ahead, the case for a renewed bear-steepening of the U.S. Treasury curve, and widening of the 2/5/10 butterfly spread, rests on the Fed accommodating the current rise in U.S. inflation by being cautious with future rate hikes. Recent comments from Fed officials suggest that policymakers are in no hurry to rapidly raise rates in order to cool off an "overheating" U.S. economy. Yet at the same time, U.S. inflation continues to rise and the economy is in good shape, so the Fed can't take a pause on rate hikes. This will likely leave the Treasury curve range bound, with the potential for some periods of bear-steepening as inflation expectations rise. Our conviction on this Treasury butterfly spread trade has fallen of late. Yet with our model suggesting that the belly of the curve is somewhat cheap to the wings, and given our view that U.S. inflation expectations have not reached a cyclical peak, we are reluctant to completely exit this position. Instead, we are opting to switch out of the 2/5/10 U.S. Treasury butterfly into another butterfly that our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy have identified as cheap within their newly-expanded curve modeling framework - the 1/7/20 butterfly (long the 7-year bullet vs. short a duration-matched 1/20 barbell).2 That butterfly offers better carry than the 2/5/10 butterfly (Chart 2), and is nearly one standard deviation cheap to estimated fair value. Another of our U.S.-focused tactical trades has been to directly play for rising U.S. inflation expectations by going long TIPS versus nominal U.S. Treasuries. This is a long-held trade (initiated on August 23rd, 2016) which has performed very well, delivering a return of 4.13%.3 We continue to see the potential for TIPS breakevens to widen back to levels consistent with the market believing that inflation can sustainably return to the Fed's 2% target on the PCE deflator, which is equivalent to 2.4-2.5% on CPI-based 10-year TIPS inflation expectations. Given the persistent strong correlation between oil prices and breakevens, and with the BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy team continuing to forecast Brent oil prices jumping above $80/bbl over the next year (Chart 3), there is still solid underlying support for wider breakevens. This is especially true given the uptrend in overall global inflation (middle panel), and the likelihood that core U.S. inflation can also continue to rise alongside an expanding U.S. economy (bottom panel). We are sticking with our long TIPS position vs. nominal Treasuries. Chart 2Switch The UST Butterfly##BR##Trade From 2/5/10 to 1/7/20 Chart 3Stay Long U.S. TIPS##BR##Vs. Nominal Treasuries Our final U.S.-focused tactical trade is actually a cross-market trade where we are short 10-year U.S. Treasuries versus 10-year German Bunds. We initiated that trade on August 8th, 2017 when the Treasury-Bund spread was at 179bps. With the spread now at 252bps, the trade has delivered a solid total return of 4.23%. This was driven primarily by the rapid move higher in Treasury yields in response to faster U.S. growth (Chart 4), more rapid U.S. inflation and Fed rate hikes versus a stand-pat European Central Bank (ECB).4 From a medium-term perspective, those three fundamental drivers of the Treasury-Bund spread continue to point to U.S. bond underperformance (Chart 5). From this perspective, the peak in the spread will not be reached until U.S. economic growth and inflation peak and the Fed signals an end to its current tightening cycle. None of those outcomes is on the horizon, and we continue to target an eventual cyclical top in the 10-year Treasury yield in the 3.25-3.5% range as inflation expectations move higher. Yet the Treasury-Bund spread has reached an overvalued extreme according to our "fair value" model (Chart 6). In other words, the markets have moved to more than fully discount the cyclical differences between the U.S. and euro area - a trend that surely reflects the huge short positioning in the U.S. Treasury market. Yet it is also important to note that the fair value spread continues to steadily climb higher. In our model, the spread is primarily a function of differences in central bank policy rates between the Fed and ECB, relative unemployment rates and relative headline inflation rates. All three of those factors continue to move in a direction favorable to a wider Treasury-Bund spread, and the gap is only growing wider with both growth and inflation in the euro zone losing momentum. Chart 4Stay Long 10yr UST##BR##Vs. 10yr German Bund Chart 5UST-Bund Spread Widening##BR##Due To Relative Fundamentals... Chart 6...But The Spread##BR##Has Overshot A Bit The spread is currently being pushed to even wider extremes by the current turmoil in Italy, which is pushing money out of Italian BTPs into safer assets like Bunds. The situation remains fluid and new elections are likely in Italy later this year, thus it is unlikely that any more to restore investor confidence in Italy is on the immediate horizon. This will keep Bund yields depressed versus Treasuries, even as the ECB continues to signal that it will fully taper its asset purchases by year-end (rate hikes remain a long way off in Europe, however). We continue to recommend staying short Treasuries versus Bunds, and would view any tightening of the spread back towards our model estimate of fair value as an opportunity to enter the position or add to an existing position. Euro Area Long 10-year euro area CPI swaps (HOLD, BUT ADD A STOP AT 1.5%) Short 5-year Italy government bonds vs. 5-year Spain government bonds (HOLD) Chart 7Stay Long 10-Year Euro Area CPI Swaps We have two tactical trades that are purely within the euro area: positioning for higher inflation expectations through a long position in 10-year euro CPI swaps, and playing relative credit quality within the Peripheral countries by shorting 5-year Italian bonds versus a long position in 5-year Spanish debt. The long 10-year CPI swaps trade, which was initiated on December 20th, 2016, has generated a total return of +0.45% over the life of the trade so far (Chart 7).5 The rationale for the recommendation, and our conviction behind it, has evolved over that time. We first recommended the trade when the ECB was aggressively easing monetary policy and there was clear positive momentum in euro area economic growth that was driving down unemployment. At a time when oil prices were steadily climbing and the euro was very weak, the case for seeing some improvement in inflation expectations in the euro area was a strong one. Inflation expectations stayed resilient in 2017, however, despite the unexpected strength of the euro. Continued gains in oil prices and above-trend economic growth that rapidly absorbed spare capacity in the euro area more than offset any downward pressure on inflation from a stronger currency. Looking ahead, the combination of renewed weakness in the euro and firm oil prices should allow headline inflation in the euro area to drift higher from current levels in the next 3-6 months (2nd panel). However, the euro area economy has lost the positive momentum seen last year with steady declines in cyclical data like manufacturing PMIs, industrial production and exports (3rd panel). Admittedly, that deceleration has come from a high level and leading indicators are not yet pointing to a prolonged period of below-potential growth that could raise unemployment and reduce domestic inflation pressures. Yet with core inflation still struggling to climb beyond the 1% level (bottom panel), any worsening of euro area economic momentum could lead to inflation expectations stalling out well before getting close to the ECB's 2% target level. Thus, we continue to recommend this long 10-year CPI swaps position, but we are adding a new stop-out level at 1.5% to protect against downside risks if the euro area growth outlook darkens. On our other euro area tactical trade, we have been recommending shorting Italian government bonds versus Spanish equivalents. We initiated that trade on December 16th, 2016 and it has produced a total return of +0.57% over the life of the trade. The original logic for the trade was based on an assessment that Italy's medium-term growth potential, sovereign debt fundamentals and political stability were all much worse than that of Spain (Chart 8), yet Italian bond yields were still trading at too low a spread to Spanish debt. The cyclical improvement in the Italian economy in 2017 helped pushed Italian yields even closer to Spanish yields, yet we stuck with the trade given the looming political risk from the Italian parliamentary elections. The recent political turmoil in Italy has justified our persistence with this trade, with the 5-year Italy-Spain spread widening out by 46 bps over just the past two weeks. With the situation remaining highly fluid as the Italian coalition partners (the 5-Star Movement and the League) struggle to form a new government, Italian assets will continue to trade with a substantial risk premium to Spain and other European bond markets. Yet with the Italian economy now also showing signs of losing cyclical momentum, the case for continued Italian bond underperformance is a strong one, and we moved to a strategic underweight stance on Italian debt last week.6 Looking ahead, we see the potential for additional spread widening between Italy and Spain in the coming months. Spain is enjoying better economic growth, the deficit outlook is worsening for Italy with the new coalition government proposing a stimulus that could widen the budget deficit by as much as 6% of GDP, and Spanish support for the euro currency is far higher than it is in Italy. All those factors justify a wider risk premium for Italian debt over Spanish bonds (Chart 9). Chart 8Spain Trumps Italy On All Fronts Chart 9Stay Short 5-Year Italy Versus 5-Year Spain Our view on Italian debt, both from a tactical and strategic viewpoint, is bearish. We are maintaining our tactical trade, and we also advise selling into any rallies in Italy rather than buying the dips. U.K. Long 5-year Gilt bullet vs. duration-matched 2-year/10-year Gilt barbell (HOLD) We entered into a U.K. Gilt butterfly trade, long the 5-year bullet versus the duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell, back on March 27th, 2018.7 The logic of the trade was a simple one. We simply did not believe that the Bank of England (BoE) would follow through on its hawkish commentary by hiking rates as much as was discounted in the Gilt curve. Our view came to fruition as the BoE held rates steady at the May monetary policy meeting, which resulted in a bullish steepening at the front end of the Gilt curve. Our butterfly trade has returned +0.25% since inception, and we see more to come in the coming months.8 The U.K. economy has lost considerable momentum, with no growth shown in Q1 (real GDP only expanded +0.1%). The OECD leading economic indicator for the U.K. is at the weakest level in five years, and now consumer confidence is rolling over as rising oil costs are offsetting the pickup in wages (Chart 10). Overall headline inflation has peaked, however, after the big currency-fueled surge in 2016 and 2017 (bottom panel). With both growth and inflation slowing, and with the lingering uncertainty of the Brexit negotiations weighing on business confidence and investment, the BoE will have a tough time hiking rates even one more time this year. There are still 34bps of rate hikes priced into the U.K. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve, which leaves room for 2-year Gilts to decline as the BoE stays on hold for longer (Chart 11). This will cause the front-end of the Gilt curve to steepen. Meanwhile, longer-term Gilt yields will have a difficult time falling given the deceleration of global central bank asset purchase programs that is slowly raising depressed term premia on government bonds (3rd panel). Another factor that will help keep the Gilt curve steeper, all else equal, is the path of the inflation expectations curve. Shorter-dated expectations are likely to fall faster as growth slows and headline inflation continues to drift lower (bottom panel). Chart 10Fading Momentum For##BR##U.K. Growth & Inflation Chart 11Stay Long The 5yr U.K. Gilt Bullet##BR##Vs. The 2/10 Gilt Barbell Although some narrowing of the butterfly spread is already priced in the forwards (top panel), we see that outperformance of the 5-year happening faster, and by a greater amount, than the forwards. Stay long the belly of the Gilt curve versus the wings. Canada Long 10-year Canada inflation-linked government bonds vs. nominal Canada government bonds (HOLD) We recommended entering a long Canada 10-year breakeven inflation trade on January 9th, 2018.9 Since then, the 10-year breakeven inflation rate rose by 6bps along with the rise in oil prices denominated in Canadian dollars (Chart 12). This has helped our tactical trade deliver a return of +0.64% since inception.10 More fundamentally, the breakeven has risen as strong Canadian growth has helped close the output gap and push realized Canadian inflation back to the middle of the Bank of Canada (BoC)'s 1-3% target band. The rapid rate of real GDP growth has decelerated a bit after approaching 4% last year, and the OECD leading economic indicator for Canada may be peaking at a high level (Chart 13). Growth in consumer spending is also look a bit toppy, with bigger downside risks evident in the sharp declines in the growth of retail sales and house prices (3rd panel). Both were affected by a harsher-than-usual Canadian winter, but the cooling of the overheated Canadian housing market (especially in Toronto) is a welcome development for financial stability. Chart 12Stay Long Canadian##BR##Inflation Breakevens Chart 13Canadian Inflation At BoC Target,##BR##But Has Growth Peaked? On balance, however, the current state of Canadian economic data shows an economy that is slowing a bit from a very overheated pace, but is still likely to grow above potential with no spare capacity available. Both headline and core inflation will remain under upward pressure against this backdrop, at a time when the BoC's policy rate is still well below neutral. We continue to recommend staying long Canadian inflation-linked government bonds over nominal equivalents with a near-term target of 2% on the 10-year breakeven inflation rate. We will re-evaluate the position with regards to Canadian growth and inflation trends once that target is reached. Australia Long December 2018 Australian Bank Bill futures (SELL AND SWITCH TO NEW TRADE). We entered into a long December 2018 Australian Bank Bill futures trade on October 17, 2017 as a focused way to express the view that the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) would stay on hold for longer than markets expect. The trade has worked out nicely, generating a profit of +0.25%. The potential for further upside is fairly low at these levels so we are now closing the trade. However, our view remains that the RBA will not be able to hike as early as markets are pricing. As such, we are opening a new position - long October 2019 Australia Bank Bill futures. Markets expect the first rate hike will occur in nine months' time. The October 2019 Australia Bank Bill futures are currently pricing in a massive 180bps of rate hikes over the next sixteen months. That will not happen. The RBA will not be able to hike this much given the lack of inflation pressures and a wide output gap. Our Australia Central Bank Monitor, which measures cyclical growth and inflation pressures, has pulled back to the zero line, confirming that there is no current need to tighten policy (Chart 14). Real GDP growth slowed to 2.4% in Q4 2017, from 2.9% the previous quarter. Weakness in the OECD leading economic indicator and Citigroup economic surprise index for Australia suggest that the Q1 reading will also disappoint. Consumer spending will be dampened by weak wage growth, softening consumer sentiment and the recent decline in house prices in multiple major cities. As a result of easing house prices, the growth rate of household net wealth was considerably lower in 2017 relative to the previous four years. Additionally, credit growth has been slowing, even before the recent news of the bank scandals that will force banks to be more stringent with lending practices. Most importantly, however, inflation remains below the RBA's target and there is a lack of inflationary pressures. The inflation component of our Central Bank Monitor has collapsed and is now well below the zero line. Both headline and core inflation readings are stable but remain persistently below 2%. Tradeable goods prices have declined for nine consecutive months despite the currency weakness seen in the Australian dollar over the past twelve months. The IMF is not projecting Australia to have a closed output gap until 2020, and that is with the optimistic expectation that Australia achieves 3% growth. Labor markets have plenty of slack as evidenced by rising unemployment rate, nonexistent wage growth and elevated level of underemployment. The RBA estimates that the current unemployment rate is still approximately 0.5% above full employment. Against this backdrop, it is unlikely that inflation will sustainably rise enough to force the RBA's hand, leaving scope for interest rate expectations to decline (Chart 15). Chart 14The RBA Will##BR##Stay Dovish Chart 15Switch Long Australia Bank Bill Futures##BR##Trade From Dec/18 Contract To Oct/19 Contract New Zealand Long 5-year New Zealand government bonds vs. 5-year U.S. Treasuries, currency-hedged into U.S. dollars (HOLD) Long 5-year New Zealand government bonds vs. 5-year German government bonds, with no currency hedge (HOLD) One of our more successful tactical trades has been in New Zealand (NZ) government bonds. We entered long positions in 5-year NZ debt versus 5-year U.S. Treasuries and 5-year German Bunds on May 30th, 2017, but we reviewed, and decided to maintain, those positions in a recent Weekly Report.11 The NZ-US spread trade has returned 4.67% since inception, hedged into U.S. dollars (Chart 16).12 The NZ-Germany trade, however, was a very rare instance where we recommended a cross-country spread trade on a currency UN-hedged basis, based on the negative view on the euro that we had last year. With the euro rising sharply against the New Zealand dollar, the unhedged return on that trade has been -2.87% (a return that, if hedged back into the euro denomination of the German bonds, would have generated a return of +3.56%). Looking ahead, we see continued scope for NZ bond outperformance, although the return potential is far less than it was when we first put on the trade. NZ economic growth is in the process of peaking, with export growth already rolling over (Chart 17, top panel). Net immigration inflows, which have been a major support for the NZ housing market and overall consumer spending over the past five years, have already begun to slow with the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) projecting bigger declines in the next couple of years (2nd panel). Both headline and core CPI inflation took a surprising downward turn in Q1 of this year, and both are well below the midpoint of the RBNZ target band (3rd panel). Chart 16Stay Long NZ 5yr Bonds##BR##Vs. The U.S. & Germany... Chart 17...With NZ Growth &##BR##Inflation Losing Momentum With both growth and inflation slowing, the RBNZ can remain dovish on monetary policy. An additional factor is the NZ government has recently changed the mandate of the RBNZ to include both inflation targeting and "maximizing employment" in a similar fashion to the Federal Reserve. With inflation posing no threat, the RBNZ can focus on its employment mandate by maintaining highly accommodative policy settings. With the NZ OIS curve still discounting one full 25bp RBNZ hike over the next year (bottom panel), there is scope for NZ bonds to outperform as that hike will not happen. This will allow NZ bond spreads to tighten, or at least outperform versus the forwards where some modest widening is currently priced. We are sticking with both spread trades, but we are choosing to leave the NZ-Germany trade currency unhedged given the renewed weakness in the euro (the unhedged return has already improved by over two full percentage points since the euro peaked earlier this year). We will monitor levels of the NZD/EUR currency cross rate to determine when to potentially hedge the currency exposure of our trade back into euros. Sweden Long Sweden 10-year government bond vs. 2-year government bond Short 2-year Sweden government bond vs. 2-year German government bond We recently entered two Sweden tactical bond trades on May 8, 2018, going long the Swedish 10-year vs. the 2-year and shorting the Swedish 2-year vs. the German 2-year (Chart 18).13 We expect that strong growth momentum, rising inflation and a tight labor market will force the Riksbank to raise rates earlier, and by more, than markets expect. Since inception for these "young" trades, each has returned -1bp.14 Sweden's economy made a solid recovery in 2017, with year-over-year real GDP growth reaching 3.3% in Q4. Going forward, export growth will remain supported by strong global activity, low unit labor costs, and a weak krona. Our own Swedish export growth model is already signaling a pickup over the rest of 2018. Consumption has been resilient and should continue to be supported by steadily recovering wages. Capital spending has been robust and industrial confidence remains in an uptrend. Additionally, leading indicators are still signaling positive growth momentum. The Riksbank's preferred measure of inflation, CPIF, slowed to 1.9% in April after briefly touching the central bank's target last month (Chart 19). In our view, this is a minor pullback rather than the start of a sustained reversal. Our core inflation model projects a gradual increase in the coming months, driven by above-trend growth that has soaked up all spare capacity. Labor markets have tightened considerably, and the unemployment rate is now more than one percentage point below the OECD's estimate of the full-employment NAIRU. During the last period when unemployment was this far below NAIRU, wage growth surged to over 4%. Chart 18Stay In A Sweden 2/10 Curve Flattener##BR##& Short 2yr Swedish Bonds Vs Germany Chart 19The Riksbank Will Not Ignore##BR##The Coming Inflation Overshoot For the curve flattener trade, our expectation is that the Riksbank will shift to a more hawkish tone in the coming months, leading markets to reprice the shape of the Swedish yield curve, as too few rate hikes are discounted in the short-end. With their mandates met, the Riksbank will be forced to act more aggressively. Importantly, there is no flattening currently priced into the Swedish bond forward curve, thus there is no negative carry associated with putting on a flattener now. In the relative value trade, we shorted the Swedish 2-year relative to the German 2-year. Growth in Sweden is likely to outpace that of the euro area once again in 2018. Swedish inflation is almost at the Riksbank target while euro area inflation continues to undershoot the ECB benchmark. The ECB is signaling that it is in no hurry to begin raising interest rates, therefore policy rate differentials will drive the 2-year Sweden-Germany spread wider over the next 12-18 months, with no spread move currently priced into the forwards. South Korea Short Korea 10-Year Government Bonds Vs. Long 2-Year Korea Government Bonds (CLOSE) We first introduced this trade on May 30th, 2017, after the election of Moon Jae-In as the South Korean president.15 The new government made major campaign promises to greatly expand fiscal spending on social welfare, public sector job creation, and increased aid to North Korea. With the central government's budget balance set to worsen significantly, we expected longer-term Korean bond yields to begin to price in faster growth and rising future debt levels, resulting in a bearish steepening of the yield curve (Chart 20). Since the new president was elected, however, the Korean economy worsened - even as much of the global economy was enjoying a cyclical upturn - with the trend likely to continue (Chart 21). The OECD leading economic indicator for Korea is weakening, while the annual growth in industrial production now sits at -4.2% - the worst level since the 2009 recession. Capital spending and exports are also slowing rapidly. Chart 20Close The 2yr/10y Korean##BR##Government Bond Curve Steepener Chart 21Korean Curve Stable,##BR##Despite Slower Growth & Fiscal Stimulus Due to the slowdown in the economy, Korean firms' capacity utilization is now at the worst level since the middle of 2009. Although businesses were already suffering from downward pressure on revenues, the Moon administration dramatically increased the minimum wage last year, directly leading to a rise in bankruptcies for small and medium size firms (the bankruptcy rate rose from 1.9% in the first half of 2017 to 2.5% in the latter half). Looking ahead, the Moon government will continue to increase spending on welfare and financial aid for North Korea, especially if the domestic economy continues to struggle. We still believe that the rise in deficits and debt will eventually lead the market to price in some increase in the fiscal risk premium and a steeper Korean yield curve. Yet with the Bank of Korea (BoK) having already surprised the markets last November with a rate hike, and with Korean inflation now ticking higher alongside a stable won, we fear that any renewed steepening of the Korean curve awaits a shift to a more dovish BoK that is not yet on the horizon. For now, given the competing forces on the Korean yield curve, we are choosing to close our 2/10 Korea curve steepener at a loss of -0.63%.16 We will continue to monitor the Korean situation to look for opportunities to re-enter the trade at a later date. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com 1 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg pricing of the total return of a 2/5/10 butterfly. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies", dated May 15th 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. 3 Return is taken directly from Bloomberg Barclays index data on the duration-adjusted excess return of the entire TIPS index versus the entire Treasury index. 4 This return is calculated using Bloomberg data on actual U.S. and German bonds, and is shown on a currency-hedged basis into U.S. dollars - the currency denomination of the bond we are short in this spread trade. 5 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg Barclays inflation swap index data for a euro area CPI swap with a rolling 10-year maturity. 6 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Partly Sunny Or Mostly Cloudy?", dated May 22nd 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Nervous Complacency", dated March 27th, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data on actual Gilts, rather than bond index data. 9 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Let The Good Times Roll", dated January 9th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 10 This return is measured as the total return of the Canadian inflation-linked bond index less that of the nominal Canadian government bond index from the Bloomberg Barclays family of bond indices. 11 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Serenity Now", dated May 15th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 12 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data on actual New Zealand government bonds, with our own adjustments for the impact on returns from currency hedging. 13 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Sweden: The Riksbank Cannot Kick The Can Down The Road Anymore", dated May 8th 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 14 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data for actual individual Swedish government bonds, rather than bond index data. Both legs of the trade are duration-matched. 15 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Distant Early Warning", dated May 30th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 16 Returns are calculated using Bloomberg data for actual individual Korean government bonds, rather than bond index data. Both legs of the trade are duration-matched and funding costs are included. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The global economy is slowing. However, growth should stabilize at an above-trend pace over the next few months, as fiscal policy turns more stimulative and interest rates remain in accommodative territory. President Trump's macroeconomic policies are completely at odds with his trade agenda. Fortunately, Trump appears willing to cut a deal on trade, even if it is on terms that are not nearly as favorable to the U.S. as he might have touted. The recently renegotiated South Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement is a case in point. We remain cyclically overweight global equities, but acknowledge that valuations are stretched and the near-term market environment could remain challenging until leading economic indicators improve. Feature Global Equities: Near-Term Outlook Is Still Hazy We published a note on February 2nd entitled "Take Out Some Insurance" warning investors that the stock market had become highly vulnerable to a correction.1 The VIX spike began the next day. Although volatility has fallen and equities have rebounded so far in April, we are reluctant to sound the all-clear. The near-term signal from the beta version of our MacroQuant model has improved a bit but remains in bearish territory, as it has for over two months now (Chart 1). Chart 1MacroQuant Model Suggests Caution Is Warranted The model is highly sensitive to changes in growth. Starting early this year, it began to detect a weakening in a variety of leading economic indicators in the U.S. and, to an even greater degree, abroad. Most notably, global PMIs and the German IFO have dipped, Korean and Taiwanese exports have decelerated, Japanese machinery orders have fallen, and the Baltic Dry Index has swooned by 36% from its December high (Chart 2). The model also noted an increase in inflationary pressures, suggesting that monetary policy would likely end up moving in a less accommodative direction. The emergence of stagflationary concerns came at a time when bullish stock market sentiment stood at very elevated levels (Chart 3). Our empirical work has shown that equities perform worst when sentiment is deteriorating from bullish levels and perform best when sentiment is improving from bearish levels (Chart 4). Chart 2Growth Has Peaked Chart 3Stock Market Sentiment Was Very ##br##Bullish Earlier This Year Chart 4Swings In Sentiment And ##br##Stock Market Returns Waiting For The Economic Data To Stabilize The good news is that the drop in equity prices has caused sentiment to return to more normal levels. The bad news is that the activity data has continued to disappoint at the margin, as evidenced by the weakness in economic surprise indices and various "nowcasts" of real-time growth (Chart 5). Ultimately, we expect global growth to stabilize at an above-trend pace over the coming months, which should allow equities to grind higher. Monetary policy is still quite accommodative. The yield on the JP Morgan Global Bond Index has averaged 1.88% since the end of the Great Recession (Chart 6). We do not know where the "neutral" level of bond yields has been over this period. However, we do know that unemployment in the major economies has been falling, which suggests that monetary policy has been in expansionary territory. Despite the move away from quantitative easing by many central banks, the yield on the JP Morgan Global Bond Index is only 1.53% today. This implies a fortiori that bond yields today are well below restrictive levels. The conclusion is further strengthened if one assumes, as seems highly plausible, that the neutral bond yield has risen over the past few years, as deleveraging headwinds have abated and fiscal policy has turned more stimulative (Chart 7). Chart 5Unexpected Slowdown In Growth Chart 6Interest Rates Are Off Their Bottom, ##br##But Are Not Restrictive Chart 7Fiscal Policy Will Be Stimulative ##br##This Year And Next The Protectionism Bugbear Global growth has not been the only thing on investors' minds. The specter of a trade war has also loomed large. It is true that the standard early-19th century Ricardian model that first-year economics students learn predicts very small welfare losses from increased protectionism.2 The model, however, makes highly antiquated assumptions about how trade works. Trade today bears little resemblance to the world in which David Ricardo lived - the one where England exchanged cloth for Portuguese wine (the example Ricardo used to illustrate his famous principle of comparative advantage). Chart 8Trade In Intermediate Goods Dominates To an increasingly large extent, countries do not really trade with one another anymore. One can even go as far as to say that different companies do not really trade with each other in the way they once did. A growing share of international trade is between affiliates of the same companies. Trade these days is dominated by intermediate goods (Chart 8). The exchange of goods and services takes place within the context of a massive global supply chain, where such phrases as "outsourcing," "vertical integration" and "just-in-time inventory management" have entered the popular vernacular. This arrangement has many advantages, but it also harbors numerous fragilities. A small fire at a factory in Japan that manufactured 60 percent of the epoxy resin used in chip casings led to a major spike in RAM prices in 1993. Flooding in Thailand in 2011 wreaked havoc on the global auto industry.3 The global supply chain is highly vulnerable to even small shocks. Now imagine an across-the-board trade war. Equities represent a claim on the existing capital stock, not the capital stock that might emerge after a trade war has been fought. A trade war would result in a lot of stranded capital. It is not surprising that investors are worried. Trump's Dubious Trade Doctrine The psychology of a trade war today is not that dissimilar to that of an actual war among the great powers. It would be immensely damaging if it were to happen, but because everyone knows it would be so damaging, it is less likely to occur. How then should one interpret President Trump's tweet that "Trade wars are good, and easy to win?" One possibility is that he is bluffing. The U.S. exported only $131 billion in goods to China last year, which is less than the $150 billion in Chinese imports that Trump has already targeted for tariffs. China simply cannot win a tit-for-tat trade war with the United States. Unfortunately, there is also a less charitable interpretation, as revealed by the second part of Trump's tweet, where he said, "When we are down $100 billion with a certain country and they get cute, don't trade anymore - we win big. It's easy!" Trump seems to equate countries with companies: Exports are revenues and imports are costs. If a country is exporting less than it is importing, it must be losing money. This is deeply flawed reasoning. I run a trade deficit with the place where I eat lunch, but I don't go around complaining that they are ripping me off. One would think that Trump - whose businesses routinely spent more than they earned, accumulating debt in the process - would understand this. But apparently not. As we discussed two weeks ago, the U.S. runs a trade deficit mainly because its deep and open financial markets, along with a relatively high neutral rate of interest, make it an attractive destination for foreign capital.4 If a country runs a capital account surplus with the rest of the world - meaning that it sells more assets to foreigners than it buys from foreigners - it will necessarily run a current account deficit. Trump's Macro Policy Colliding With His Trade Policy In this respect, President Trump's macroeconomic policies are completely at odds with his trade agenda. By definition, the current account balance is the difference between what a country saves and what it invests. The U.S. fiscal position is set to deteriorate over the coming years, even if the unemployment rate continues to fall - an unprecedented occurrence (Chart 9). A bigger budget deficit will drain national savings. Chart 9The U.S. Budget Deficit Is Set To Widen Even If The Unemployment Rate Continues To Decline Meanwhile, an overheated economy will cause capital spending to rise as firms run out of low-cost workers. If Trump succeeds in boosting infrastructure spending, aggregate U.S. investment will rise even more. The current account deficit is highly likely to widen in this environment. A Temporary Reprieve? Chart 10Trump's Protectionist Agenda Is A ##br##Popular One Among Republican Voters The prospect of a wider trade deficit means that Trump's protectionist wrath will not go quietly into the night. It may, however, go into remission for a little while. Trump's approval rating has managed to rise over the past few months because his protectionist agenda is popular with a large segment of the population (Chart 10). However, if the problems on Wall Street begin to show up on Main Street - as is likely to happen if stocks resume their decline - Trump will change his tune. This is especially true if a trade war threatens to hurt U.S. agricultural interests. Rural areas have been a key source of support for Trump's populist rhetoric. Trump has shown a willingness to cut a deal on trade even if the negotiated outcome falls well short of his bluster. Consider the agreement between the U.S. and Korea in late March to amend their existing trade pact. Trump had called the South Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement an "unacceptable, horrible deal" and a "job killer." After the agreement was renegotiated, the President described it as a "wonderful deal with a wonderful ally." What did Trump get that was so wonderful? The Koreans agreed to double the ceiling on the number of U.S. automobiles that can be exported to Korea without having to meet the country's tough environmental standards to 50,000. The problem is that the U.S. only shipped 11,000 autos to Korea last year, so the original quota was nowhere close to binding. The Koreans also agreed to reduce steel exports to the U.S. to about 70% of the average level of the past three years in exchange for a permanent exemption from Trump's 25% steel tariff. That may sound like a major concession, but keep in mind that only 12% of Korea's steel exports go to the United States. Korea also re-exports steel from other countries. These re-exports can be curtailed without causing major damage to Korea's steel industry. The shares of Korea's largest publicly-listed steel companies jumped by 1.7% on the first trading day after news of the deal broke, eclipsing the 0.8% rise in the KOSPI index. Investment Conclusions The global economy is going through a soft patch and this could weigh on stocks in the near term. However, if trade frictions fade into the background and global growth stabilizes over the coming months, as we expect will be the case, global equities should rally to fresh cycle highs. Granted, we are in the late stages of the business-cycle expansion. U.S. interest rates are likely to move into restrictive territory in the second half of 2019. Given the usual lags between changes in monetary policy and the real economy, this would place the next recession in 2020. By then, barring any fresh stimulus, the U.S. fiscal impulse will have dropped below zero. It is the change in the fiscal impulse that matters for growth. If growth has already slowed to a trend-like pace by late 2019 due to a shortage of workers, the economy could easily stall out in 2020. Given the still-dominant role played by U.S. financial markets, a recession in the U.S. would quickly be transmitted to the rest of the world. Stocks will peak before the next recession starts, but if history is any guide, this will only happen six months or so before the economic downturn begins (Table 1). This suggests that the equity bull market still has another 12-to-18 months of life left. The extent to which investors may wish to participate in any blow-off rally this year is a matter of personal preference. As was the case in the late 1990s, long-term expected returns have fallen to fairly low levels. A comparison between the Shiller P/E ratio and subsequent 10-year returns over the past century suggests that the S&P 500 will deliver a total nominal annualized return of only 4% during the next decade (Chart 11). A composite valuation measure incorporating both the trailing and forward P/E ratio, price-to-book, price-to-cash flow, price-to-sales, market cap-to-GDP, dividend yield, and Tobin's Q shows only modestly higher expected returns for stock markets outside the U.S. (Appendix A). Table 1Cyclically, It Is Too Soon To Get Out... Chart 11...But Long-Term Investors, Take Note As such, while we recommend overweighting global equities over a 12-month horizon, we would not fault long-term investors for taking some money off the table now. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Roughly speaking, the Ricardian model predicts that the welfare loss from protectionism will be one-half times the average percentage-point increase in tariffs times the change in the import-to-GDP ratio. Imports are about 15% of U.S. GDP. Consider a 10 percent across-the-board increase in tariffs. Assuming a price elasticity of import demand of 4, this would reduce trade by 1-0.96^10=0.33 (i.e., 33%), which would take the import-to-GDP ratio down from 15% to 10%. As such, the welfare loss would be 0.5*0.1*(15%-10%)=0.25%, or just one quarter of one percent of GDP. 3 James Coates, "Real Chip Shortage Or Just A Panic, Crunch Is Likely To Boost Pc Prices," Chicago Tribune, dated August 6, 1993. "Thailand Floods Disrupt Production And Supply Chains," BBC.com, dated October 13, 2011; Ploy Ten Kate, and Chang-Ran Kim, "Thai Floods batter Global Electronics, Auto Supply Chains," Reuters.com, dated October 28, 2011. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "U.S.-China Trade Spat: Is R-Star To Blame?" dated April 6, 2018. APPENDIX A Chart 1Long-Term Real Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights The U.S. and China have a roughly 60-day period to prevent the current trade "skirmish" from metastasizing into a full-blown trade war; The revised U.S.-Korea trade deal suggests that Trump's trade negotiators are credible and are targeting China, not U.S. allies; The U.S. will demand that China's recent RMB appreciation is backed by a long-term reduction in foreign exchange intervention; Tariff reciprocity is not significant, but market access and investment reciprocity are; China will offer concessions first, and will only go to a trade war if Trump imposes sweeping tariffs anyway; Short Chinese technology stocks; remain short China-exposed S&P500 stocks in expectation of further volatility. Feature The market is coming to terms with the fact that President Trump is willing to put his policies where his campaign rhetoric was, at least on trade policy. U.S. equities are down 5.7% since the White House announced Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum and 2.34% since it announced forthcoming Section 301 tariffs against China. Although we have cautioned clients since November 2016 that protectionism is a real risk to global growth and risk assets,1 we believe that the current set of U.S. demands on China justify the moniker of a "trade skirmish," rather than a full-out war.2 That said, the 5.7% drawdown is appropriate, if a bit sanguine. Our "trade skirmish" view is low-conviction. President Trump remains unconstrained on trade policy, giving him leeway to be tougher than the market expects. As such, it is appropriate for the market to price a 20%-30% probability of a full-blown trade war. Given that the market drawdown in such a scenario could be 20% or more, the current market action is appropriately pricing the worst-case scenario. Why would a trade war between the U.S. and China elicit a bear market in U.S. equities if a similar confrontation between Japan and the U.S. did not in the late 1980s? For three reasons. First, the overvaluation of stocks is much greater today. Second, interest rates are much lower, restricting how much policymakers can react to adverse risks. Third, supply chains are much more integrated today, globally and between China and the U.S. Nearly every major S&P 500 multinational corporation is in some way exposed to these supply chains. As such, we think the current drawdown is appropriate. That said, the administration's policy is not haphazard. President Trump and U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Robert Lighthizer are on the same page, making China - and not NAFTA trade partners or South Korea - the main target of U.S. protectionism (Chart 1). The rapid pace at which the administration pivoted from global tariffs to targeting China gives a clear indication of what is afoot. The U.S. is using the threat of tariffs to cajole its allies into tougher trade enforcement against China (Table 1).3 We think this strategy can work, as outlined last week, but there is plenty of room for mistakes that could derail it. Chart 1China, Not NAFTA, In The Crosshairs Table 1U.S. Gradually Exempting Allies From Tariffs Trump also wants to change U.S. policy on immigration and could use the NAFTA negotiation to gain leverage over Mexico. There is therefore still some probability that Trump triggers Article 2205 to leave NAFTA, but we believe it has declined substantively since we put it at 50% in November, particularly given the U.S.-South Korea negotiations we discuss below.4 This week we take a look at the revised U.S.-Korea trade deal and what it suggests about the Trump administration's trade agenda more broadly. Then we update the status of the U.S.-China trade frictions, which are only temporarily subsiding, if at all. Lessons From The KORUS Talks The just-completed renegotiation of the U.S.-Korea free trade agreement (the "KORUS FTA") offers some clues to the Trump administration's trade tactics that may be relevant for future negotiations with NAFTA partners, China, and others. President Trump has repeatedly criticized the KORUS FTA, as the U.S. trade deficit with South Korea has ballooned since its implementation in March 2012 (Chart 2). Trump used the threat of withdrawing from the deal to pressure South Korean President Moon Jae-in not to ease sanctions on North Korea too rapidly. Chart 2Why Trump Likes Tariffs Now USTR Lighthizer and his South Korean counterpart, Hyun Chong-Kim, have agreed to the outlines of a revised deal.5 The key points are as follows: Steel tariff waiver for Korea: South Korea will receive a country-level exemption from the U.S.'s recently imposed steel tariffs.6 Going forward, Korean steel exports will be subject to quotas equivalent to 70% of the average annual import volume during 2015-17. Greater market access for U.S. autos: Korea will double the number of autos it imports on the basis of U.S. safety standards, from 25,000 to 50,000 per year from each U.S. carmaker. It can import more subject to its own safety standards. It will refrain from any new emissions-standards tests, will accept U.S. safety standards on auto parts, and will ease ecological policies and the customs process of verifying the origin of exports. Delayed market access for Korean trucks: The U.S. will retain the existing 25% tariff on Korean trucks through 2041, instead of 2021 (Chart 2, second panel). Fair treatment of U.S. pharmaceutical imports: Korea promises not to discriminate against U.S. drugs but to grant them fair treatment under KORUS provisions. Ancillary currency agreement: The two sides appended a "gentleman's agreement" on currency policies, which is not a formal part of the deal and not subject to legislative confirmation. South Korea agreed not to devalue the won competitively, or to manipulate it more broadly, and to provide greater transparency regarding its interventions in foreign exchange markets. There are three main takeaways from the above. First, the U.S. is obviously focusing on non-tariff barriers to trade, the main hindrance to trade in a world with already low tariff rates. The grievances with Korea were primarily due to safety standards, environmental policies, and burdensome administration that hindered U.S. exports despite the reduction of tariffs under the KORUS agreement. Second, USTR Robert Lighthizer - the seasoned negotiator of the historic 1980s trade disputes with Japan, and the man in charge of the current NAFTA and China negotiations - deserves his reputation as a competent policymaker. He apparently makes concrete demands and is capable of compromising to conclude deals. This reduces the risk, overstated by the media, that the inexperienced U.S. president is driving the trade negotiations. Third, the U.S. is not deliberately trying to punish its allies in pursuit of some mercantilist fantasy of closing every single trade imbalance. Strategic logic dictated that Washington and Seoul needed to conclude a deal quickly so as to better coordinate on North Korea, and they did so. It is highly unlikely that the concluded deal will end the U.S. trade imbalance with South Korea, but it will likely improve it substantively. Moon Jae-in continues to be a pragmatist in his dealings with Trump and Trump is joining Moon's "Moonshine" policy of engagement with North Korea. Talk of the U.S. abandoning its allies did not materialize. (Japan and Taiwan are likely to get deals soon.) Most importantly, this deal is a strong indication that the U.S. will continue to pressure China on its foreign exchange practices. It would make no sense for the U.S. to require its allies to disavow competitive devaluation and reduce currency interventions while not demanding similar assurances from China. On this front, China's recent appreciation of the yuan will not ultimately satisfy the U.S., as it is arbitrary. The U.S. will need to extract deeper guarantees, with the implicit threat of tariffs to prevent China from backsliding. Otherwise the U.S. would yield Chinese exporters a foreign exchange advantage relative to American trade partners who agree to stop intervening to preserve a favorable exchange rate with the USD. A simple comparison of these countries currency moves over the past eight years reveals how they have allowed less appreciation relative to the U.S. than in trade-weighted terms, and how China would benefit if the others were forced to stop this practice while it was left off the hook (Chart 3). Chart 3The U.S. Will Demand Currency Appreciation This last conclusion fits with our study of previous cases of U.S. trade protectionism, in which the end-game was dollar depreciation relative to key trade partners.7 The KORUS case can be considered alongside Lighthizer's and the Trump administration's handling of the Section 301 investigation into China's forced tech transfer and intellectual property theft. The Trump administration came out swinging with unilateral 25% tariffs on about $60 billion worth of goods, to be listed on April 6 and enacted sometime in June. But it also signaled that it would allow a consultation period, and initiated a case through the World Trade Organization, thus reinforcing (rather than undermining) the global trading system. These developments give some grounds for optimism in the NAFTA negotiations and (less so) in the China negotiations. While China is preempting U.S. demands on its currency policy, it will be averse to providing any permanent guarantees, or to painful structural demands. This is due to its concerns about overall stability and its suspicion that the U.S. is pursuing a broader strategic containment policy against it. We discuss these issues below. Bottom Line: The preliminary conclusions of the KORUS FTA negotiation suggest that the Trump administration's trade leadership is credible, while Trump himself is looking for quick and concrete trade "wins" that can be presented to his domestic voter base. This is a marginally market-positive sign. But its ramifications are limited with regard to China, where strategic tensions and geopolitical competition will make it much harder to strike a similar deal quickly. U.S.-China: Fade The "Mirror Tax," Focus On Market Access And Tech China announced tariffs on roughly $3-$3.5 billion worth of U.S. goods on April 2 - ranging from fruits and nuts to wine and pork - in retaliation for the steel and aluminum tariffs that the U.S. imposed in March under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962. China used the exact same tariff rates as the U.S. - 25% and 10% - while selecting the product list so as to produce roughly the same net trade impact in USD terms (Chart 4). The implication is that China will retaliate in kind to deter the U.S., but does not wish to "up the ante." This is largely what we expected, but the implication is significant: the U.S. is about to release a preliminary list on April 6 of $50-$60 billion worth of goods on which it will slap tariffs. This second round of tariffs - which is China-specific - follows from the probe under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. China's recent decision suggests that if negotiations fail, it will respond with tariffs worth roughly the same amount, which is a much bigger exchange of fire for these two economies. The actual retaliatory action would most likely occur in June, when the U.S.'s list is finalized and implemented, though China may hint at its product list much sooner, adding to trade fears and market volatility.8 The Trump administration claims that its product list will be chosen by an algorithm to maximize the impact on Chinese exporters while minimizing the impact on the American consumer. Consistent with this aim, some reports indicate that the goods will be advanced technological products set to benefit from China's "Made in China 2025" plan, in which China has laid down aggressive domestic content requirements (Chart 5). Chart 4Tit For Tat Chart 5China's High-Tech Protectionism What is the Trump administration's goal? Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin declared at the G20 finance ministers' meeting that he did not want to penalize Chinese imports so much as promote U.S. exports. Is this a credible basis for assessing the administration's policy? Yes and no. We think Mnuchin is telling the truth, but not the whole truth. When it comes to blocking imports or boosting exports, Mnuchin is right: the U.S. goal is not simply to punish Beijing for past unfair trade practices by blocking imports of Chinese goods. True, the Trump administration has focused on a lack of reciprocity in tariff rates. But a "mirror tax" or "mirror tariff" with China, which Trump has referred to, would not make much of a difference to the trade balance: Chart 6AThe U.S. Exports Soybeans And Cars To China Chart 6BChina Exports Phones And Computers To The U.S. Taking a look at the top ten exports of the U.S. and China to each other (Chart 6 A&B), it is quite clear that China imposes higher tariffs on U.S. goods than the U.S. imposes on Chinese goods (Chart 7 A&B). This follows from World Trade Organization rules and the relative level of economic development of the two countries. Chart 7AAmerican Exports To China Face Higher Tariffs... Chart 7B... Than Chinese Exports To America If we equalize these tariffs by raising U.S. tariffs to the same level as their Chinese counterparts for the same good, we wind up with a very small $6.2 billion gain to the U.S. trade balance (Chart 8). If we focus only on the top ten goods that both countries export to each other, and impose a hypothetical mirror tax, we wind up with an even smaller gain for the U.S. of $3.9 billion (Chart 9). This is small fry and cannot be the administration's goal (at least not its main goal). The real goal is to gain greater market access for U.S. exports in China. Here the U.S. may have a case, as China lags both its developed and emerging market peers in sourcing its imports from the U.S. (Chart 10). While China comprises 24% of total EM imports, it comprises only 15% of U.S. exports to EM. Even in commodity exports, where the U.S. has made major inroads in China, Beijing has recently limited the American share (Chart 10, middle panel). Chart 8Equalizing Tariffs Has Little Impact Chart 9Equalizing Tariffs Has Little Impact (2) Chart 10U.S. Grievance Is About Market Access A simple, back-of-the-envelope comparison of the U.S.'s top exports to China and EM ex-China suggests that the U.S. can make a case that its exports are suffering unduly in China: China's share of top U.S. exports is lower than one might expect it to be relative to EM or EM-ex-China (Chart 11 A&B). The U.S.'s market share of China's imports in key goods is lower than it is in EM or EM-ex-China (Chart 12 A&B). The U.S. share of China's top imports is smaller than the DM-ex-U.S. share (Chart 13 A&B). Chart 11AChina Is Not A Large Enough Share Of U.S. Exports (Broad) Chart 11BChina Is Not A Large Enough Share Of U.S. Exports (Detailed) Chart 12AU.S. Is Not A Large Enough Share Of Chinese Imports (Broad) Chart 12BU.S. Is Not A Large Enough Share Of Chinese Imports (Detailed) Chart 13AU.S. Has Less Market Access In China Than Other Exporters Chart 13BU.S. Has Less Market Access In China Than Other Exporters China has granted the legitimacy of U.S. complaints by pledging several times in the last few months to open market access. The latest news from the negotiations suggests that some progress is being made.9 Clearly the above is a very rough measure. Chinese consumers may not want to buy as much stuff from the U.S. as from Europe and Japan. The U.S. doubtless needs to improve its global competitiveness, and even then it may not gain as much market share in China as its DM peers. Nevertheless, Washington sees itself as the power that brought China into the global economy and allowed it to join the WTO. If China wants the U.S. to allow it to play a greater role in running the world, the U.S. is demanding a beneficial economic relationship in return. One way China is offering to deal with the problem is by buying American goods at the expense of U.S. allies' goods. For instance, Beijing has offered to buy more semiconductors from the U.S. and fewer from Taiwan and South Korea. This would alleviate the U.S. trade deficit a little, but at a greater expense to U.S. allies (Table 2). It would open up an opportunity for China to make more strategic acquisitions in those weakened, neighboring industries. It is not clear that the Trump administration will accept such a "concession," unless it is coupled with much greater concessions as compensation for selling out the allies. Table 2China's Trade Concessions To The U.S. Could Impose Costs On U.S. Allies Similarly, China's concessions that have been offered so far - like lowering the 25% tariff on car imports - are tokens in the right direction but not sufficient to satisfy the U.S. at the current juncture. This means that the U.S. will demand structural changes that increase market access, from a stronger RMB to a more consumer-oriented economy, as part of what will be a drawn-out effort to encourage China to rebalance its macroeconomy. Of course, Treasury Secretary Mnuchin was only telling half the truth: the U.S. also wants to prevent China from stealing too much of America's market share too fast. When we look at China's comparative advantage - the goods categories in which China's export growth has been fastest in recent years, weighted by contribution to the total - the U.S. is the country that has the largest global market share in these very goods (Chart 14). For instance, telecoms equipment, car parts, TVs, electrical circuits, etc. The U.S.'s export mix is not as dependent on these goods as that of China's neighbors (Taiwan, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea), but it is the chief exporter of these goods nevertheless. Because many of China's most competitive goods are still low value-added (toys, plastics, textiles, furniture), China is pursuing tech upgrades, innovation, and intellectual property: it would eat away at the U.S. share of more advanced goods. Chart 14China's Comparative Advantage Threatens U.S. Global Market Share The Trump administration is trying to slow China's advance and put a stop to China's aggressive poaching of foreign tech and IP.10 This will include restrictions on Chinese direct investment and acquisitions to be announced by Mnuchin on May 21. We expect him to intensify an inherently stringent vetting process. The administration has already taken a proactive stance by blocking Canyon Bridge Capital Partners from acquiring Lattice Semiconductor and Singaporean company Broadcom's attempted acquisition of Qualcomm.11 Rumor has it that the administration is now considering invoking the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977, which authorizes the president to take actions "to deal with any unusual and extraordinary threat, which has its source in whole or substantial part outside the United States, to the national security, foreign policy, or economy of the United States, if the President declares a national emergency with respect to such threat." Trump would be able to cite China's use of state-backed companies, corporate espionage, and cyber-attacks in pursuit of technology and IP (Table 3). Table 3Trump Lacks Legal Constraints On Trade Issues... Especially When National Security Is Involved This is entirely aside from legislation pending in Congress, which the White House appears to support, that would provide the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) with the ability to block investments across entire industries, rather than on a case-by-case basis, and with a broader definition of national security and sensitive property and technologies.12 While American presidents have historically vetoed similar legislation against China, the Trump administration may not, depending on the outcome of talks. The key point is that the U.S. political establishment - across the spectrum - is alarmed about China's economic mercantilism. As Senator Elizabeth Warren recently declared to a group of top policymakers in Beijing: "Now U.S. policymakers are starting to look more aggressively at pushing China to open up the markets without demanding a hostage price of access to U.S. technology."13 Warren, a staunchly liberal senator from the Democratic stronghold of Massachusetts, is entirely on the same page as Trump. The takeaway for investors? China's tit-for-tat response to Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs should not be dismissed out of hand. The market is sensitive to trade fears and there is a clear avenue for them to get worse if the 60-day consultation period lapses without any major Chinese concessions. True, negotiations are ongoing and Trump's trade team has been shown to be both credible and willing to pursue trade disputes through the WTO. Nevertheless there are substantial measures aimed at China coming down the pike and the usual restraints on U.S. policy, centered on the U.S. business establishment lobbying policymakers, are not as effective as in the past. Bottom Line: The U.S.'s primary economic goal in the China negotiations is not to equalize tariffs but to open market access. The strategic goal is much larger. The U.S. wants to see China's rate of technological development slow down. As such, Washington will expect robust guarantees to protect intellectual property and proprietary technology. Investment Conclusions Several clients have asked about the constraints on the different players if trade conflict should escalate over the coming months. On the surface the U.S. is in a stronger position because its outsized deficit with China means that measures constricting bilateral trade are inherently more damaging to China's output (Chart 15). Even some of China's best retaliatory options are difficult to put into practice, including selling U.S. treasuries or imposing sanctions on U.S. commodities (Table 4).14 Chart 15China More Exposed To Trade Than U.S. Table 4China's Retaliation Options Are Limited... Even In Agriculture The U.S. also faces a constraint in imposing measures on China because manufacturing value chains today sprawl across various countries and multinational corporations. Tariffs therefore punish countries, including U.S. allies, that provide inputs to China or American companies that profit from them - think Apple. Moreover, tariffs will not in themselves change the U.S.'s fundamental savings-investment balance, suggesting that demand for foreign goods will simply shift to other producers and the trade deficit will be unaffected. However, supply chain risk is ultimately not prohibitive for the U.S. China has long ranked among the most exposed to supply-chain disruptions, while the U.S. ranks among the least (Chart 16). Moreover, U.S. allies in Europe and ASEAN stand to benefit if supply chains are rerouted from China (Chart 17). While the U.S. and allies would suffer higher initial costs as a result, they would gain the strategic advantage of reducing China's centrality to global supply chains. The latter has given Beijing an advantage in acquiring technology and moving up the value chain. Chart 16China Most Exposed To Supply-Chain Risk Chart 17U.S. Allies Benefit If Supply Chains Move While the Xi Jinping administration is weaning China off export reliance and U.S. reliance, the country still employs 28% of its workers in the manufacturing sector, which leaves it more exposed to disruptions than the U.S. if trade frictions should spiral out of control and weaken overall demand (Chart 18). While American workers are intimately familiar with the boom-and-bust cycle of free labor markets, China has not struggled with significant unemployment since 2003 (Chart 19). Its middle class was much smaller then. Chart 18Employment Is A Constraint On China Chart 19China Unfamiliar With Large-Scale Job Loss In short, China will first attempt to appease the Trump administration through market access (and keeping the RMB strong) to maintain its supply-chain centrality and overall stability. If Trump accepts China's concessions, trade frictions will not spiral out of control - at least not this year. China will only accept a full-fledged trade war if Trump rejects its concessions and imposes punitive measures that threaten its stability. At that juncture, Xi would probably find it useful to demonize Trump and execute long-term changes to make China more self-sufficient, blaming the U.S.-initiated trade war for the painful consequences. This is why it matters if Trump's demands go beyond foreign exchange rates, improved market access, and IP enforcement - for instance, if they extend to capital account liberalization, the holy grail of American trade negotiations with China. Thus far, Trump's team has not raised this demand, but it is a subject we will revisit soon as it is likely to be China's red line, at least within the economic sphere. In light of our expectation for further trade-war related volatility, we would recommend shorting Chinese tech stocks15 and remaining short China-exposed U.S. stocks. The latter trade has been in the black by over 5% in just a week, but is currently up only 0.7%. It is a way to hedge the risk of further tensions between U.S. and China. Risks to this view are: if the U.S. reduces the Section 301 tariffs that it is threatening on or after April 6; if Treasury Secretary Mnuchin's investment restrictions due on May 21 are watered down; or if the U.S. makes no structural demands on China's economy but merely accepts temporary RMB appreciation and some big-ticket import orders. Otherwise the risk that trade tensions spiral out of control will remain elevated at least through the U.S. midterm elections on November 6. By then, Trump will need either to have cut a small-scale deal with China that he can tout for voters or to have taken more aggressive trade action pursuant to the Section 301 findings. Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri, Research Analyst jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Constraints And Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Market Reprices Odds Of A Global Trade War," dated March 6, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated March 28, 2018, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "NAFTA - Populism Vs. Pluto-Populism," dated November 10, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 A 60-day consultation period with both legislatures will follow but the deal will probably remain in more or less the same form. 6 Aluminum was not included, but South Korea is not a major source of aluminum products for the U.S. 7 Please see footnote 2 above. 8 Please see David Lawder, "Trump to unveil China tariff list this week, targeting tech goods," Reuters, April 2, 2018, available at www.reuters.com. 9 Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin spoke with Politburo member Liu He, who is Xi Jinping's top economic policymaker, and they reportedly pledged that they are "committed" to a solution on reducing the U.S. trade deficit. The U.S. is asking for a $100 billion reduction to the trade deficit within the year, as well as some progress on intellectual property enforcement. Supposedly the specific demands involve reducing the Chinese tariff on car imports and raising the foreign ownership cap on Chinese financial companies, the latter of which China has previously promised to do. Please see Andrew Mayeda, "U.S. Pushes China On Cars And Finance In Tariff Talks," Bloomberg, March 26, 2018, available at www.bloomberg.com. 10 Please see the U.S. Trade Representative, "Findings of the Investigation into China's Acts, Policies, and Practices Related to Technology Transfer, Intellectual Property, and Innovation under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974," March 2018, available at ustr.gov. 11 In September 2017, the White House and Department of Treasury intervened in the attempt by a group of investors, including the state-owned China Venture Capital Fund, from acquiring Lattice, on the advice of CFIUS. Lattice makes computer chips that are highly versatile and can be used in military functions; the Chinese SOE was suspected of pursuing China's state-backed efforts to improve its semiconductor industry. Separately, in March 2018, President Trump blocked Singapore-based Broadcom's attempt to acquire Qualcomm, which would have been a hugely consequential tech merger due to the two companies' dominance in making processors. The Treasury Department feared that Chinese state entities might get access to Qualcomm's IP or that the merger might otherwise hinder Qualcomm's "technological leadership." Please see "CFIUS Case 18-036: Broadcom Limited (Singapore)/Qualcomm Incorporated," dated March 5, 2018, available at www.sec.gov. 12 Please see Andrew Mayeda, Saleha Mohsin, and David McLaughlin, "U.S. Weighs Use of Emergency Law to Curb Chinese Takeovers," March 27, 2018, available at www.bloomberg.com. 13 She was speaking with Liu He, seasoned diplomat Yang Jiechi, and Defense Minister Wei Fenghe. Please see Michael Martina, "Senator Warren, in Beijing, says U.S. is waking up to Chinese abuses," April 1, 2018, available at www.reuters.com. 14 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Ags Could Get Caught In U.S. Tariff Imbroglio," dated March 15, 2018, and "Oil Price Forecast Steady, But Risks Expand," dated March 22, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 15 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "After The Selloff: A View From China," dated February 15, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Geopolitical Calendar
Highlights Several economic and financial market indicators point to a budding downtrend in Chinese capital spending and its industrial sector. The recent underperformance of global mining, chemicals and machinery/industrials corroborate that capital spending in China is starting to slump. Shipments-to-inventory ratios for Korea and Taiwan also point to a relapse in Asian manufacturing. This is occurring as our global growth sentiment proxy sits on par with previous peaks, and investor positioning in EM and commodities is overextended. Stay put on EM. Markets with currency pegs to the U.S. dollar, such as the Gulf states and Hong Kong, will face tightening local liquidity. Share prices in these markets have probably topped out. Feature On the surface, EM equities, currencies and local bond and credit markets are still trading well. However, there are several economic indicators and financial variables that herald negative surprises for global and Chinese growth. In particular: China's NBS manufacturing PMI new orders and backlogs of orders have relapsed in the past several months. Chart I-1 illustrates the annual change in new orders and backlogs of orders to adjust for seasonality. The measure leads industrial profits, and presently foreshadows a slowdown going forward. Furthermore, the average of NBS manufacturing PMI, new orders, and backlog orders also points to a potential relapse in industrial metals prices in general as well as mainland steel and iron ore prices (Chart I-2). The message from Charts I-1 and I-2 is that the recent weakness in iron ore and steel prices could mark the beginning of a downtrend in Chinese capital spending. While supply cuts could limit downside in steel prices, it would be surprising if demand weakness does not affect steel prices at all.1 Chart I-1China: Slowdown Has Further To Run Chart I-2Industrial Metals Prices Have Topped Out Although China's money and credit have been flagging potential economic weakness for a while, the recent manufacturing PMI data from the National Bureau of Statistics finally confirmed an impending deceleration in industrial activity and ensuing corporate profit disappointment. Our credit and fiscal spending impulses continue to point to negative growth surprises in capital spending. The latter is corroborated by the weakening Komatsu's Komtrax index, which measures the average hours of machine work per unit in China (Chart I-3). In both Korea and Taiwan, the overall manufacturing shipments-to-inventory ratios have dropped, heralding material weakness in both countries' export volumes (Chart I-4). Chart I-3Signs Of Weakness In Chinese Construction Chart I-4Asia Exports Are Slowing Notably, global cyclical equity sectors that are leveraged to China's capital spending such as materials, industrials and energy have all recently underperformed the global benchmark (Chart I-5). Some of their sub-sectors such as machinery, mining and chemicals have also begun to underperform (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Global Cyclicals Have ##br##Begun Underperforming... Chart I-6...Including Machinery ##br##And Chemical Stocks Among both global and U.S. traditional cyclicals, only the technology sector is outperforming the benchmark. However, we do not think tech should be treated as a cyclical sector, at least for now. In brief, the underperformance of global cyclical equity sectors and sub-sectors following last month's equity market correction corroborate that China's capital spending is beginning to slump. Notably, this is occurring as our global growth sentiment proxy rests on par with its previous apexes (Chart I-7). Previous tops in this proxy for global growth sentiment have historically coincided with tops in EM EPS net revisions, as shown in this chart. Chart I-7Global Growth Sentiment: As Good As It Gets All told, we may be finally entering a meaningful slowdown in China that will dampen commodities prices and EM corporate earnings. The latter are still very strong but EPS net revisions have rolled over and turned negative again (Chart I-8). Chart I-8EM EPS Net Revisions Have Plummeted EM share prices typically lead EPS by about nine months. In 2016, EM stocks bottomed in January-February, yet EPS did not begin to post gains until December 2016. Even if EM corporate profits are to contract in the fourth quarter of this year, EM share prices, being forward looking, will likely begin to wobble soon. Poor EM Equity Breadth There is also evidence of poor breadth in the EM equity universe, especially compared to the U.S. equity market. First, the rally in the EM equally-weighted index - where all individual stocks have equal weights - has substantially lagged the market cap-weighted index since mid 2017. This suggests that only a few large-cap companies have contributed a non-trivial share of capital gains. Second, the EM equal-weighted stock index's and EM small-caps' relative share prices versus their respective U.S. counterparts have fallen rather decisively in the past six weeks (Chart I-9, top and middle panels). While the relative performance of market cap-weighted indexes has not declined that much, it has still rolled over (Chart I-9, bottom panel). We compare EM equity performance with that of the U.S. because DM ex-U.S. share prices themselves have been rather sluggish. In fact, DM ex-U.S. share prices have barely rebounded since the February correction. Third, EM technology stocks have begun underperforming their global peers (Chart I-10). This is a departure from the dynamics that prevailed last year, when a substantial share of EM outperformance versus DM equities was attributed to EM tech outperformance versus their DM counterparts and tech's large weight in the EM benchmark. Chart I-9EM Versus U.S. Equities: Relative ##br##Performance Is Reversing Chart I-10EM Tech Has Started ##br##Underperforming DM Tech Finally, the relative advance-decline line between EM versus U.S. bourses has been deteriorating (Chart I-11). This reveals that EM equity breadth - the advance-decline line - is substantially worse relative to the U.S. Chart I-11EM Versus U.S.: Relative Equity Breadth Is Very Poor Bottom Line: Breadth of EM equity performance versus DM/U.S. has worsened considerably. This bodes ill for the sustainability of EM outperformance versus DM/U.S. We continue to recommend an underweight EM versus DM position within global equity portfolios. Three Pillars Of EM Stocks EM equity performance is by and large driven by three sectors: technology, banks (financials) and commodities. Table I-1 illustrates that technology, financials and commodities (energy and materials) account for 66% of the EM MSCI market cap and 75% of MSCI EM total (non-diluted) corporate earnings. Therefore, getting the outlook of these sectors right is crucial to the EM equity call. Table I-1EM Equity Sectors: Earnings & Market Cap Weights Technology Four companies - Alibaba, Tencent, Samsung and TSMC - account for 17% of EM and 58% of EM technology market cap, respectively. This sector can be segregated into hardware tech (Samsung and TSMC) and "new concept" stocks (Alibaba and Tencent). We do not doubt that new technologies will transform many industries, and there will be successful companies that profit enormously from this process. Nevertheless, from a top-down perspective, we can offer little insight on whether EM's "new concept" stocks such as Alibaba and Tencent are cheap or expensive, nor whether their business models are proficient. Further, these and other global internet/social media companies' revenues are not driven by business cycle dynamics, making top-down analysis less imperative in forecasting their performance. We can offer some insight for technology hardware companies such as Samsung and TSMC. Chart I-12 demonstrates that semiconductor shipment-to-inventory ratios have rolled over decisively in both Korea and Taiwan. In addition, semiconductor prices have softened of late (Chart I-13) Together, this raises a red flag for technology hardware stocks in Asia. Chart I-12Asia's Semiconductor Industry Chart I-13Semiconductor Prices: A Soft Spot? Finally, Chart I-14 compares the current run-up in U.S. FANG stocks (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google) with the Nasdaq mania in the 1990s. An equal-weighted average stock price index of FANG has risen by 10-fold in the past four and a half years. Chart I-14U.S. FANG Stocks Now ##br##And 1990s Nasdaq Mania A similar 10-fold increase was also registered by the Nasdaq top 100 stocks in the 1990s over eight years (Chart I-14). While this is certainly not a scientific approach, the comparison helps put the rally in "hot" technology stocks into proper historical perspective. The main take away here is that even by bubble standards, the recent acceleration in "new concept" stocks has been too fast. That said, it is impossible to forecast how long any mania will persist. This has been and remains a major risk to our investment strategy of being negative on EM stocks. In sum, there is little visibility in EM "new concept" tech stocks. Yet Asia's manufacturing cycle is rolling over, entailing downside risks to tech hardware businesses. Putting all this together, we conclude that it is unlikely that EM tech stocks will be able to drive the EM rally and outperformance in 2018 as they did in 2017. Banks We discussed the outlook for EM bank stocks in our February 14 report,2 and will not delve into additional details here. In brief, several countries' banks have boosted their 2017 profits by reducing their NPL provisions. This has artificially boosted profits and spurred investors to bid up bank equity prices. We believe banks in a number of EM countries are meaningfully under-provisioned and will have to augment their NPL provisions. The latter will hurt their profits and constitutes a major risk for EM bank share prices. Energy And Materials The outlook for absolute performance of these sectors is contingent on commodities prices. Industrial metals prices are at risk of slower capex in China. The mainland accounts for 50% of global demand for all industrial metals. Oil prices are at risk from traders' record-high net long positions in oil futures, according to CFTC data (Chart I-15, top panel). Traders' net long positions in copper are also elevated, according to the data from the same source (Chart I-15, bottom panel). Hence, it may require only some U.S. dollar strength and negative news out of China for these commodities prices to relapse. Chart I-15Traders' Net Long Positions In ##br##Oil And Copper Are Very Elevated How do we incorporate the improved balance sheets of materials and energy companies into our analysis? If and as commodities prices slide, share prices of commodities producers will deflate in absolute terms. However, this does not necessarily mean they will underperform the overall equity benchmark. Relative performance dynamics also depend on the performance of other sectors. Commodities companies could outperform the overall equity benchmark amid deflating commodities prices if other equity sectors drop more. In brief, the improved balance sheets of commodities producers may be reflected in terms of their relative resilience amid falling commodities prices but will still not preclude their share prices from declining in absolute terms. Bottom Line: If EM bank stocks and commodities prices relapse as we expect, the overall EM equity index will likely experience a meaningful selloff and underperform the DM/U.S. benchmarks. Exchange Rate Pegs Versus U.S. Dollar With the U.S. dollar depreciating in the past 12 months, pressure on exchange rate regimes that peg their currencies to the dollar has subsided. These include but are not limited to Hong Kong, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). As a result, these countries' interest rate differentials versus the U.S. have plunged (Chart I-16). In short, domestic interest rates in these markets have risen much less than U.S. short rates. This has kept domestic liquidity conditions easier than they otherwise would have been. However, maneuvering room for these central banks is narrowing. In Hong Kong, the exchange rate is approaching the lower bound of its narrow band (Chart I-17). As it touches 7.85, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) will have no choice but to tighten liquidity and push up interest rates. Chart I-16Markets With U.S. Dollar Peg: ##br##Policymakers' Maneuvering Window Is Closing Chart I-17Hong Kong: Interest ##br##Rates Are Heading Higher In Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the monetary authorities have used the calm in their foreign exchange markets over the past year to not match the rise in U.S. short rates (Chart I-18A and Chart I-18B). However, with their interest rate differentials over U.S. now at zero, these central banks will have no choice but to follow U.S. rates to preserve their currency pegs.3 Chart I-18ASaudi Arabian Interest Rates Will Rise Chart I-18BThe UAE Interest Rates Will Rise If U.S. interest rates were to move above local rates in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, those countries' currencies will come under considerable depreciation pressure because capital will move from local currencies into U.S. dollars. Hence, if U.S. short rates move higher, which is very likely, local rates in these and other Gulf countries will have to rise if their exchange rate pegs are to be preserved. Neither the Hong Kong dollar nor Gulf currencies are at risk of devaluation. The monetary authorities there have enough foreign currency reserves to defend their respective pegs. Nevertheless, the outcome will be domestic liquidity tightening in the Gulf's and Hong Kong's banking system. In addition, potentially lower oil prices will weigh on Gulf bourses and China's slowdown will hurt growth and equity sentiment in Hong Kong. All in all, equity markets in Gulf countries and Hong Kong have probably seen their best in terms of absolute performance. Potential negative external shocks and higher interest rates due to Fed tightening have darkened the outlook for these bourses. Bottom Line: Local liquidity in Gulf markets and Hong Kong is set to tighten. Share prices in these markets have probably topped out. However, given these equity markets have massively underperformed the EM equity benchmark, they are unlikely to underperform when the overall EM index falls. Hence, we do not recommend underweighting these bourses within an EM equity portfolio. For asset allocators, a neutral or overweight allocation to these bourses is warranted. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "China's "De-Capacity" Reforms: Where Steel & Coal Prices Are Headed," dated November 22, 2017; the link is available on page 16. 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "EM Bank Stocks Hold The Key," dated February 14, 2018; the link is available on page 16. 3 Please see BCA's Frontier Markets Strategy Special Report "United Arab Emirates: Domestic Tailwinds, External Headwinds," dated March 12, 2018. The link is available on fms.bcaresearch.com. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
The Korean won is vulnerable on several fronts: Its real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs is well above its historical mean (Chart II-1, top panel). Importantly, based on this same measure, the won is very expensive versus the Japanese yen (Chart II-1, bottom panel). The manufacturing cycle has already weakened in Korea (Chart II-2). Japanese exports in U.S. dollar terms are starting to outperform Korean ones (Chart II-3), suggesting that Korean exporters might be losing market share to their Japanese rivals. Furthermore, manufacturing inventories are rising sharply in Korea but not in Japan (Chart II-4). Relative manufacturing inventory trends also favor the yen versus the won (Chart II-4, bottom panel). The won's appreciation has depressed Korea's export prices in local-currency terms. In Japan, on the other hand, local-currency export prices are holding better. Interestingly, the relative export price trend in U.S. dollars points to the won's depreciation versus the yen (Chart II-5). Korean non-financial stocks have broken below their 200-day moving average, which corroborates that corporate profitability is deteriorating (Chart II-6). Korean equities have been among the world's worst-performing bourses year-to-date. In addition, the correction in Korean stocks commenced before the recent plunge in the S&P 500. This highlights that the relapse in Korean share prices was not only due to the contagion from the U.S. equity selloff. Finally, the technical profile of the won points to a major top. Chart II-7 shows that the won is facing multi-year technical resistance versus the U.S. dollar. Investment Conclusions We have been short the Korean won versus the Thai baht since October 19, 2016 and this trade has produced a 7.3% gain. We recommend closing this trade and shorting the won versus an equally-weighted basket of the U.S. dollar and yen. The rationale to short the KRW versus this basket is to hedge against a possible near-term U.S. dollar selloff if China is forced to revalue the RMB further, as we discussed in February 7, 2018 report.1 In regards to equities, we are closing our long KOSPI / short Nikkei trade with a 1% loss since April 26, 2017. Within the EM universe, we continue recommending a neutral allocation to Korean stocks excluding technology. Despite their recent underperformance, EM-dedicated managers should continue overweighting Korean tech stocks. The reasoning behind this is that the potential currency depreciation will help their corporate profitability as tech shipments are not exposed to Chinese capital spending. The latter will be the epicenter of negative growth surprises in our opinion. Finally, Korean local bond yields will soon top out as the deflationary pressures from a stronger currency become more evident in the economy. Korean bonds will outperform U.S. Treasurys on a currency-hedged basis. Footnotes 1 Please refer to Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, titled "A Regime Shift?," dated February 7, 2018, the link is available on page 19.
Highlights The trajectory of EM bank profits and share prices will be critical to sustain the EM equity rally. Rising U.S. bond yields will push up EM local bond yields. This, along with poor quality of banks' earnings, will likely halt EM banks' stock rally. We reiterate our strategic equity position: short EM banks / long U.S. banks. The same strategy can be replicated in credit markets. In China, bank loan data are no longer indicative of aggregate lending to all segments of the economy. Banks' total claims, total assets, and money aggregates have all slowed. The Korean won is making a major top. Short it against an equal-weighted basket of the U.S. dollar and yen. Feature Chart I-1Rising U.S. Bond Yields = Higher EM Local ##br##Bond Yields And Lower Bank Stocks The key financial market variables with respect to the outlook for emerging markets (EM) are commodities prices, the U.S. dollar and EM bank share prices. We have written extensively on the former two, and today we elaborate on the third pillar: the importance of banks/financial stocks to the EM aggregate equity index. First, surging U.S. Treasurys yields point to higher EM local currency bond yields (Chart I-1, top panel). In turn, EM banks' share performance inversely correlates with EM local bond yields (Chart I-1, bottom panel). Altogether, this heralds lower EM bank share prices. Second, financials make up 24.4% of the MSCI EM equity market cap, with banks accounting for 18% out of the 24.4%. Hence, financials/banks' price fluctuations are critical to the EM equity benchmark. Importantly, financials' earnings accounts for 33.6% of EM listed companies earnings. By contrast, technology accounts for 27.6% of the EM market cap, but only 23.3% of EM total earnings (Table I-1). As to the EM technology sector, it is heavily skewed toward four large companies: Tencent, Alibaba, Samsung and TSMC. The latter two have already shown considerable weakness, with Samsung breaking down below its 200-day moving average (Chart I-2). Analyses on the former two companies are beyond the realm of macro research. What's more, these stocks are extremely overbought and probably expensive. If the rest of EM goes down, these two stocks are not likely to preclude it from happening. Third, banks in China, Turkey, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brazil have been boosting their reported EPS by reducing their provisions outright or the pace of provisioning. Table I-1EM Equity Sectors: Earnings & Market Cap Weights Chart I-2Is EM Tech Hardware Breaking Down? For various reasons, we believe these reductions in provisions are unjustified. In China, Turkey and Malaysia, NPLs are too low to begin with: the more accurate measures of NPLs are probably much higher in these banking systems given the magnitude and duration of the preceding credit boom (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). Chart I-3China: Banks' Provisions Are Inadequate Chart I-4Turkey And Malaysia: ##br##Falling Provisions Are Untenable In Brazil and Indonesia, the recent weakness in nominal GDP growth - shown inverted on the chart - does not justify the outright reduction in the level of net new NPL provisions (Chart I-5). In short, some EM banks have inflated their EPS in recent quarters by reducing provisioning for bad loans. This suggests that their EPS quality is poor, and their profit recovery is unsustainable. Bottom Line: EM bank share prices have reached their previous high but are unlikely to break above that level, in our opinion (Chart I-6). Chart I-5Brazil And Indonesia: Declining ##br##Provisions Are Unsustainable Chart I-6EM Bank Share Prices ##br##Are Facing Resistance We reiterate our strategic call of being short EM banks and long U.S. bank stocks. The relative share price performance of EM versus U.S. banks has been inversely correlated with U.S. bond yields (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Rising U.S. Bond Yields = ##br##EM Banks Underperformance If our view on higher U.S. bond yields materializes, odds are that EM bank share prices will relapse considerably versus U.S. banks. Traders should consider implementing this trade. Credit investors can replicate the same strategy in credit markets. Strategy Considerations Investor sentiment remains bullish on risk assets in general and emerging markets in particular. The buy-on-dips mentality is well entrenched. Amid such investor consensus, it is important to consider alternative scenarios. Presently, the relative performance of Swiss versus global non-financial stocks is sitting on its long-term moving average (Chart I-8). Odds of a rebound in the relative performance of Swiss non-financial stocks from such oversold levels are fairly high. As and when the latter begin outperforming their global peers, it might entail a negative outlook for global bourses in general and cyclical equity sectors in particular. The basis is that Swiss non-financial stocks are defensive in nature, as pharmaceuticals and consumer staples account for a large portion of the total market cap. Not surprisingly, the previous bottoms in Swiss non-financials' relative performance versus global non-financials coincided with major tops in global equity bull markets. For now, the risk-reward for global stocks is unattractive, and the outlook for EM relative performance is extremely poor. Notably, relative manufacturing PMI trends favor DM over EM stocks (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Swiss Stocks Are At Critical Juncture: ##br##What Does It Mean For Global Equities? Chart I-9EM Relative To DM: PMIs And Share Prices Besides, as we discussed at great length in our recent report,1 EM equity valuations are on par with DM when adjusted for sector weights and sub-sectors with outlier valuation ratios. Our stance remains that EM risk assets will face a perfect storm this year for two reasons: Strong U.S. growth will cause U.S. inflation to rise, and the selloff in U.S. bonds has further to run. Higher U.S. interest rates should support the U.S. dollar and weigh on EM risk assets that have benefited disproportionally from the search for yield; While China's growth has slowed only moderately, our forward-looking leading indicators continue to point to further deceleration. A combination of these two tectonic shifts will amount to a perfect storm for EM risk assets in 2018. We explore these two issues in greater detail below. U.S. Inflation, The Fed And The U.S. Dollar We have the following observations on current U.S. economic dynamics: Fiscal stimulus is arriving at a time when growth is already robust, and the labor market is tight. This will likely produce higher inflation. Inflation does not need to surge to make a difference in financial markets. It would be fair to say investors have become complacent and financial markets are still pricing in a goldilocks scenario. Therefore, even a moderate rise in core inflation readings along with some anecdotal evidence that companies are able to raise prices will lead to further re-pricing in U.S. interest rate expectations. Higher U.S. interest rates pose a risk to EM, which have benefited considerably from the search for yield. EM currencies, domestic bonds and credit markets have so far held up well, despite the considerable rise in U.S. bond yields (see Chart I-1 on page 1). Based on this, it is tempting to argue that EM will be immune to rising U.S. interest rate expectations. Nevertheless, we believe this EM resilience has occurred because fund flows to EM remain very robust. These flows are often backward looking. Odds are that 10-year U.S. Treasury yields will move well north of 3%. Such a considerable rise in yields will weigh on EM risk assets. It is essential to realize that the positioning in EM stocks, local bonds and credit is more elevated today than it was before the 2015 downturn. Finally, Chart I-10 illustrates that U.S. banks' excess reserves at the Federal Reserve have started to drop. In recent years the periods of reserve declines have coincided with a strong U.S. dollar, yet the latest drop in banks' excess reserves has not yet produced a meaningful rally in the greenback (the dollar is shown inverted in Chart I-10). The Fed's ongoing tapering efforts and the U.S. Treasury's replenishment of its account at the Fed are bound to produce further reductions in banks' excess reserves. Based on the latter's correlation with the exchange rate, this should support the greenback. Notably, the U.S. dollar is fairly valued, according to our most favored valuation measure: the unit labor cost-based real effective exchange rate (Chart I-11). This takes into account both wages and productivity, and hence gauges competitiveness much better than real effective exchange rate measures that rely on consumer and producer prices. Chart I-10Shrinking U.S. Banks Excess ##br##Reserves = Stronger U.S. Dollar Chart I-11The U.S. Dollar Is Not Expensive Finally, tax cuts are supply side reforms, and they are typically bullish for the currency. Bottom Line: A combination of stronger growth, rising interest rate expectations, neutral valuations and oversold conditions should help the U.S. dollar to rebound. The rally in the U.S. exchange rate versus EM currencies will be pronounced if China's growth slows, as we expect it to. Making Sense Of Chinese Data China's slowdown has so far been moderate. However, in any economy a downturn almost always begins with a moderation in growth. That, however, is not sufficient reason to conclude that the growth slump will be benign or short-lived. Judgement on the duration and magnitude of a slowdown should be based on the existence of major macro imbalances, or lack thereof. Given that China has enormous money, credit and property market excesses/imbalances and policy has been tightening, we believe that growth disappointments will be non-trivial and more substantive than the market consensus currently expects. The following corroborate the case for a deepening growth slump ahead: The annual change in the manufacturing new orders-to-inventory ratio from the National Bureau of Statistics points to a relapse in Caixin's manufacturing PMI as well as steel, iron ore and coal prices (Chart I-12). This indicator also heralds a decline in analysts' EPS net revisions for all Chinese stocks (Chart I-13). Chart I-12China: An Impending Slowdown Chart I-13China: EPS Net Revisions Have Peaked While some economic data like imports for January were strong, it is important to realize that this January had a few more working days compared with January 2017 due to the Chinese New Year falling in February this year. Although the same seasonal adjustment should be applied to money and credit data, there are other critical dimensions specific to the credit data that investors should be aware of. Banks' loans to companies and households - widely watched by the investment community - was very strong in January relative to the previous month. However, loan and most of other data in China should be seasonally adjusted. The annual growth rate in RMB bank loans is still very robust at 13.2% (Chart I-14, top panel). However, the growth rates of banks' total assets, total claims and broad money have all dropped close to 10% or below (Chart I-14). The disparity between bank loans on the one hand and their claims and assets on the other is due to the following: In China's banking statistics, banks' loans to non-bank financial institutions - such as financial trusts, investment corporations, insurance, financial leasing companies and auto-financing companies, and loan companies - are not included in banks' loan data. Hence, bank loan data do not reveal the banks' full impact on the economy. By extending credit to non-bank financial institutions, banks have expanded their balance sheets without exceeding their loan quotas. In short, banks have funded shadow banking and by extension the real economy and speculative investment schemes but have done so via non-bank financial institutions. In addition, banks have also bought a lot of corporate and local government bonds that are not considered loans. Overall, bank loans have been understating the degree of the banking system's credit expansion. In the past year, regulators have been forcing banks to reduce their lending to non-bank financial institutions. With this channel of balance sheet expansion restricted (Chart I-15, top panel), banks are probably resorting to more traditional loans to expand their balance sheets and earn income. Chart I-14China: Bank Loans, ##br##Assets And Total Claims Chart I-15China: Bank Lending To Shadow ##br##Banking Is Being Curtailed In short, one needs to look at banks' aggregate claims on all entities - companies, households, non-bank financial institutions and governments - to assess whether their lending to the economy is slowing or accelerating. Chart I-16China: Structure Of Bank Assets Consistent with the ongoing regulatory clampdown, banks' claims on non-bank financial institutions - so called shadow banking - have plummeted in the past 12 months after expanding 50-70% annually for several years in a row (Chart I-15, top panel). The bottom three panels of Chart I-15 indicate that the annual growth rates of banks' claims on companies, household and the government have either already decelerated or are slowing now. Their respective shares in banks' total assets are displayed in Chart I-16. While banks' RMB loans remain the largest category of assets, the importance of other claims has risen. Bottom Line: Several leading indicators continue pointing to an impending slowdown in the mainland's economy. Bank loan data is no longer indicative of total bank assets expansion/aggregate lending to all segments in the economy. Broader measures - such as banks' total claims, assets and money aggregates - have decelerated considerably. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Korea: A Major Top In The Won The Korean won is vulnerable on several fronts: Its real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs is well above its historical mean (Chart II-1, top panel). Importantly, based on this same measure, the won is very expensive versus the Japanese yen (Chart II-1, bottom panel). The manufacturing cycle has already weakened in Korea (Chart II-2). Chart II-1The Won Is Expensive Chart II-2Korea's Manufacturing Is Weakening Japanese exports in U.S. dollar terms are starting to outperform Korean ones (Chart II-3), suggesting that Korean exporters might be losing market share to their Japanese rivals. Furthermore, manufacturing inventories are rising sharply in Korea but not in Japan (Chart II-4). Relative manufacturing inventory trends also favor the yen versus the won (Chart II-4, bottom panel). Chart II-3Relative Exports: Korea Versus Japan Chart II-4Manufacturing Inventories: Korea And Japan The won's appreciation has depressed Korea's export prices in local-currency terms. In Japan, on the other hand, local-currency export prices are holding better. Interestingly, the relative export price trend in U.S. dollars points to the won's depreciation versus the yen (Chart II-5). Korean non-financial stocks have broken below their 200-day moving average, which corroborates that corporate profitability is deteriorating (Chart II-6). Korean equities have been among the world's worst-performing bourses year-to-date. Chart II-5Export Prices: Korea And Japan Chart II-6Korean Non-Financial Stocks Are Cracking In addition, the correction in Korean stocks commenced before the recent plunge in the S&P 500. This highlights that the relapse in Korean share prices was not only due to the contagion from the U.S. equity selloff. Finally, the technical profile of the won points to a major top. Chart II-7 shows that the won is facing multi-year technical resistance versus the U.S. dollar. Chart II-7KRW/USD Exchange Rate: ##br##A Long-Term Technical Profile Investment Conclusions We have been short the Korean won versus the Thai baht since October 19, 2016 and this trade has produced a 7.3% gain. We recommend closing this trade and shorting the won versus an equally-weighted basket of the U.S. dollar and yen. The rationale to short the KRW versus this basket is to hedge against a possible near-term U.S. dollar selloff if China is forced to revalue the RMB further, as we discussed in February 7, 2018 report.2 In regards to equities, we are closing our long KOSPI / short Nikkei trade with a 1% loss since April 26, 2017. Within the EM universe, we continue recommending a neutral allocation to Korean stocks excluding technology. Despite their recent underperformance, EM-dedicated managers should continue overweighting Korean tech stocks. The reasoning behind this is that the potential currency depreciation will help their corporate profitability as tech shipments are not exposed to Chinese capital spending. The latter will be the epicenter of negative growth surprises in our opinion. Finally, Korean local bond yields will soon top out as the deflationary pressures from a stronger currency become more evident in the economy. Korean bonds will outperform U.S. Treasurys on a currency-hedged basis. 1 Please refer to Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, titled "EM Equity Valuations (Part I)," dated January 24, 2018, the link is available on page 19. 2 Please refer to Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, titled "A Regime Shift?," dated February 7, 2018, the link is available on page 19. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Chinese policymakers are walking a tightrope, attempting to balance contradictory objectives. While their task is not impossible, we find that financial markets are overly complacent. Recent price action in EM risk assets resembles a final bear capitulation phase, and a classic top formation. Currency appreciation and moderation in export growth will damp corporate profits of exporters in Korea and Taiwan. Stay short KRW versus THB and short MYR versus RUB and USD. Feature "...at first, a stick may bend under strain, ready all the time to bend back, until a certain point is reached, when it breaks." Irving Fisher, The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions (1933) China continues to tighten financial regulations1 and onshore corporate bond yields keep marching higher. Yet EM and China-related financial markets have been extremely buoyant, completely ignoring the tightening dynamics underway. This reminds us of the above quote from Irving Fisher. The Chinese economy has been able to "...bend under strain, ready all the time to bend back..." In other words, growth has so far done well, despite ongoing liquidity and regulatory tightening (Chart I-1). This has led many investors and commentators to proclaim that the economy is healthy and will slow only a bit, or not at all. Chart I-1China: Will Economy Continue ##br##Defying Weak Credit Impulse? Yet, financial market risks linger. At a certain point, cumulative pressure from policy tightening will cause China's recovery to falter - "break," as per Fisher's quote above - impacting the rest of the world in general and EM in particular. This precept is pertinent to China at present because its money, credit and property markets are frothy, as we have written repeatedly in recent years, making them especially vulnerable to tightening. We thought such a deceleration in China's business cycle would occur in 2017, but it has not yet transpired. Forward-looking indicators such as money supply growth and the yield curve have been heralding a growth slowdown for many months (see Chart I-1). Nevertheless, this recovery has proved to be enduring; even though some segments have slowed, overall nominal growth, corporate pricing power and profits have done well. Does such growth resilience warrant an upgrade on China's outlook? An economy's past performance does not guarantee its future performance. This is relevant to China now, especially given the cumulative impact of the ongoing triple policy tightening - liquidity, regulatory and anti-corruption efforts in the financial industry2 - which will likely be substantial. Walking A Tightrope China's policymakers are walking a tightrope trying to balance contradictory objectives such as curbing financial speculation and credit excesses, capping inflation and maintaining a stable currency on the one hand, and maintaining robust growth on the other. Inflationary pressures are escalating in the mainland economy. Chart I-2 demonstrates that pricing power for 5,000 industrial companies - a diffusion index for producer prices compiled by the People's Bank of China - is approaching its 2007 and 2010 highs, while nominal interest rates are currently much lower than they were in 2007 and 2010 (Chart I-2, bottom panel). Notably, most of China's nominal recovery in the past two years has been due to prices, not volumes (Chart I-3). Given that rising prices benefit corporate profits much more than rising volumes, Chinese corporate profits have surged. Yet, the flip side of these dynamics is rising inflation. Chart I-2China: Inflationary Pressure Are Rising, ##br##While Interest Rates Are Low Chart I-3China: It Has Been Nominal (Price) Not ##br##Volume Manufacturing Recovery Mounting inflation amid enormous money excesses - the Chinese banking system has originated RMB 142 trillion (equivalent to $22 trillion) since January 20093 - risks triggering rising inflation expectations, which would then feed back into inflation. With real interest rates already extremely low (Chart I-4), increasing inflation expectations could lead to growing demand for foreign currency, in turn exerting downward pressure on the RMB exchange rate. Chart I-4China: Inflation-Adjusted ##br##Interest Rates Are Low Chinese households have been uneasy about the real (inflation-adjusted) value of their deposits, and have been opting for speculative investments that promise higher yields than bank deposits. Hence, policymakers cannot ignore households' desire for higher real interest rates if they aim to cool down speculative investment activities and contain systemic risks in the system. Overall, the authorities need to tread carefully, balancing between the need to preserve decent growth while keeping inflation at bay. Falling behind the inflation curve is as dangerous as being too aggressive in tightening. For now, rising domestic inflationary pressures, robust DM growth and the resilience of financial markets will justify further policy tightening in China. Controlling leverage, curbing financial market excesses and limiting speculation in the real estate market are all major components of the structural reforms agenda that China's top policymakers committed to at the Party Congress in October. Bottom Line: Chinese policymakers are walking a tightrope, trying to balance contradictory objectives. While their task is not impossible, we find that financial markets are overly complacent. The odds of successfully navigating these contradictory objectives amid lingering money, credit and property market imbalances are 30% or lower. In the meantime, financial markets seem priced for perfection. This gap between the market's views and our perception of risks leads us to maintain a negative investment stance. EM's Blow-Out Phase EM stocks and currencies have gone vertical in recent weeks, despite being overbought and not cheap. The recent price actions in EM and global risk assets looks like a final bear capitulation phase and a classic top formation. The EM overall equity and small-cap indexes have reached their 2011 high (Chart I-5, top and middle panels). Meanwhile, EM high-yield (junk) corporate and quasi-sovereign bond yields are at their historical lows (Chart I-5, bottom panel). Economic data, corporate profits and news flows are typically extremely positive at tops of cycles, and very negative at bottoms. Given that share prices have surged and credit spreads are extremely low, a lot of good news has already been discounted. In particular, EM long-term EPS growth expectations have shot up above their previous highs (Chart I-6). This indicator can serve as a proxy for investor sentiment on EM stocks, at the moment suggesting extreme bullishness. EM stocks topped out in the past when this indicator reached the current levels. Chart I-5Are EM At Their Zenith? Chart I-6Analysts Are Super Bullish On EM Profits Growth Needless to say, global investors' positioning is stretched in favor of risk assets. Chart I-7 entails that U.S. individual investors' holdings of cash was at a record low as of December, while their exposure to equities was not far from record highs. Apart from China-related risks, a potential rise in U.S. bond yields and/or the U.S. dollar, could spoil the EM party. Many investors have invested in EM on the assumption of continued weakness in the greenback and subdued U.S. bond yields. It would be unusual if this current robust global growth does not lead to higher inflation expectations or higher bond yields. With respect to market signals, Chart I-8 illustrates that global steel stocks in absolute terms, and the relative performance of emerging Asian stocks versus DM equities have approached their very long-term moving averages. The latter might become a major technical resistance. Failure to break above this resistance level would be consistent with EM share prices rolling over at their 2011 highs (see Chart I-7). Altogether, this could signal a major top in EM risk assets. Chart I-7Asset Allocation Of ##br##U.S. Individual Investors Chart I-8Select Segments Are At Their ##br##Long-Term Technical Resistances Bottom Line: The EM rally has endured much longer and has gone much farther than we envisioned. However, we maintain our cautious stance, and recommend underweighting EM stocks, currencies and credit versus their DM counterparts. Emerging Asia: Currencies And Business Cycle Chart I-9Geopolitics And Asian Currencies Emerging Asian currencies have recently been on the fly, surging versus the U.S. dollar. Apart from strong global manufacturing, one reason behind the emerging Asian currency appreciation has been geopolitics. We suspect political leaders in Taiwan and Korea have instructed their central banks to allow their currencies to appreciate to gratify the Trump administration's aspirations of a weaker greenback. The top panel of Chart I-9 shows that the Taiwanese dollar's sharp appreciation coincided with Trump's controversial phone call with the Taiwanese president on December 3rd, 2016. Similarly, Trump's visit to South Korea on November 7th, 2017 jives with the latest up leg in the Korean won (Chart I-9, bottom panel). It seems President Trump's geopolitical assurances to Taiwan and Korea are somewhat tied to these policymakers' increased tolerance for currency appreciation. Notably, foreign exchange reserves in both Taiwan and Korea have risen little, despite their strong trade surpluses and foreign capital inflows over the past year. This confirms that their central banks have been reluctant to purchase U.S. dollars and in turn cap their currencies' appreciation. In addition to the political context, there are a number of other important drivers of Asian exchange rates and the region's business cycle: The growth rate of Korean and Taiwanese total exports in U.S. dollars has moderated (Chart I-10). This, along with KRW and TWD appreciation, implies a meaningful deceleration in exporters' revenue growth in local currency terms. Besides, China's container freight index - the price to ship containers worldwide - has relapsed and it correlates well with Asia's export cycle (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Moderation In Asian Exports Growth Chart I-11A Negative Signal For Asian Exports Even though DRAM prices are rising, other semiconductor prices have rolled over (Chart I-12). Semiconductor prices and volumes are vital for the tech-heavy Taiwanese and Korean manufacturing sectors. The RMB rally is also late. Enormous pent-up demand for foreign assets from Chinese residents due to low mainland real interest rates creates the potential for capital outflows to cap RMB strength. This would weigh on the ongoing Asian currency rally. Finally, net EPS revisions of Korean and Taiwanese technology companies' have rolled over (Chart I-13), probably reflecting a dampening effect of currency appreciation. This could in turn lead to foreign capital outflows from their equity markets causing currency selloffs. Chart I-12Divergence In Semiconductor Prices Chart I-13Asia Tech Companies: Net EPS Revisions Corroborating budding signs of a slowdown in exports and corporate profits, emerging Asian stocks have begun underperforming DM equities, as shown in Chart I-8 on page 7. The deceleration in export revenues and currency appreciation are adverse developments for share prices in export-related sectors of Korea and Taiwan. Nevertheless, for dedicated EM equity portfolios, we recommend overweighting the Taiwanese bourse and Korean technology stocks (and being neutral on the rest of KOSPI). The basis is that share prices of hardware tech manufacturers have less downside than other EM sectors. Their attractive relative valuations combined with prospects for robust growth in DM warrant their outperformance against the overall EM equity index in common currency terms. As to exchange rates, the Trump factor will delay and mitigate Asian currency depreciation, but will not preclude it if export growth slows, as we expect. In such a scenario, policymakers in Asia will opt for modest currency depreciation, reversing their recent gains. In terms of investment strategy, we have been shorting the Korean won versus the Thai baht. This trade has so far been flat, but we are maintaining it because the won is a higher-beta currency than the baht, and the former will underperform the latter as Asia's business cycle eventually slows. In addition, we are also shorting the Malaysian ringgit versus the U.S. dollar and the Russian ruble due to weak domestic fundamentals in Malaysia. Bottom Line: Currency appreciation will damp corporate profits of exporters in Korea and Taiwan. This will weigh on EM share prices in aggregate, given that the Korean and Taiwanese markets together account for 27% of the MSCI EM market cap, compared with an 12% share of the entire Latin American region. The 12-month outlook for Asian currencies is downbeat: continue shorting the MYR versus both the U.S. dollar and the RUB, and stay long the THB versus the KRW. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 This week the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) announced a set of sweeping new rules to control banks' entrusted lending (Source: Caixin). This is in addition to a slew of regulatory measures for financial institutions that have been introduced over the past year. 2 We discussed these in details in Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Questions For Emerging Markets," dated November 29, 2017, a link available on page 13. 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, titled "The True Meaning Of China's Great 'Savings' Wall," dated December 20, 2017, a link available on page 13. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights This week, we are reviewing all our current active trades in our Tactical Overlay. As a reminder, these positions (Table 1) are meant to complement our strategic GFIS Model Fixed Income Portfolio, typically with shorter holding periods and occasionally in smaller or less liquid markets outside our usual core bond market coverage (i.e. U.S. TIPS or Swedish interest rate swaps). This report includes a short summary of the rationale behind each position, as well as a decision on whether to continue holding the trade, close it out or switch to a new position that may more efficiently express our view. The trades are grouped together by the country/region that is most relevant for the performance of each trade. Table 1GFIS Tactical Overlay Trades Feature U.S. Short July 2018 Fed Funds futures (HOLD). Long 5-year U.S. Treasury (UST) bullet vs. 2-year/10-year duration-matched UST barbell (HOLD). Long U.S. TIPS vs. nominal USTs (HOLD). Short 10-year USTs vs. 10-year German Bunds (HOLD). The tactical trades that we have been recommending within U.S. markets all have a common theme - positioning for an expected rebound in U.S. inflation that will push up U.S. bond yields. We are maintaining all of them. The drift lower in realized inflation rates since the spring has been a surprise given the backdrop of above-potential growth, low unemployment and a weakening U.S. dollar. On the back of this, markets have priced out several of the Fed rates hikes that had been expected over the next year, leaving U.S. Treasury yields at overly-depressed levels. Back on July 11th, we initiated a recommendation to short the July 2018 fed funds futures contract (Chart 1). This was a position that would turn a profit if the market moved to once again discount multiple Fed rate hikes by mid-2018. The trade has a modest profit of 9bps, but with scope for additional gains if the market moves to discount 2-3 hikes by the middle of next year. Our base case scenario is that the Fed will lift rates again this December, and deliver additional increases next year amid healthy growth and with inflation likely to grind higher towards the Fed's 2% target. With the market discounting 46bps of rate hikes over the next year, there is scope for additional profits in our fed funds futures trade. Another tactical position that we've been recommending is a butterfly trade within the U.S. Treasury (UST) curve, long a 5-year UST bullet versus a duration-matched 2-year/10-year UST barbell. This is a position that would benefit from a bearish steepening of the UST curve as the market priced in higher longer-term inflation expectations (Chart 2). We have held that trade for a much longer period than a typical tactical trade, going back nearly a full year to December 20th, 2016. Yet while the UST curve has flattened since that date, our trade has delivered a return of +18bps. This outperformance can be attributed to the undervalued level of the 5-year bullet at the initiation of the trade. Chart 1Stay Short July 2018##BR##Fed Funds Futures Chart 2Stay Long The 5yr UST Bullet Vs.##BR##The 2yr/10yr UST Barbell While that valuation cushion no longer exists (bottom panel), longer-term TIPS breakevens are back to the levels seen last December (middle panel), thanks in no small part to much higher energy prices (top panel). This leaves the UST curve at risk of a bearish re-steepening on the back of rising inflation expectations. Add in a U.S. dollar that is -2.5% weaker from year-ago levels (Chart 3, middle panel), and a solid U.S. economic expansion that should eventually translate into rising core inflation momentum (bottom panel), and the case for a steeper UST curve over the next 3-6 months is a strong one. The above logic also supports our trade recommendation to go long U.S. TIPS vs. nominal USTs, which is up +248bps since inception on August 23, 2016. We have been holding this trade for much longer than our usual tactical recommendations, but we will not look to take profits until we see the 10-year breakeven (now at 186bps) return back to levels consistent with the Fed's 2% PCE inflation target (i.e. headline U.S. CPI inflation back to 2.5%). One final tactical trade that will benefit from higher UST yields is our recommendation to position for a wider spread between 10-year USTs and 10-year German Bunds. This trade was initiated on August 9th of this year, and has delivered a profit of +9bps. Yet the UST-Bund spread still looks too low relative to shorter-term interest rate differentials that favor the U.S. (Chart 4, top panel). With U.S. data starting to surprise more on the upside than Euro Area data (middle panel), and with UST positioning still quite long (bottom panel), there is potential for additional near-term UST-Bund spread widening. The upcoming decision by the European Central Bank (ECB) on potential tapering of its asset purchases next year represents a potential risk for the long Bund leg of our recommended trade. Any hawkish surprises on that front would be a likely catalyst for us to close out this position. Chart 3Stay Long U.S. TIPS Vs. Nominal USTs Chart 4Stay Short 10yr USTs Vs. German Bunds Euro Area Long 10yr Euro Area CPI swaps (HOLD). Long 5-year Spain vs. 5-year Italy in government bonds (HOLD). We have two recommended tactical trades that are specifically focused on developments in the Euro Area. We are maintaining both of them. As a way to position for an eventual pickup in European inflation, we entered a long position in 10-year Euro Area CPI swaps back on December 20th, 2016. That trade is now estimated to have a profit of +29bps, as market-based inflation expectations have drifted higher in the Euro Area. The simple reason for that increase is that realized inflation has moved higher on the back of rising energy costs, as there is a very robust correlation between the annual growth rate of oil prices (denominated in euros) and headline Euro Area inflation (Chart 5). More importantly, the booming Euro Area economy, which has eaten up much of the spare capacity in the Europe, has boosted wage growth and core inflation to levels seen prior to the disinflation shock from the 2014/15 collapse in oil prices (bottom panel). With no signs of any imminent slowing of Euro Area growth that could raise unemployment and slow underlying inflation pressures, the trend for inflation expectations in Europe is still upward. The current 10-year Euro Area CPI swap at 1.5% is still well beneath the ECB's inflation target of "just below" 2% on headline CPI, so there is room for inflation expectations to continue drifting higher. ECB tapering of asset purchases is not an immediate threat to this trade, as the central bank is still likely to keep buying bonds next year (at a slower pace), while holding off on any interest rate increases until late 2019. In other words, the ECB will not be looking to act to slow economic growth to bring down Euro Area inflation anytime soon. Our other tactical trade recommendation in Europe is a relative value spread trade, long 5-year Spanish government debt versus 5-year Italian bonds. This trade was initiated on December 13th, 2016 and currently has only a modest gain of +9bps, although the profits were much larger earlier this year. Italian bonds have been outperforming on the back of improving Italian economic growth (Chart 6, top panel) and, recently, a generalized sell-off in Spanish financial assets on the back of the political uncertainty in Catalonia. Chart 5Stay Long 10yr##BR##Euro Area CPI Swaps Chart 6Stay Long 5yr Spanish Government Bonds Vs.##BR##5-Year Italian Debt Our colleagues at BCA Geopolitical Strategy have been downplaying the threat to Spanish political stability from the Catalonian independence movement, given that the polling data shows only 35% for outright independence from Spain. At the same time, the poll numbers in Italy for the upcoming parliamentary elections are much closer, with parties favoring less integration with Europe holding a slight lead over more "establishment" parties (bottom two panels). With the bulk of the cyclical convergence between Italian and Spanish growth now largely completed, and with a greater potential for future political instability in Italy compared to Spain, we expect that Spain-Italy spreads will tighten further back to the lows seen at the beginning of 2017 (-64bps on the 5-year spread). That is a level we are targeting on our current tactical trade recommendation. Canada Short 10-year Canadian government bonds vs. 10-year USTs (TAKE PROFITS). Long Canada/U.K. 2-year/10-year government bond yield curve box, positioning for a relatively flatter Canadian curve (TAKE PROFITS). Short 5-year Canada government bond versus a duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell (TAKE PROFITS). We have three different Canadian fixed income trades in our Tactical Overlay, all of which were biased towards tighter monetary policy in Canada: a Canada-U.S. bond spread widener, a yield curve box trade versus the U.K. and a curve flattener expressed as a barbell trade (Chart 7) All three positions are in the money, but we now recommend taking profits. We had initiated these recommendations in a very timely fashion earlier in the year at a time when the Bank of Canada (BoC) was sending a relative dovish message. In our view, the Canadian economy was building significant upward momentum that would eventually force the central bank to shift its policy bias. This would especially be true with the Fed also in a tightening cycle, given the typical tendency for the BoC to follow the Fed's policy actions. Several members of the BoC monetary policy committee began to sing a more hawkish tune over the summer, particularly after the release of the Q2 BoC Business Outlook Survey. That robust report, which was confirmed by a 2nd quarter GDP growth rate of nearly 4% (Chart 8), led the BoC to deliver not one by two unexpected interest rate hikes in July and September. Markets reacted accordingly, driving Canadian bond yields higher and flattening the yield curve. Chart 7Take Profits On Bearish Canadian Bond Trades Chart 8Canadian Growth Set To Cool Off A Bit Now, we see the market pricing as having gone a bit too far, too quickly. The Q3 Business Outlook Survey, released yesterday, was still positive but with readings softer than the booming Q2 report. Meanwhile, the commentary from the BoC has become more balanced, with BoC Governor (and BCA alumnus) Stephen Poloz describing the central bank as being more "data dependent" after the recent rate hikes. Markets are now pricing in another 72bps of rate hikes over the next year, even with our own BoC Monitor off the peak (Chart 9). Chart 9Our BoC Monitor Is Peaking From a tactical perspective, the repricing of the BoC that we expected earlier this year is now largely complete. Thus, we are taking profits on all three Canadian trades: Canada-U.S. spread trade: initiated on January 17th, profit of +43bps. Canada/U.K. box trade: initiated on May 16th, profit of +67bps. Canada 2yr/5yr/10yr butterfly trade: initiated on December 6th, 2016, profit of +95bps. From a strategic perspective, we still see a case where the BoC can deliver additional rate hikes and keep upward pressure on Canadian bond yields. The output gap in Canada is now closed, according to BoC estimates, and additional strength in the economy now has a greater chance in translating to higher inflation. Strong global growth, especially in the U.S., will also support Canadian export growth and feed into rising capital spending. While the rate hikes have help boost the value of the Canadian dollar (CAD), the exchange rate (on a trade-weighted basis) also largely reflects a rising value of energy prices and is, therefore, should provide an additional boost to growth via stronger terms-of-trade (bottom panel). In other words, the rising CAD will not prevent additional BoC rate hikes if oil prices remain strong. Thus, we are maintaining our underweight recommendation on Canadian government bonds in our strategic model bond portfolio, even as we take profits on our bearish Canadian tactical trades. Australia Long a 2-year/10-year Australia government bond curve flattener (SELL AND SWITCH TO NEW TRADE). On July 25th of this year, we entered into a 2-year/10-year curve flattener trade for Australia. Though employment was improving and house prices were booming in Australia, the wide output gap, high level of consumer indebtedness and lack of real wage growth was keeping the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) inactive. In our view, nothing has changed since then; the RBA remains in a very difficult position. While the yield curve flattened substantially following the initiation of our trade, the global rise in long-term yields since mid-September lifted Australian longer-maturity yields, and the yield curve with it (Chart 10). Now, Australian long-term yields are not reflecting domestic fundamentals but are instead driven by improving global growth. As such, we are closing the trade and initiating a new position - long Dec 2018 Australian Bank Bill futures - as a more focused way to express the view that the RBA will stay on hold for longer than markets expect. Markets are currently pricing in 30bps of RBA rate hikes over the next twelve months. We believe this will be unlikely, for several reasons. Macroprudential measures on the Australian housing market will continue to dampen credit growth. Core inflation is slowly rising but still far below the central bank's target. Additionally, there is plenty of slack in the labor market despite the spike in employment growth. This is evidenced in anemic real wage growth, stubbornly high underemployment rate, low hours worked and high percentage of part-time to full-time workers (Chart 11). Chart 10Close Australian Government##BR##Bond 2yr/10yr Flattener Chart 11RBA Unlikely To Deliver##BR##Discounted Rate Hikes The biggest risk to our new trade would if signs of a tighter Australian labor market started to feed through into faster wage growth, which would likely coincide with faster underlying price inflation and a more hawkish turn by the RBA. New Zealand Long 5-year NZ government bonds vs. 5-year USTs (currency hedged). Long 5-year NZ government bonds vs. 5-year Germany (currency unhedged). Chart 12Stay Long 5yr NZ Government Bonds##BR##Vs. U.S, & Germany We entered two New Zealand (NZ) tactical bond trades on May 30th, going long 5-year government bonds vs. U.S. and Germany (Chart 12). We expected NZ spreads to tighten faster than the forwards based on our more hawkish views on the Fed and, to a lesser extent, the ECB relative to the more dovish view on the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ). The outright bond spreads have tightened and, on a currency-hedged basis, both trades are in the money. Our dovish view on the RBNZ came from the central bank's own forecasts, which called for slowing headline inflation on the back of softer "tradeables" inflation and a sharp cooling of domestic "non-tradeables" inflation through a slowing housing market (Chart 13, bottom two panels). Our own RBNZ Monitor has been calling for the need for higher interest rates in NZ, mostly from the strength in the labor market. Yet we have been ignoring that signal, as has the market which has priced out one full expected RBNZ rate hike since the beginning of the year. With business confidence rolling over, and with the trade-weighted NZ dollar still staying at stubbornly strong levels, the case for the RBNZ to deliver even a single rate hike is not a strong one - especially given the soft inflation forecasts of the central bank. Thus, we are sticking with our tactical spread trades for NZ versus the U.S. and Germany. We are maintaining the currency hedge on the U.S. version of the trade, as we typically do for the vast majority of our cross-country spread trade recommendations. Occasionally, however, we will make an active decision to do a spread trade UN-hedged if we felt very strongly about a currency move. We did that for our NZ-Germany spread trade and this has cost us in the performance of the trade, which is down -3.4%. This is because of a surprisingly large decline in the New Zealand dollar (NZD) versus the euro since the inception of our trade. Yet a review of the technical indicators on the NZD/EUR currency cross shows that the currency pair is now very stretched versus its medium-term trend (the 40-week moving average), with price momentum also at some of the most negative levels of the past decade (Chart 14). These measures suggest that the worst of the downturn in the currency is likely over. The relative positioning on the two individual currencies is now neutral, as long positions on the NZD have been reduced (bottom panel). Chart 13RBNZ Dovishness Is Justified Chart 14Keep NZ/Germany Position Currency Unhedged Given these technical indicators, and from these current levels, we see greater upside potential for NZD/EUR in the months ahead. This leads us to maintain our unhedged currency position on the NZ-Germany spread trade so as not to realize the current mark-to-market losses on the trade. Sweden Pay 18-month Sweden Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate (TAKE PROFITS). We entered into a bearish Swedish rates position back on November 22nd, 2016, paying Sweden 18-month Overnight Index swap rates (Chart 15). At the time, we expected the Riksbank to begin hiking interest rates earlier than what was priced in the markets IF inflation reached the central bank target faster due to a weaker Swedish krona. We also believed that the economy would continue to expand at a robust pace when the economy had no spare capacity, creating additional upside inflation surprises. According to the Riksbank's latest Monetary Policy Statement (MPS), the central bank will likely keep the repo rate at -0.5% until mid-2018, while continuing its asset purchase program until the end of this year - even with an overheating economy. This is because realized inflation has remained below the Riksbank target for a long period of time and, although current inflation is above target, it was not necessary to immediately tighten conditions. More likely, the Riskbank is worried about the potential for the krona to appreciate - especially versus the euro - if rate hikes are delivered. It will only be a matter of time before the central bank is forced to tighten policy with the economy likely to strengthen further, led by solid domestic demand, strong productivity growth, and improving exports. Consumption is also expected to increase as households have scope to cut back their high level of savings. Combining the Riksbank's easing policy with the current strength of the economy and the tightness of the labor market, inflation is very likely to return to the 2% target in the next year or two (Chart 16). Chart 15Close Sweden OIS Trade Chart 16Riksbank More Worried About SEK Than Inflation However, if the Riskbank remains too concerned about the currency versus the euro, as we suspect, then this will prevent any shift to a more hawkish stance before any change from the ECB. That is unlikely to happen over the next year, at least, even if the ECB slows the pace of asset purchases as we expect. Thus, we are closing out our Sweden 18-month Overnight Index Swap position at a small profit of 12bps. We have already kept this trade for longer than the typical investment horizon for one of our tactical overlay trades. We will investigate the potential for more profitable trade opportunities in the Swedish fixed income markets in a future report. Korea Long a 2-year/10-year Korean government bond yield curve steepener (HOLD). We recommended entering into a 2-year/10-year steepening trade in the Korean government bond yield curve on May 30th, 2017. Since then, the yield curve has flattened by 7bps, which was mainly caused by an unexpected rise in the 2-year yield, rather than a decline in 10-year yield (Chart 17). Korea is currently enjoying a solid business cycle upturn. Leading economic indicators are rising, the year-over-year growth in exports has risen to a 7-year high and previously sluggish private consumption has also rebounded recently. The Bank of Korea (BoK) is of the view that the recovery will continue and consumer price inflation will stabilize at the target level over the medium-term. This recovery should cause the 2/10 curve to steepen as longer-term inflation expectations rise. Based on South Korean President Moon's aggressive fiscal plans to increase welfare spending and create jobs in the public sector, at a time when the economy is good shape, we still believe that long-end of the curve (10-year) will rise. In addition, as shown in Chart 18, the 26-week rolling beta of changes in the 10-year UST yield and Korean 10-year bond is very high, nearly 1. Given our bearish view on USTs, this implies Korean yields can follow suit. On the other hand, the correlation between the 2-year UST yield and equivalent maturity Korean yields is much lower (4th panel), as Korean rate expectations have not been following those of the U.S. higher - even with a stronger Korean economy. Most likely, this is due to investors downplaying the potential for the BoK to match Fed rate hikes tick-for-tick given the heightened tensions between the U.S. and North Korea. Chart 17Stay In Korea 2yr/10yr##BR##Government Bond Steepener Chart 18Long-Term Korean##BR##Yields Are Too Low We still believe the Korean curve can steepen as longer-term yields rise, although we will be monitoring the behavior of shorter-dated Korean yield as the situation between D.C. and Pyongyang evolves. If investors begin to demand a higher risk premium on Korean assets, particularly the Korean won, then 2-year Korean yields may rise much faster and our curve trade may not go our way. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Patrick Trinh, Associate Editor Patrick@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns