Utilities
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Relentless selling in utilities stocks is overdone and we are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Operating metrics have turned the corner for the better, but a still challenging macro backdrop suggests that it is too soon to boost to an overweight stance. A rising interest rate backdrop, the sinking Cyclical Macro Indicator and near collapse in our sales growth model along with high chances of a profit margin squeeze, suggest that telecom services stocks are a sell. Recent Changes S&P Utilities - Upgrade to neutral for a gain of 15%. S&P Telecom Services - Downgrade to underweight, and add to high-conviction underweight list today. S&P Utilities - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 18%.1 S&P Semiconductor Equipment - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 20%.2 S&P Homebuilding - Removed from high-conviction underweight list last week for a gain of 10%.3 Feature Chart 1Time To Start 'Buying The Dip' Panic selling persisted last week, and equities struggled for direction, as the battle between liquidity withdrawal and stellar profit growth rages on. As we wrote in a recent report, the market will test the new Fed Chairman's resolve and this must have been an unnerving first week for Powell at the helm of the Fed.4 The 10% tactical pullback that we had been flagging in recent publications with the tech sector correctly sniffing it out has materialized, and our strategy is to start "buying the dip" as we do not foresee recession in the coming 9-12 months. While an undershoot cannot be ruled out given the emotional nature of recent market action, a number of indicators we track suggest that it would be a mistake to get extremely bearish at the current juncture. First and foremost, empirical evidence suggests that investors with a cyclical 9-12 month investment horizon should start to buy this correction (Chart 1). We analyzed SPX data back to the early-1960s and identified daily falls of 4% or more. There have been 16 such occurrences. In our sample we excluded the 1982 and 2015 incidents that rounded up to 4%, but were a hair below that level. For 1987 we included only one datapoint for the Black Monday crash and omitted occurrences very close to that date. Similarly, in the autumn of 2008 we only used the first large daily decline in our study and excluded other sizable downdrafts that were clustered around Lehman's collapse. We decided to exclude such clustered datapoints as they would skew our results to the upside. This analysis clearly demonstrates that it pays to "buy the dip" (top panel, Chart 1), and on average the SPX rises roughly 14% in the ensuing 12 months following the steep daily pullback (bottom panel, Chart 1). Interestingly, within a few weeks of the mini-crash empirical evidence suggests that markets typically retest those beaten-down levels and tend to hold above them. The implication is that investors have some time to deploy cash and/or reposition portfolios in order to take advantage of the recent pullback. Second, credit spreads have been surprisingly quiet. Bond spreads across the risk spectrum are extremely sensitive to risk off phases and one would have expected a sharp widening in spreads during the recent turmoil (fourth panel, Chart 2A). Chart 2ANo Systemic Risk Evident Chart 2BLatent Buying Power Third, the U.S. dollar has remained muted despite recent stock market jitters. A soft greenback is purely redistributive and represents a boost to global growth (third panel, Chart 2A). Fourth, short equity market positions are pinned near all-time highs representing latent dry powder (Chart 2B). Fifth, the VIX has gone vertical surging beyond the 50 level. Both the jump in the VIX and the explosion in trading volumes signal that capitulation was likely hit (second panel, Chart 2A). Finally, the recent market swoon along with rising EPS estimates have knocked down valuations pushing them to a 16 handle on a 12-month forward P/E basis (bottom panel, Chart 2A). In other words, all these indicators suggest that the bulk of the selling may have already occurred, and an absorption/consolidation phase will likely take place in the next few weeks. In fact, the recent let-up of soft data and simultaneous perkiness of hard data also corroborates that a lateral move is in the cards for the broad market (Chart 3). Chart 3Consolidation Phase Ahead We are willing to ride out the volatility and selectively look for opportunities to put cash to work, given our view that the longevity of the business cycle remains intact. Our core strategy remains to stay heavily focused on financials and industrials that benefit from our two key 2018 themes: higher interest rates and synchronized global capex upcycle. The energy sector also provides excellent value and a positive cyclical earnings outlook, based on BCA's upbeat crude oil view and rising odds of a virtuous capex upcycle. Meanwhile, health care remains our core defensive sector underweight. This sector still has to contend with political backlash against its multi-decade resilient selling price backdrop. With regard to the niche fixed income proxies, we are making a small tweak this week lifting the bombed-out utilities sector to neutral from underweight and locking in gains of 15% since inception. We are also downgrading defensive telecom stocks from neutral to underweight. Enough Is Enough In Bombed-Out Utilities In mid-summer we downgraded utilities to a below benchmark allocation, and subsequently on November 27th we were compelled to add it to our 2018 high-conviction underweight list, doubling down on our bearishness toward this fixed income proxy sector. These moves have paid handsome dividends and added alpha to our portfolio. Last week we crystalized gains by obeying our trailing stop that got triggered on our high-conviction list, registering 18% gains for the utilities underweight call. And, today we recommend an upgrade to a neutral stance to the niche S&P utilities sector, booking 15% gains since the July 24th inception, as indiscriminate selling has gone way too far in our opinion. Chart 4 shows that relative utilities performance has hit rock-bottom, plumbing all-time lows. In fact, the relative share price ratio has been so downbeat that if history at least rhymes a temporary relief rebound is in sight. Such oversold levels in our composite technical indicator have marked previous troughs (bottom panel, Chart 5). Tack on a gap down in relative valuations right at the neutral zone, and the implication is that it does not pay to be bearish from current washed out relative share price levels. Chart 4Unloved... Chart 5...And Under-owned Utilities... On the operational front, nat gas prices are no longer reeling and should boost industry pricing power as they are the marginal price setter for utilities (top two panels, Chart 6). Electricity production is also staging a slingshot recovery. This demand increase should also underpin utilities selling prices. Resource utilization is on the rise, up roughly 700bps from the 2016 trough. Once again the removal of excess slack should at least put a floor under industry producer price inflation. Indeed, our utilities sector productivity proxy has caught on fire recently pushing four year highs as both industry output and employment restraint are aiding our gauge. The upshot is that sell side analyst pessimism has likely hit a trough (bottom panel, Chart 6). All of these positives signal that we should take a punt and boost exposure all the way to overweight, nevertheless a challenging macro backdrop keeps us on the sidelines for now. Chart 7 shows that utilities stocks are the mirror image of the global manufacturing PMI survey. In other words, relative share prices move inversely with the ebb and flow of global growth, showcasing their ultimate safe-haven status. Similarly, increasing capital outlays are negatively correlated with utilities stocks, and given our synchronized global growth and global capex themes, utilities have limited cyclical upside. Finally, this high dividend yielding sector also suffers when Treasury bond yields shoot higher, as competing risk free assets become more appealing. Higher interest rates is one of BCA's key 2018 themes, and any resumption of the 10-year Treasury selloff will continue to weigh on relative performance (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 6...Are Coming Back To Life... Chart 7...But Do Not Get Carried Away Netting it all out, relentless selling in utilities stocks is overdone and we are compelled to lift exposure to neutral. Operating metrics have turned the corner for the better, but a still challenging macro backdrop suggests that it is too soon to boost to an overweight stance. Bottom Line: Take profits of 15% and lift the S&P utilities sector to a benchmark allocation. Trim Telecom Services To Underweight We are filling the void from the upgrade in the S&P utilities sector by downgrading the S&P telecom services sector to underweight, and also adding it to the high-conviction underweight list. This defensive sector swap preserves our bearishness toward safe haven assets as both sectors have a similar weight in the SPX. Three main reasons are behind our dislike for this fixed income proxy sector: BCA's 2018 rising interest rate theme Both our Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) and our sales model send a distress signal A profit margin squeeze is looming The top panel of Chart 8 shows that high dividend yielding telecom services stocks and the 10-year yield are nearly perfectly inversely correlated. In fact, telecom services stocks are prime beneficiaries of disinflation/deflation and vice versa (bottom panel, Chart 8). BCA's bond market view remains that the 10-year yield will continue to rise on the back of rising inflation expectations, and this represents a bearish backdrop for the telecom services sector. Our CMI has melted and relative consumer outlays on telecom services have also taken a nosedive (top two panels, Chart 9), warning that revenue growth will be hard to come by for telecom carriers. In fact, while nearly all of the GICS1 sectors have come out of the top line growth lull of late-2015/early-2016, telecom services sales growth has relapsed. Worrisomely, our S&P telecom services revenue growth model remains deep in contractionary territory, waving a red flag (bottom panel, Chart 9). Still steeply deflating selling prices are a major headwind for the sector's top and bottom line growth prospects and coupled with a still expanding wage bill, suggest that a profit margin squeeze is looming (fourth panel Chart 10). Chart 8No Dial Tone Chart 9Models Say Shy Away Chart 10Looming Margin Squeeze The sell side analyst community does not share this dire earnings picture. Net earnings revisions have gone vertical likely on the back of the recent tax reform. However, increasing industry slack underscores that beyond any one time gains from a lower corporate tax rate, organic EPS growth will be anemic at best. In fact, telecom services weekly hours worked do an excellent job of forecasting the sector's net earnings revision ratio and the current message is grim for profits (bottom panel, Chart 10). Adding it up, a rising interest rate backdrop, the sinking CMI and near collapse in our sales growth model along with high chances of a profit margin squeeze, suggest that a fresh bear phase is likely in the S&P telecom services sector. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P telecom services sector to a below benchmark allocation. We are also adding it to our high-conviction underweight list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: T, VZ, CTL. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Stocks Take An Escalator Up, And An Elevator Down," dated February 7, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight, "Housekeeping In Turbulent Times," dated February 9, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Ibid. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Market Test Powell?" dated November 13, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth. Stay neutral small over large caps (downgrade alert).
Highlights A thorough audit of our trade book highlights that our country and sector allocation recommendations have been quite profitable for investors. Of the 12 active trades in our book, 11 have generated a positive return, including one with a 32% annualized rate of return. A review of the original basis and subsequent performance of our trades suggests that investors should close 6 out of 12 of our active positions, predominantly related to resource & construction and domestic stock market themes. We will be looking for opportunities to add new trades to our book over the coming weeks and months that have broad, "big-picture" relevance. Watch this space. Feature In this week's report we conduct a thorough audit of our trade book, by revisiting the original basis and subsequent performance of all 12 of our active trades. While these trades have been initiated at different points over the past five years, they can be broadly grouped into five different themes: Core Equity Allocation & General Pro-Risk Trades (4 Trades) Reform-Oriented Trades (2 Trades) Resource & Construction Plays (2 Trades) Domestic Stock Market Trades (2 Trades) Trades Linked To Hong Kong (2 Trades) Overall, our trade book performance has been excellent. Of the 12 active trades in our book, 11 have generated a positive return, including one with a 32% annualized rate of return (since December 2015). As a result of our trade book review, we recommend that investors close six trades and maintain six over the coming 6-12 months. The closed trades predominantly fall into the resource & construction and domestic stock market categories, although we also recommend closing our long China H-share / short industrial commodity trade as well as our long Hong Kong REITs / short Hong Kong broad market trade. We present our rationale for retaining or closing each trade below. Over the coming weeks and months we will be looking for opportunities to add new trades to our book. Stay tuned. Core Equity Allocation & General Pro-Risk Trades We have four open core equity allocation and pro-risk trades: Overweight MSCI China Investable stocks versus the emerging markets benchmark, initiated on May 2, 2012 Long China H-shares / short industrial commodities, initiated on March 16, 2016 Short MSCI Taiwan / Long MSCI China Investable, initiated on February 2, 2017 and Long China onshore corporate bonds, initiated on June 22, 2017 We recommend that investors stick with three of these trades, but close the long China H-shares / short industrial commodities position for the following reasons: Chart 1Be Overweight China Vs EM In This Environment Overweight MSCI China Investable Stocks Versus The EM Benchmark (Maintain) This trade represents one of the most important equity allocation calls for Chinese stocks, and is one of the ways that BCA expresses a view on the Chinese economy in our House View Matrix.1 While it hasn't always been the case, we noted in a recent Special Report that Chinese stocks have become a high-beta equity market versus both the global aggregate and the emerging market benchmark, even when excluding the technology sector.2 China's high-beta nature, the fact that EM equities remain in an uptrend (Chart 1), and our view that China's ongoing slowdown is likely to be benign and controlled all suggest that investors should continue to overweight Chinese stocks vs their emerging market peers. Long China H-Shares / Short Industrial Commodities (Close) We initiated this trade in March 2016, one month after Chinese stock prices bottomed following the significant economic slowdown in 2015. At that time it was not clear to global investors that a mini-cycle upswing in the Chinese economy had begun, and this pair trade was a way of taking a limited pro-risk bet. Given our view of a benign, controlled economic slowdown in China, this hedged trade is no longer needed, especially given the uncertain impact of ongoing supply side constraints in China on global commodity prices. As such, we recommend that investors close the trade, locking in an annualized return of 15.7%. Short MSCI Taiwan / Long MSCI China Investable (Maintain) Chart 2If The TWD Declines Materially, ##br##Upgrade Taiwan (From Short) We initiated our short MSCI Taiwan / long MSCI China investable trade last February, when the risk of protectionist action from the Trump administration loomed large. While there have been no negative trade actions levied against Taiwan this year, macro factors, particularly the strength of the currency, continue to argue for an underweight stance within the greater China bourses (China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan). We reviewed the basis of this trade in a report last month,3 and recommended that investors stick with the call despite significantly oversold conditions (Chart 2). A material easing in pressure on Taiwan's trade-weighted exchange rate appears to be the most likely catalyst to close the trade and to upgrade Taiwan within a portfolio of greater China equities. Long China Onshore Corporate Bonds (Maintain) Chinese corporate bond yields have risen materially since late-2016, largely in response to expectations of tighter monetary policy. These expectations have been validated, with 3-month interbank rates having risen over 200bps since late-2016. We argued last summer that the phase of maximum liquidity tightening was likely over, and that quality spreads and government bond yields would probably drop over the coming three to six months. While this clearly did not occur (yields and spreads rose), the total return from this trade has remained in the black owing to the significant yield advantage of these bonds versus similarly-rated bonds in the developed world. Chart 3 highlights that Chinese 5-year corporate bond spreads are also considerably less correlated with equity prices than their investment-grade peers in the U.S. This underscores that the rise in yields and spreads over the past year has reflected expectations of tighter monetary policy, not rising default risk. Our sense is that barring a significant improvement in China's growth momentum, significant further monetary policy tightening is improbable, meaning that corporate bond yields are not likely to rise much further. As a final point, as of today's report we are changing the benchmark for this trade from a BCA calculation based on a basket of 5-year AAA and AA-rated corporate bonds to the ChinaBond Corporate Credit Bond Total Return Index. Chart 3Chinese Corporate Spreads Aren't A Risk ##br##Barometer Like In The U.S. Reform-Oriented Trades We have two open trades related to China's rebooted reform initiative, both of which were initiated on November 16, 2017: Long China investable consumer staples / short consumer discretionary stocks and Long China investable environmental and social governance (ESG) leaders / short investable broad market These trades were recently opened, and we continue to recommend that investors maintain both positions: Long China Investable Consumer Staples / Short Consumer Discretionary Stocks (Maintain) The basis for the first trade stems from the current limitations of China's investable consumer discretionary index as a clear-cut play on retail-oriented consumer spending. We argued in our November 16 Weekly Report that Chinese investable consumer staples would be a better play on Chinese consumer spending owing to the material weight of the automobiles & components industry group in the discretionary sector, which may fare poorly over the coming year due to the environmental mandate of President Xi's proposed reforms. We argued in the report that this trade would likely be driven by alpha rather than beta, and indeed Chart 4 illustrates that staples continue to rise relative to discretionary against a backdrop of a rising broad market. Long China Investable ESG leaders / Short Investable Broad Market (Maintain) In the same report we recommended that investors overweight the China investable ESG leaders index, based on the goal of favoring firms that are best positioned to deliver "sustainable" growth in an era of heightened environmental reforms. The index overweights firms with the highest MSCI ESG ratings in each sector (using a proprietary MSCI ranking scheme), and maintains similar sector weights as the investable benchmark, which limits the beta risk of the trade. Chart 5 highlights that the trade is progressing in line with our expectations, suggesting that investors stick with the position over the coming 6-12 months. Chart 4Staples Vs Discretionary Isn't A Low Beta Trade Chart 5Likely To Continue To Outperform Resource & Construction Plays We have two open trades related to the resource sector: Long China investable oil & gas stocks / short global oil & gas stocks, initiated on April 26, 2014 and Long China investable construction materials sector / short investable broad market, initiated on December 9, 2015 We recommend that investors close both of these positions, based on the following rationale: Chart 6Similar Earnings Profile, ##br##But Weaker Dividend Payouts Long China Investable Oil & Gas Stocks / Short Global Oil & Gas Stocks (Close) This trade was initiated based on the view that the valuation gap between Chinese and global oil & gas companies is unjustifiable given that the earnings off both sectors are globally driven. Indeed, Chart 6 shows that the trailing EPS profiles of both sectors in US$ terms have been broadly similar over the past few years, and yet China's oil & gas sector trades at a 40% price-to-book discount relative to its global peers. However, panel 2 of Chart 6 highlights that this discount may represent investor concerns about earnings quality and/or state-owned corporate governance. The chart shows that while the earnings ROE for Chinese oil & gas companies is higher than that of the global average, the dividend ROE (dividends per share as a percent of shareholders equity) is considerably lower. While China's oil & gas dividend ROE has recently been rising, the gap remains wide relative to global oil & gas companies, suggesting that there is no significant re-rating catalyst that is likely to emerge over the coming 6-12 months. Close for an annualized return of 1.4%. Long China Investable Construction Material Stocks / Short China Investable Broad Market (Close) The relative performance of Chinese investable construction material stocks has been positive over the past two years, with the trade having generated an 8.1% annualized return since initiation. There are two factors contributing to our view that it is time for investors to book profits on this trade. The first is that China's investable construction materials are dominated by cement companies, which may suffer in relative terms from China's rebooted reform initiative this year.4 The second is that the relative performance of construction materials stocks is closely correlated with, and led by, the growth in total real estate investment (Chart 7). Residential investment makes up a significant component of total real estate investment, and Chart 8 highlights that a significant gap between floor space sold and completed has narrowed the inventory to sales ratio over the past three years. But the ratio remains somewhat elevated relative to its history which, when coupled with the ongoing growth slowdown in China and the deceleration in total real estate investment growth, implies a poor risk/reward ratio over the coming 6-12 months. Chart 7Cement Producers Trade Off Of Real Estate Investment Chart 8No Clear Construction Boom Is Imminent Domestic Stock Market Trades We have two open trades related to China's domestic stock market: Long China domestic utility sector / short domestic broad market, initiated on January 22, 2014 and Long China domestic food & beverage sector / short domestic broad market, initiated on December 9, 2015 Similar to our resource & construction plays, we recommend that investors close both of our recommended domestic stock market trades: Long China Domestic Utility Sector / Short Domestic Broad Market (Close) We initiated this trade in early-2014, following a comprehensive reform plan released in late-2013 by the Chinese government. The plan called for allowing market forces to play a decisive role in allocating resources, which we argued would grant utilities more pricing power, reduce their earnings volatility associated with policy risks, and lead to a structural positive re-rating. Chart 9 illustrates that this trade gained significant ground in 2014 and early-2015, even prior to the significant melt-up in domestic stock prices that began in Q2 2015. However, the trade has underperformed significantly since the middle of last year, which has been driven by a sharp deterioration in ROE. This decline in ROE appears to have been cost-driven, as coal is an important feedstock for Chinese utility companies and has risen substantially in price over the past two years. While domestic utilities are now significantly oversold in relative terms, we recommend that investors close this trade because the original reform-oriented basis has shifted significantly. The priorities that emanated from October's Party Congress were decidedly environmental in nature, meaning that coal prices may very well remain elevated over the coming 6-12 months (due to restricted supply). This means that a recovery in ROE would rest on the need to raise utility prices, which is a low-visibility event that will be difficult to predict. Close for an annualized return of 3%. Long China Domestic Food & Beverage Sector / Short Domestic Broad Market (Close) We initiated this trade in December 2015, based on this sector's superior corporate fundamentals and undemanding valuation levels. We argued that the anti-corruption campaign since late-2012 was likely the cause of prior underperformance, given that the group is dominated by a few high-end alcohol producers. The market overacted to the high-profile crackdown, and ultimately the fundamentals of the sector did not deteriorate materially. Our view has panned out spectacularly, with the trade having earned a 32% annualized return since inception5 (Chart 10 panel 1). While the group's ROE remains significantly above that of the domestic benchmark, valuation measures suggest that investors have more than priced this in (Chart 10 panel 2). The trade has mostly played out and we would not like to overstay our welcome. In addition, panel 3 illustrates that technical conditions are extremely overbought, suggesting that investors are being presented with an excellent opportunity to exit the position. Chart 9Sidelined By A Major Hit To ROE Chart 10Time To Book Profits Trades Linked To Hong Kong We have two open trades related to Hong Kong: Long U.S. / short Hong Kong 10-Year government bonds, initiated on January 15, 2014 and Short Hong Kong property investors / long Hong Kong broad market, initiated on January 21, 2015 We recommend that investors stick with the first and close the second, based on the following perspectives: Long U.S. / Short Hong Kong 10-Year Government Bonds (Maintain) Hong Kong has an open capital account and an exchange rate pegged to the U.S. dollar, meaning that its monetary policy is directly tied to that of the U.S. Yet, Hong Kong's 10-year government bond yield is non-trivially below that of the U.S., which argues for a short stance versus similar maturity U.S. Treasurys. While it is true that the Hong Kong - U.S. 10-year yield spread does vary and can widen over a 6-12 month horizon, Chart 11 highlights that the relative total return profile of the trade (in unhedged terms) trends higher over time due to the carry advantage. Short Hong Kong REITs / Long Hong Kong Broad Market (Close) There are cross-currents facing the outlook for Hong Kong REITs vs the broad market, arguing for a neutral rather than an underweight stance. Close this trade for an annualized return of 3.6%. While the relative performance of global REITs is typically negatively correlated with bond yields, Chart 12 shows that the relationship with Hong Kong property yields has been positive and lagging (i.e. falling yields lead declining relative performance, and vice versa). Under this regime, a rise in U.S. government bond yields, as we expect, would suggest an improvement in the relative performance of Hong Kong REITs. Chart 11A Straightforward Carry Pick Up Trade Chart 12Rising Bond Yields Implies ##br##Positive HK REIT Performance Chart 13 highlights that periods of positive yield / REIT performance correlation have tended to occur when Hong Kong property prices are rising significantly relative to income, as they have been for the past several years. One interpretation of this dynamic is that when house prices are overvalued and potentially vulnerable, REIT investors react positively to an improvement in economic fundamentals (which tends to push yields up due to higher interest rate expectations). The risk of an eventual collapse of Hong Kong property prices is clear, but we cannot identify an obvious catalyst for this to occur over the coming 6-12 months. Importantly, the fact that property prices have continued to rise during a period of tighter mainland capital controls suggests that only a significant economic shock will be enough to derail the uptrend in prices, circumstances that we do not expect over the coming year. Finally, Chart 14 highlights that Hong Kong REITs are deeply discounted relative to book value when compared against the broad market. This suggests that at least some of the risks associated with the property market have already been priced in by investors. Chart 13Yields & REITs Positively Correlated ##br##When House Prices Are Overvalued Chart 14Hong Kong REITs Are Cheap Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com Lin Xiang, Research Analyst linx@bcaresearch.com 1 https://www.bcaresearch.com/trades 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China: No Longer A Low-Beta Market", dated January 11, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Taiwan: Awaiting A Re-Rating Catalyst", dated December 14, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Messages From The Market, Post-Party Congress", dated November 16, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please note that the total return from this trade had been erroneously reported for some time due a data processing error on BCA's part. The return since inception now properly sources the China CSI SWS Food & Beverage index from CHOICE. We sincerely regret the error and any confusion it may have caused. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Trade #1: Go Short The December 2018 Fed Funds Futures Contract. The trade has gained 64 bps since we initiated it. We are lifting the stop to 60 bps and targeting a profit of 75 bps. Trade #2: Go Long Global Industrial Stocks Versus Utilities. The trade is up 13.1%. We are targeting a profit of 15%, and are tightening the stop further to 12%. Trade #3: Go Short 20-Year JGBs Relative To Their 5-Year Counterparts. The trade is up 0.7%. We see this as a multi-year trade with significant upside potential. The unwinding of heavy short positions could cause the yen to strengthen temporarily. The euro is vulnerable to negative growth surprises. A retracement of some of its recent gains is likely. Feature Looking Back, Thinking Forward I had the pleasure of speaking at BCA's Annual Investment Conference held in New York on September 27th of last year where I offered three "tantalizing" trade ideas. Chart 1 reviews their performance. They were the following: Trade #1: Go Short The December 2018 Fed Funds Futures Contract We argued last summer that U.S. growth was likely to accelerate, taking rate expectations higher. That has indeed happened. Aggregate hours worked rose by 2.5% in Q4 over the previous quarter. Assuming that productivity increased by 1.5% in Q4 - equal to the pace recorded in Q3 - real GDP probably increased by nearly 4%. A variety of leading indicators point to continued above-trend growth in the months ahead (Chart 2). Chart 1Three Tantalizing Trades: ##br##An Update Chart 2Leading Indicators Pointing ##br##To Above-Trend U.S. Growth We think the Fed will raise rates four times this year, one more hike than projected by the dots and roughly 35 bps more in tightening than implied by current market expectations. The median Fed dot calls for an unemployment rate of 3.9% by end-2018, only marginally lower than today's rate of 4.1%. We have been saying for a while that above-trend growth will take the unemployment rate down to a 49-year low of 3.5% by the end of this year. If the unemployment rate falls this much, the Fed will probably turn more hawkish. Stronger inflation numbers should also give the Fed confidence to keep raising rates once per quarter. Core inflation surprised on the upside in December. We expect this trend to continue in the coming months, as the ISM manufacturing index, the New York Fed's Inflation Gauge, and our own proprietary pipeline inflation index are already foreshadowing (Chart 3). Chart 3U.S. Inflation ##br##Should Accelerate Chart 4A Pick-Up In Wage Growth ##br##Would Put Upward Pressure On Service Inflation As we noted two weeks ago,1 service sector inflation should get a lift from faster wage growth this year (Chart 4). Goods inflation should also rise on the back of higher oil prices and the lagged effects of a weaker dollar (Chart 5). In addition, health care inflation is likely to pick up from its current depressed level, especially if the Congressional Budget Office is correct that insurance premiums will rise due to the elimination of the individual mandate (Chart 6). Housing inflation will moderate, but this is unlikely to stymie the Fed's tightening plans since excessively low interest rates could lead to even more overbuilding in the increasingly vulnerable commercial real estate sector. Chart 5Higher Oil Prices And A Weaker Dollar ##br##Are A Tailwind For Inflation Chart 6Health Care Inflation ##br##Should Move Higher Granted, four rate hikes equal four opportunities to defer raising rates. It is easy to imagine scenarios where the Fed stands pat, but hard to conjure scenarios where the Fed has to raise rates five times or more this year. Thus, the risk to our four-hike view is to the downside. As such, we will be looking to take profits of 75 bps on the trade, and are putting in a stop of 60 bps. Trade #2: Go Long Global Industrial Stocks Versus Utilities Capital spending tends to accelerate in the late innings of business-cycle expansions. We are in such a phase now, as evidenced by capital goods orders, capex intention surveys, and our global capex model (Chart 7). Increased capital spending will benefit industrial companies. Conversely, rising bond yields will hurt rate-sensitive utilities. Valuations in the industrial sector have gotten stretched, but are not at extreme levels (Chart 8). Based on enterprise value-to-EBITDA, industrials are still only slightly more expensive than utilities compared to their post-1990 average. Chart 7Capex Is Shifting Into ##br##Higher Gear Chart 8Industrial Stocks: Valuations Are Stretched, ##br## But Not Yet Extreme While we do think global growth will slow this year from the heady pace of 2017, it should remain firmly above-trend. A bigger-than-expected slowdown - especially if it is concentrated in China - would undoubtedly hurt industrials. A stronger dollar could also be a headwind. Thus, we are keeping this trade on a short leash, with a target of 15% and a stop of 12%. Trade #3: Go Short 20-Year JGBs Relative To Their 5-Year Counterparts The Japanese economy is on fire. Growth almost reached 2% in 2017 and leading indicators suggest a solid start to 2018 (Chart 9). The unemployment rate has fallen to 2.7%, a full point below 2007 levels. The ratio of job openings-to-applicants has surpassed its bubble peak. The Tankan Employment Conditions Index is pointing to an exceptionally tight labor market. Wages excluding overtime pay are rising at the fastest pace in twenty years (Chart 10). Chart 9Japanese Growth Momentum Is Positive Chart 10Signs Of A Tight Labor Market Inflation is low but is starting to edge up. The most recent release surprised on the upside. Inflation expectations moved higher on the news, benefiting our long Japanese 10-year CPI swap trade recommendation (Chart 11). A simple scatterplot between the unemployment rate and core inflation suggests the Phillips curve remains intact in Japan -- amazingly, it even looks like Japan (Chart 12)! Chart 11Inflation Expectations Have Edged Higher Chart 12The Phillips Curve In Japan Looks Like Japan Still, with core inflation excluding food and energy running at only 0.3%, there is a long way to go before inflation reaches the BoJ's target -- and even longer if the BoJ honours its promise to generate a meaningful overshoot to compensate for the below-target inflation of prior years. This suggests the BoJ will not meaningfully water down its Yield Curve Control regime anytime soon. As such, five-year yields are likely to stay put while yields with maturities in excess of ten years should move higher. Our "tantalizing trade" being short 20-year JGBs versus their 5-year counterparts still has a long way to run. Too Risky To Short The Yen The exceptionally strong correlation between USD/JPY and U.S. Treasury yields has broken down this year (Chart 13). Had the relationship held, the yen would have actually weakened against the dollar. Still, we are reluctant to get too bearish on the yen (Chart 14). The yen real effective exchange rate is close to multi-decade lows. Positioning on the currency is heavily short. The current account surplus has mushroomed from close to zero in 2014 to 4% of GDP at present. And even if the BoJ keeps the Yield Curve Control regime in place, investors may still anticipate its demise, leading to a temporary bout of yen strength. Chart 13Strong Correlation Is Broken Chart 14Too Risky To Short The Yen What's Propping Up The Euro? The euro has been on a tear since last week, egged on by the ECB minutes, which hinted at a faster pace of monetary normalization. Growing confidence that Angela Merkel will be able to form a grand coalition also helped the common currency, along with hopes that the new government will loosen the fiscal purse strings. The euro is often thought of as the "anti-dollar." And sure enough, the euro's strength has been reflected in a broad-based decline in the dollar index in recent days. BCA's Global Investment Strategy service went long the dollar on October 31, 2014. We "doubled up" on this call in the fall of 2016, controversially arguing that "Trump will win and the dollar will rally." Obviously, in retrospect, I should have rung the register and declared victory on our long dollar view when I had the chance. EUR/USD fell to 1.04 on December 2016, within striking distance of our parity target. Bullish dollar sentiment had reached unsustainably lofty levels. That was the time to sell the greenback. But hubris got the best of me. While our other currency trade recommendations have delivered net gains of 11% since the start of 2017, the long DXY trade has stuck out like a sore thumb. Hindsight is 20/20. The key question is what to do today. EUR/USD is still trading below the level it was at when we went long the DXY. Relative to the IMF's Purchasing Power Parity exchange rate of 1.32, the euro is 7% undervalued. That said, PPP exchange rates may not be a reliable benchmark in this case. Given current market expectations, EUR/USD would need to strengthen to 1.41 over the next ten years just to cover the carry cost of being short the dollar. Even assuming lower inflation in the euro area, that would still leave the euro trading above its long-term fair value. It is possible, of course, that rate differentials will narrow further, but the scope for this is more limited than it might appear. The market currently expects policy rates ten years out to be 95 basis points higher in the U.S., down from a spread of nearly 180 basis points in late December (Chart 15). Given that euro area inflation expectations are 40-to-50 bps lower than in the U.S., this implies a real spread of about 50 bps - broadly in line with our estimate of the real neutral rate gap between the two regions. Ultimately, the fate of the euro in 2018 will rest on the same question that drove the currency in 2017: Will euro area growth surprise on the upside, prompting investors to price in a faster pace of monetary normalization? The bar for success is certainly higher at present. Chart 16 shows that euro area consensus growth estimates have risen significantly since the start of last year. The expected lift-off date for policy rates has also shifted in by more than a year to mid-2019. Considering that Jens Weidmann stated earlier this week that he thinks current market pricing is broadly consistent with when the ECB expects to hike rates, there is little scope for the lift-off date to move forward. Chart 15Little Scope For Rate Differentials ##br## To Narrow Further Chart 16Euro Area Growth Estimates Have Been Revised Up ##br##Since The Start Of 2017 Meanwhile, financial conditions have tightened significantly in the euro area relative to the U.S., the euro area credit impulse has turned negative, and the U.S. economic surprise index has jumped above that of the euro area (Chart 17). Euro area inflation has also dipped. Especially worrying is that core inflation in Italy has fallen back to a near record-low of 0.4% (Chart 18). How is Italy supposed to navigate its way out of its debt trap if nominal growth stays this weak? On top of all that, long speculative euro positions have soared to record-high levels (Chart 19). Given the choice of betting whether EUR/USD will first hit 1.30 or 1.15, we would go with the latter. If our bet turns out to be correct, we will use that opportunity to shift to neutral on the dollar. Chart 17The Euro Is Vulnerable ##br##To Negative Growth Surprises Chart 18Euro Area Core Inflation ##br##Has Dipped Chart 19Euro Positioning: From Deeply Short ##br##To Record Long Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Four Key Questions On The 2018 Global Growth Outlook," dated January 5, 2018. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Underweight - High Conviction In our high conviction calls roundup for 2018 (please see our Weekly Report from Nov. 27, 2017 for more details), we identified our two key investment themes for the year to come, namely higher interest rates and synchronized global capex growth. Both of these themes bode ill for the S&P utilities index. On the heels of the Fed's most recent hike and the impending unwinding of its balance sheet, combined with a host of global central banks hiking, global interest rates look set to climb this year. In line with this weak outlook for bonds, fixed income proxies like the S&P utilities index should suffer (top panel). At the same time, global capex is pointing to its best year in more than a decade (third panel), a backdrop that heralds weakness for utilities. Much could be forgiven if valuations were compelling but alas this is not the case (bottom panel); fair value does not reflect the negative backdrop. We reiterate our high conviction underweight recommendation.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The easy money has already been made in the liquidity-to-growth theme-levered long S&P energy/short global gold miners pair trade. Lock in profits and move to the sidelines, for now. Similarly, book gains in the long S&P materials/short S&P utilities market-neutral trade. A stealthy macro shift, at the margin, suggests that a more challenging phase lies ahead for this relative share price ratio. Recent Changes Book 18.3% profits in the long S&P energy/short global gold miners pair trade today. Take profits in excess of 8.6% in the long materials/short utilities pair trade today. Table 1 Feature Equities continued to defy gravity last week, vaulting to fresh all-time highs. Seasonality (or the pending Santa rally) appears to have trumped any "buy on rumor sell the tax news" jitters, at a time when macro data continue to surprise to the upside. Heading into 2018, easier fiscal policy will likely offset some of the uneasiness of the Fed's ongoing tightening cycle as we postulated in early October.1 Synchronized global economic and capex growth remain the key macro themes that dominate markets. The latest GDP revisions in the G3 confirm our global capex upcycle bias: U.S., euro area and, especially, Japanese gross fixed capital formation are on fire (Chart 1). Importantly, once the tax bill related dust settles, profits will come back to the forefront as a key stock market driver. In that regard, the news on the EPS front is ebullient and, along with the forward multiple, all that matters. Table 2 shows annual SPX returns going back to 1979, and breaks down the composition of the capital (not total) return into two components: forward earnings growth and the forward P/E multiple (January 1979 is the first IBES data point for forward EPS SPX estimates). Chart 1Synchronized Global Capex Table 2Disentangling SPX Returns Currently, sell side analysts expect 11% EPS growth for 2018, and our sense is that 8-12% EPS growth is achievable next year, a message that our SPX EPS macro model corroborates (Chart 2). Keep in mind that there is no tax cut penciled into our EPS model's numbers. Chart 2SPX EPS Macro Model Flashing Green What is interesting from the multiple/EPS analysis is that over the last four decades when forward profit growth was in this high single-digit / low double-digit range (ten iterations), the multiple expanded modestly (on average, adding 2.6 percentage points to the market's return) and EPS did the heavy lifting (explaining, on average, roughly 80% of the S&P 500's 12.9% average annual return, Table 3). If we consider periods when EPS growth was positive but below 8% (eleven iterations), SPX returns are close to 10%, on average, with EPS and the multiple contributing almost equally to the market's return. One caveat is that two recessionary years and the dot com bust are part of this segment skewing the results to the downside (Table 3).2 Table 3Disentangling SPX Returns Continued Nevertheless, if history at least rhymes, were EPS growth to stay positive next year and hit the 8-12% mark, then a profit driven low double-digit broad equity market return is likely. If profits disappoint and grow between 0-8%, barring recession, empirical evidence suggests that equity returns will still prove healthy. Adding it up, the path of least resistance is higher for equities on a cyclical 9-12 month horizon. Granted, since Brexit the SPX has rallied in a near straight line up and a healthy and temporary pause for breath is likely in Q1/2018. As a result, this week we are booking impressive gains in two tactical market-neutral trades we initiated in late-August and mildly de-risking our portfolio. Lock In Profits In The Long Energy/Short Gold Producers Trade In late-August we initiated a liquidity-to-growth handoff levered market-neutral trade: long S&P energy/short global gold miners. Over the past four months this trade is up 18.3%. It also sports a positive annual dividend carry of 200bps. With the equity market overshoot phase likely going on hiatus sometime in early 2018 is it still prudent to hold this high-octane intra-commodity and market-neutral trade? The short answer is no. Nothing in terms of macro data has changed to trip up this pair trade. If anything, the handoff of global liquidity to economic growth has gained steam in the past few months. Global GDP, IP, manufacturing PMIs, global trade (Chart 3) and gross capital formation are all growing simultaneously across all of the G7 and most of the EMs. Even China's economy seems to have stabilized. The Fed announced its plans to wind down its balance sheet as expected in September and the BoE and BoC have both tightened monetary policy. Even the ECB announced a halving of the size of its monthly purchases in late-October (but extended it for nine months). All these central bank (CB) moves suggest that, at the margin, the global liquidity injection is reversing, with CBs actually mopping up liquidity. This is de facto negative for the shiny metal and gold mining equities as interest rates are headed higher (Chart 4). Chart 3Brisk Global Growth... Chart 4...Higher Rates... Moreover, geopolitical uncertainty is steadily receding, especially now that the Senate also passed a tax bill, and a final bill will likely soon be signed into law.3 Historically in times of duress, safe haven assets are bid up and vice versa, and the current low policy uncertainty backdrop is conducive to additional gains in the relative share price ratio (policy uncertainty shown inverted, Chart 5). Meanwhile, on the relative operating front, energy stocks have the upper hand versus gold miners. The oil and gas rig count has resumed its advance and remains 150% clear of the lows hit during the depths of the global manufacturing recession of late-2015/early-2016. Anecdotes of global oil majors comfortably registering positive EPS, in the new era of $50/bbl oil, and reinstating stock buybacks and eliminating scrip dividends (RDS, BP & ENI) suggest that the worst is behind the industry. In contrast, safe haven asset demand is in retreat and will continue to weigh on global gold ETF flows. Anecdotally, the BITCOIN/ICO/cryptocurrency mania may also steal some of bullion's thunder, as this mania is capturing investor's imagination. Either a flare up in global geopolitical risk or a global growth scare could cause investors to start shifting capital into gold ETFs. Our relative EPS models do an excellent job in capturing this energy positive/gold negative backdrop and continue to suggest that energy profits will outpace gold mining EPS (Chart 6). Chart 5...And Diminishing Uncertainty##br## Still Bode Well For The Trade Chart 6But We Do Not Want To##br## Overstay Our Welcome If these different macro and operational forces all emit an unambiguously bullish signal for S&P energy shares compared with global gold miners, why book profits? Our sense is that there are high odds of a pullback in Q1/2018 and from a portfolio management and risk perspective it is prudent to lock in handsome profits in excess of 18.3% in a four month period. There are high odds that most of these key drivers are reflected in relative share prices versus late-August. Relative valuations are pricier today and technicals are also flashing yellow (bottom panel, Chart 4). We deem that the easy money has already been made in this market-neutral trade, despite the still favorable relative macro backdrop. This was a tactical three-to-six month pair trade that has mostly played out and we would not like to overstay our welcome. Were the broad market pullback to occur in the upcoming quarter, and the ratio to trade significantly lower, we would not hesitate to reinstate this pair trade. Our cyclical strategy is to "buy the broad market dip" and remain opportunistic on a tactical basis. Bottom Line: Lock in 18.3% profits in the long S&P energy/short global gold miners pair trade and move to the sidelines for now. Take Profits In Materials Vs. Utilities Similar to booking gains in the liquidity-to-growth levered market-neutral long S&P energy/short global gold miners pair trade, we also recommend taking profits in the reflation levered long S&P materials/short S&P utilities pair trade. Since its late-August inception this market-neutral trade has generated returns in excess of 8.6% and added alpha to our portfolio. While overall macro conditions continue to underpin the relative share price ratio, some cracks are appearing on the surface. Global reflation has matured and synchronized global growth is as good as it gets. The ISM manufacturing and services surveys have ticked down in sympathy recently, warning that the easy gains are behind this market neutral trade (Chart 7). Worrisomely, our relative sector Cyclical Macro Indicators are sniffing out this marginal shift in the macro backdrop and suggest that a more challenging phase lies ahead for the relative share price ratio (Chart 8). BCA's view remains that a sizable selloff in the bond markets is the most likely scenario in 2018. This is one of our key themes for next year, and given that this trade typically moves in lockstep with interest rates, the path of least resistance is higher. Nevertheless, the fact that this ratio has not kept up with the slingshot recovery in the stock-to-bond (S/B) ratio is slightly disconcerting. The top panel of Chart 9 shows that the gap between the S/B and the materials/utilities ratios has widened further since late-August. Chart 7As Good As It Gets? Chart 8Fatigue Signs Chart 9More Balanced Backdrop=Move To The Sidelines On the operating front, our relative EPS models are also showing signs of fatigue. Materials profits cannot expand indefinitely at the breakneck pace observed since the 2016 trough, at a time when utilities EPS have stabilized. Currently, the relative earnings models suggest that materials are on an even keel with utilities (Chart 9). Tack on rising odds of a healthy broad market pullback in Q1/2018, and from a risk management perspective we would rather de-risk the portfolio a notch by locking in near double-digit gains since inception in this volatile pair trade. Bottom Line: Book gains of 8.6% in the long S&P materials/short S&P utilities pair trade. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Easy Fiscal Offset Tighter Monetary Policy?" dated October 9, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 For reference and completion purposes Table 3 also tabulates the results during EPS contractions (nine iterations) and in profit boom times, i.e. forward EPS growth north of 12% (nine iterations). 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy & Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Tax Cuts Are Here - Equity Sector Implications," dated December 11, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Synchronized global capex growth, a derivative of BCA's synchronized global growth thesis, will be a dominant theme next year, benefiting cyclicals over defensives. Three high-conviction calls are levered to this theme. Higher interest rates on the back of a pickup in inflation expectations is another BCA theme that should materialize in 2018. Three calls focus on a selloff in the bond markets for the coming year. Two special situations round up our high-conviction calls for 2018. Recent Changes S&P Software index - Boost to overweight. S&P Homebuilding index - Downgrade to underweight. Table 1 Feature Equities continued to grind higher last week, largely ignoring tax bill passage jitters. The S&P 500 is on track to register an eighth consecutive month of positive monthly returns, an impressive feat. Firm global economic data suggests that the synchronized global growth theme is gaining traction and remains investors' focal point. While the 10/2 yield curve flattening is a bit unnerving, another curve to watch is the spread between 2-year yields and the Fed funds rate, or what BCA often refers to as the "Fed Spread". This spread has widened 50bps since early September closely tracking the Citi economic surprise index (Chart 1A), and signals that the U.S. economy remains on a solid footing. We would be most worried that a recession was imminent were both slopes concurrently flattening and approaching inversion (third panel, Chart 1A). Chart 1AThe 'Fed Spread'Is Right Chart 1BHigher Interest Rates Theme Moreover, credit growth has turned the corner, and the three, six and twelve month credit impulses are all simultaneously rising at a time when total loans outstanding have hit an all-time high. Importantly, credit breadth is also broad-based. Our six month impulse diffusion index shows that six out of the eight credit categories that the Fed tracks have a positive second derivative (Chart 1A). All of this suggests that, cyclically, the path of least resistance is higher for equities, especially given BCA's view of a recession hitting only in 2019. In this context, we are revealing our high-conviction calls for the next year. Most of our calls leverage two BCA themes: synchronized global capex growth (a derivative of our flagship publication's "The Bank Credit Analyst" synchronized global growth theme articulated in last week's outlook)1 and a higher interest rate theme ("The Bank Credit Analyst" expects yields to be under upward pressure in most major markets during 2018)2. Over the past few months we have been articulating the ongoing synchronized global capital spending macro theme3 that, despite still flying under the radar, will likely dominate in 2018. Table 2 on page 4 shows that both DM and EM countries are simultaneously expanding gross fixed capital formation. As a result, we reiterate our recent cyclical over defensive portfolio bent,4 and tie three high-conviction overweight calls to this theme. Table 2Synchronized Global Capex Growth Similarly in recent reports we have been highlighting BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy view of a higher 10-year yield on the back of rising inflation expectations for 2018. If BCA's constructive crude oil view pans out then inflation and rates may get an added boost (Chart 1B). Three high-conviction calls are levered to this theme. Finally, we have a couple of special situations, and this year we characterize two out of these eight calls as speculative. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "OUTLOOK 2018 Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 2 Ibid. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Invincible" dated November 6, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, "Top 5 Reasons To Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives" dated October 16, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Living With The Carry Trade" dated October 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Construction Machinery & Heavy Trucks (Overweight, Capex Theme) The capex upcycle will likely fuel the next machinery stock outperformance upleg. Not only are expectations for overall capital outlays as good as they get (Chart 2), but there are also tentative signs that even the previously moribund mining and oil & gas complexes will be capex upcycle participants. While we are not calling for a return to the previous cycle's peak, even a modest renormalization of capital spending plans (i.e. maintenance capex alone would suffice) in these two key machinery client segments would rekindle industry sales growth. A quick channel check also waves the green flag. Both machinery shipments and new orders are outpacing inventory accumulation (Chart 2). Moreover, backlogs are rebuilding at the quickest pace of the past five years (not shown). This suggests that client demand visibility is returning. This machinery end-demand improvement is a global phenomenon. In fact, the fourth panel of Chart 2 shows that global machinery new orders are climbing faster than domestic new order growth. Tack on the reaccelerating global credit impulse courtesy of the latest Bank for International Settlements Quarterly Review and the ingredients are in place for a global machinery export boom. Finally, our machinery EPS model is firing on all cylinders, underscoring that the earnings-led recovery has more running room (Chart 2). The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CSTF - CAT, CMI, PCAR. Chart 2S&P Construction Machinery & Heavy Trucks Energy (Overweight, Capex Theme) The slingshot recovery in basic resources investment - albeit from a very low base - suggests that there is more room for relative gains in the S&P energy index in the coming months (second panel, Chart 3). The U.S. dollar remains down significantly for the year and, irrespective of future moves, it should continue to goose energy sector profits owing to the positive impact on the underlying commodity. Importantly, energy producers are a levered play on oil prices and the latter have jumped roughly $14/bbl to $58/bbl or ~32% since July 10th, but energy stocks are up only 8% in absolute terms. Given BCA's still sanguine crude oil market view, we expect a significant catch up phase in energy equity prices into 2018. On the supply front, Cushing and OECD oil stocks are now contracting. As oil inventories get whittled down, OPEC stays disciplined and oil demand grinds higher, oil prices will remain well bid. The implication is that the relative share price advance is still in the early innings. Relative valuations have ticked up in the neutral zone according to our composite relative Valuation Indicator, but on a number of metrics value remains extremely compelling in the energy space. Finally, our EPS model heralds additional growth in the coming quarters on the back of solid industry pricing power and sustained global oil producer discipline. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5ENRS - XLE:US. Chart 3S&P Energy Software (Overweight, Capex Theme) The S&P software index is a clear capex upcycle beneficiary (Chart 4) and we recommend an upgrade to a high-conviction overweight stance today. If software commands a larger slice of the overall capital spending pie as we expect, then industry profits should enjoy a healthy rebound (second panel, Chart 4). Small business sector plans to expand have returned to a level last seen prior to the Great Recession, underscoring that software related outlays will likely follow them higher. Recovering bank loan growth is also corroborating this upbeat spending message: capital outlays on software are poised to accelerate based on rebounding bank loans. The latter signals that businesses are beginning to loosen their purse strings anew (Chart 4). Reviving animal spirits suggest that demand for software upgrades will stay elevated. CEO confidence is pushing decade highs. Such ebullience is positive for a pickup in software investments. It has also rekindled software M&A activity, with the number of industry deals jumping in recent months. Meanwhile, the structural pull from the proliferation of cloud computing and software-as-a-service has served as a catalyst to raise the profile of this more defensive and mature tech sub-sector. Finally, our newly introduced S&P software EPS model encapsulates this sanguine industry backdrop and heralds a bright profit outlook. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SOFT-MSFT, ORCL, ADBE, CRM, ATVI, INTU, EA, ADSK, RHT, SYMC, SNPS, ANSS, CDNS, CTXS, CA. Chart 4S&P Software Banks (Overweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) The S&P banks index is a core overweight portfolio holding and there are high odds of significant relative gains in the coming quarters. All three key drivers of bank profits, namely price of credit, loan growth and credit quality, are simultaneously moving in the right direction. On the price front, the market expects the 10-year yield to hit 2.47% in November 2018 from roughly 2.32% currently. BCA expects the 10-year yield will rise more quickly than is discounted in the forward curve. Our U.S. bond strategists think core inflation will soon resume its modest cyclical uptrend (Chart 5). A parallel recovery in the cost of inflation protection will impart 50-60 basis points of upside to the 10-year Treasury yield by the time core inflation reaches the Fed's 2% target.5 C&I and consumer loans, two large credit categories, are both forecast to reaccelerate in the coming months. The ISM has been on fire lately and consumer confidence has been following closely behind. Our credit growth model captures these positive forces and is sending an unambiguously positive message for loan reacceleration in the coming months (Chart 5). Finally, credit quality remains pristine despite some pockets of weakness in, subprime especially, auto loans. At this stage of the cycle, near or at full employment, NPLs will remain muted. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX - WFC, JPM, BAC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, CFG, RF, KEY, HBAN, CMA, ZION, PBCT. Chart 5S&P Banks Utilities (Underweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) Increasing global economic growth expectations bode ill for defensive utilities stocks (global manufacturing PMI diffusion index shown inverted, top panel, Chart 6). Synchronized global economic and capex growth (second panel, Chart 6) and coordinated tightening in monetary policy spells trouble for bonds. Our U.S. Bond strategists expect a bond selloff to gain steam in 2018. Given that utilities essentially trade as a proxy for bonds, this macro backdrop leaves them vulnerable to a significant underperformance phase. Importantly, the stock-to-bond (S/B) ratio and utilities sector relative performance also has a tight inverse correlation. The implication is that downside risks remain acute. Without the support of continued declines in bond yields, or of indiscriminate capital flight from all riskier assets, utilities advances depend on improving fundamentals. The news on the domestic operating front is grim. Contracting natural gas prices, the marginal price setter for the industry, suggest that recent utilities pricing power gains are running on empty. Add on waning productivity, with labor additions handily outpacing electricity production, and the ingredients for a margin squeeze are in place. Finally, industry utilization rates are probing multi-decade lows and overcapacity is negative for pricing power. Turbine and generator inventories have been hitting all-time highs. This is a deflationary backdrop. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5UTIL - XLU:US. Chart 6S&P Utilities Pharmaceuticals (Underweight, Special Situation) Weak pricing power fundamentals, a soft spending backdrop, a depreciating U.S. dollar and deteriorating industry operating metrics will sustain downward pressure on pharma stocks in the coming year. Both in absolute terms and relative to overall PPI, pharma selling prices are steadily losing steam (Chart 7). In the context of a bloated industry workforce, the profit margin outlook darkens significantly. If the Trump administration also manages to clamp down on the secular growth of pharma selling price inflation, then industry margins will remain under chronic pressure. Moreover, our dual synchronized global economic and capex growth themes bode ill for defensive pharma stocks. Nondiscretionary health care outlays jump in times of duress and underwhelm during expansions. Currently, the soaring ISM manufacturing index is signaling that pharma profits will remain under pressure in the coming months as the most cyclical parts of the economy flex their muscles (the ISM survey is shown inverted, second panel, Chart 7). A depreciating currency is also synonymous with pharma profit sickness (bottom panel, Chart 7). While pharma exports should at least provide some top line growth relief during depreciating U.S. dollar phases, they are contracting at an accelerating pace (middle panel, Chart 7), warning that global pharma demand is ill. Finally, even on the operating metric front, the outlook is dark. Pharma industrial production is nil and our productivity proxy remains muted, warning that profits will likely underwhelm. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5PHAR - JNJ, PFE, MRK, BMY, AGN, LLY, ZTS, MYL, PRGO. Chart 7S&P Pharma Homebuilding (Speculative Underweight, Higher Interest Rates Theme) Year-to-date, the niche homebuilding index is the best performing sub-index within consumer discretionary stocks surpassing even the internet retail subgroup that AMZN is part of, and has bested the broad market by 50 percentage points. Such exuberance is unwarranted and we deem that stocks prices have run way ahead of earnings fundamentals. Worrisomely the trifecta of higher interest rates, high lumber prices and likely tax reform blues are substantial headwinds to the index's profit potential. The second panel of Chart 8 shows that if BCA's interest rate view materializes in 2018, then 30-year fixed mortgage rates will rise in tandem with the 10-year yield (assuming the spread stays intact) and cause, at the margin, some consternation to homeownership. Near all-time highs in lumber prices are also a cause for concern (bottom panel, Chart 8). Lumber is an input cost to new homes built and eats into homebuilder margins if they decide not to pass it on to the consumer. If they do add it as a surcharge to new home selling prices, then existing homes become a "cheaper" alternative, hurting new home demand. Finally, the GOP tax plan may change mortgage interest and property tax deductions, affecting largely new home owners and becoming a net negative to the homebuilding index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME-DHI, LEN, PHM, LEN / B. Chart 8S&P Homebuilding Semiconductor Equipment (Speculative Underweight, Special Situation) Semiconductor stocks in general and semi equipment in particular have gone parabolic. The latter have bested the market by 60 percentage points year-to-date, and over a two-year period the outperformance jumps to roughly 180 percentage points (top panel, Chart 9). Something has got to give, and we are putting the S&P semi equipment index on our speculative high-conviction underweight list. A global M&A frenzy and the bitcoin/ICO mania (bottom panel, Chart 9) have pushed chip equipment stocks to the stratosphere. In absolute terms this index is near the tech bubble peak, and relative share prices are following close behind (top panel, Chart 9). Worrisomely five year EPS growth forecasts recently surpassed the 25% mark, an all-time high. Both the tech sector's (in 2000) and the biotech index's (2001 and 2014) long term growth estimates hit a wall near such breakneck pace (second panel, Chart 9). This indefinite profit euphoria is unwarranted and we would lean against it. On the operating front, DRAM prices (a pricing power proxy) have tentatively peaked and so have semi sales (an industry end-demand proxy), warning that extrapolating the recent semi equipment V-shaped profit recovery far into the future is fraught with danger (third & fourth panels, Chart 9). The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5SEEQ-AMAT, LRCX, KLC. Chart 9S&P Semis Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.