Asset Allocation
Highlights Price inflation is paradoxically deflationary for European consumers, because there is no feedthrough from price inflation to wage inflation. Whenever price inflation has risen towards the ECB's highly-misguided 2% target, euro area real wages have gone into recession. The same is true in the U.K. Do not expect a structural sell-off in high-quality bonds. Go overweight the broad-based Eurostoxx600 versus the bank-heavy Eurostoxx50. Stay overweight the international dollar-earning FTSE100 versus the more domestic pound-earning FTSE250. Feature We have a love-hate relationship with inflation. Love, if the inflation refers to our wages. Hate, if the inflation refers to our weekly grocery bill. Put another way, inflation is good for our purchasing power when wages are going up faster than prices; it is bad when prices are going up faster than wages. Unfortunately, recent inflation has been unequivocally bad for European purchasing power. Through the past 7 years, euro area nominal wages have been growing at a remarkably steady 1-2% clip. Whereas price inflation has swung between -0.5% and 3% (Chart I-2). Therefore, whenever price inflation has stayed close to 0% (the true definition of price stability), real wages have grown very healthily. But whenever inflation has risen towards the ECB's highly-misguided 2% target, euro area real wages have gone into recession (Chart of the Week). Chart I-1The Inflation Paradox: When Price Inflation Rises to 2%, Real Wages Go Into Recession Chart I-2Nominal Wages Have Been Growing At A Remarkably Steady 1-2% The same is true in the U.K. There has been no feedthrough from price inflation to wage inflation (Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). If anything, an inverse relationship has existed. Hence, whenever inflation has declined, it has boosted real wages. And whenever inflation has risen, it has choked real wages (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). Chart I-3Very Little Connection... Chart I-4...Between Price Inflation And Wage Inflation Chart I-5When Price Inflation Has Declined,##br## It Has Boosted Real Wages Chart I-6When Price Inflation Has Increased,##br## It Has Choked Real Wages Households Dislike 2% Price Inflation An argument we frequently hear is that highly indebted economies need higher inflation to 'inflate away their high debts'. But this logic only works if inflation is boosting the incomes of those burdened with the high debt, such as households. The problem, as we have just seen, is that there has been very little connection between the price inflation that central banks are targeting and the wage inflation that eases households' debt burdens. To its credit, the Bank of England recognises this paradox. "Continued moderation in pay growth and higher import prices following sterling's depreciation are likely to mean materially weaker household real income growth over the coming few years" 1 Inflation is ultimately a transfer of resources from those paying the higher prices to those receiving them. In a closed economy, the winners and losers might balance out. However, Europe is a large net importer of food and energy, whose demand is inelastic and whose prices are denominated in dollars. Therefore, currency weakness transfers resources from domestic consumers to foreign producers. As the BoE goes on to say: "Over the next few years, a consequence of weaker sterling is that the higher imported costs resulting from it will boost consumer prices... and the hitherto resilient rates of household spending growth will slow as real income gains weaken." Exactly the same dynamic applies to the euro area as a consequence of the weaker euro. The difference is that sterling's Brexit-induced slump was out of the BoE's control, whereas the euro's weakness is a direct consequence of the ECB's extreme and experimental monetary easing. The ECB is keen to tell us about the benefits of its extreme monetary easing; it is less keen to tell us about the costs. However, we believe that the benefits have diminished while the costs are rapidly rising. And absent a major shock, the ECB should end its risky experiment. What's Up With Wage Growth? The intriguing question is: why has there been little connection between price inflation and wage inflation? The BoE observes that pay growth has remained persistently subdued by historical standards - strikingly so in light of the decline in the rate of unemployment to below 5%. This outcome is likely to reflect a substantial decline in the 'equilibrium unemployment rate', the point at which wage pressures start to bubble up. The explanation comes from the type of jobs created in recent years. ECB research points out that the dynamics of wages not only reflect changes in wages at the individual level, but are also influenced by changes in the composition of employment. "The structure of recent employment creation may have contributed to low wage growth in the euro area. Since the second quarter of 2013, employment creation in the euro area has been stronger in sectors associated with relatively lower wage levels and wage growth rates. This employment composition effect puts a drag on average wage growth." 2 Automation and Artificial Intelligence (AI) are major drivers of this composition effect. Moreover, as we argued in The Superstar Economy: Part 2,3 the effect has much further to run. "Many of the jobs that AI will destroy - like credit scoring, language translation, or managing a stock portfolio - are regarded as skilled, have limited human competition and are well-paid. Conversely, many of the jobs that AI cannot (yet) destroy - like cleaning, gardening, or cooking - are relatively unskilled and are low-paid." With well-paid jobs being displaced by low-paid jobs, job creation itself might still seem very healthy and the unemployment rate might be falling to levels associated with 'full employment' - prompting some people to warn that wage inflation is about to take off. Except it won't, for two reasons: first, the AI-displaced formerly well-paid workers are downshifting to lower-paid work; second, the added supply of labour competing for the lower-paid work keeps a lid on the wages for that lower-paid work. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve Board of San Francisco points out that: "As long as employers can keep their wage bills low by replacing or expanding staff with lower-paid workers, labour cost pressures for higher price inflation could remain muted for some time." 4 A further point is that if employment creation is in jobs with lower wages, wage growth, and job security, then it will also constrain credit growth. Lacking income growth or security, households will be unwilling to borrow and banks will be unwilling to lend. Absent strong credit growth, we subscribe to a monetarist conclusion: a generalised and sustained inflation - a wage-price spiral - cannot take hold. Some Investment Considerations For the foreseeable future, there will be little feedthrough from price inflation to wage inflation. So whenever price inflation picks up - as is now happening in the U.K. and the euro area - it will choke real wages. Therefore paradoxically, price inflation will be deflationary for European consumers. This will prevent a structural sell-off in high-quality bonds. For a U.K. equity portfolio at this juncture, it means tilting towards international exposure. Stay overweight the international dollar-earning FTSE100 versus the more domestic pound-earning FTSE250 - especially given that sterling could come under renewed pressure after the U.K. formally files for its divorce from the EU (Chart I-7). For a broader European equity portfolio, prefer non-financials over financials. A very easy way to implement this is to go overweight the broad-based Eurostoxx600 versus the bank-heavy Eurostoxx50 (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Overweight The International Dollar-Earning ##br##FTSE100 Versus The FTSE250 Chart I-8Overweight The Broad Eurostoxx600##br## Versus The Bank-Heavy Eurostoxx50 Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 From the Bank of England Monetary Policy Summary and minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee meeting on February 1, 2017. 2 From the ECB Economic Bulletin, Issue 3 / 2016: Recent wage trends in the euro area. 3 Published on January 19, 2017 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com 4 From the FRBSF Economic Letter March 7, 2016: What's Up with Wage Growth? Fractal Trading Model* This week's recommendation is a commodity pair-trade: long tin / short copper. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-9 * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Markets are facing large tail risks - both negative and positive; Donald Trump is a "Fat-Tail" president; European politics offer both a right-tail risk - German Europhile turn ... ... And a left-tail risk - Italian election and a shock in France; Investors should turn to the options market for opportunities. Feature "Stock market hits new high with longest winning streak in decades. Great level of confidence and optimism - even before tax plan rollout!" President Donald Trump "tweet" - February 16, 2017 Global stocks continue their tear as the market shrugs off President Trump's tweets, European Black Swans, saber-rattling in the South China Sea, and fears of de-globalization. Some of the optimism is backed by economic data, but mostly by the "soft data," or survey-based indicators (Chart 1).1 Chart 1Not Much Behind The Optimism Aside From Animal Spirits So, why the party? It's the Animal Spirits. The bears are in retreat ... or facing deportation! We think investors are betting that the combination of the Brexit referendum and election of Donald Trump has forced policymakers to take their heads out of the sand. The market believes that policymakers have heard the angry electorate whose message is that dithering over economic policies must stop. BCA has been in this camp since last summer, when our colleague Peter Berezin penned an optimistic missive titled "The Upside To Populism."2 The hope that urgency will translate to expediency is what we think has propelled the S&P 500 to one of its best post-election performances (Chart 2). Trump's market performance is in the 83rd percentile of post-election outcomes. As promised, Trump has delivered a win. Chart 2Trump Is Winning The S&P 500 Contest The danger is that the market is extrapolating from the Trump presidency all the "right-tail" or super-positive policy outcomes without accounting for any left-tail events. Trump is a "Fat-Tails" president, an unorthodox politician that could break the gridlock and deliver positive change, but whose brand of nationalist populism may also produce paradigm-shifting crises along the way. Several indicators suggest that caution is warranted. Our U.S. Equity Strategy colleagues offer two measures of complacency, the valuation-to-volatility ratio (Chart 3) and "Complacency-Anxiety Index" (Chart 4).3 Both are stretched and suggest that the market has never been as engrossed by the right-tail narrative as today. Given our constraints-based methodology, we are concerned by how certain the market appears. It seems to believe that all the wonderful things that Trump has promised will face no constraints, while his nationalism and mercantilism will be discarded. Chart 3Market Sees Only Right Tails Chart 4Complacency Reigns First, on the domestic front, Trump faces several mounting constraints: Political capital: Trump is an unpopular president (Chart 5), at least by the standards of his peers who enjoyed a post-election "honeymoon." This could affect his relationship with the GOP-controlled Congress that hardly warmed up to him in the first place. Precedent: Congress is struggling to produce Obamacare-replacement legislation, which the GOP had six years to prepare for. This bodes poorly for the timeliness of other legislation, like tax reform. Paying for stimulus: Republicans and the White House appear to be at odds over how to pay for the coming household and corporate tax cuts. The former want to pass the controversial border adjustment tax (BAT),4 while the Trump administration may not care how tax cuts are paid for. The BAT proposal is also facing opposition from major retailers and its legality under the WTO is still in question. Infrastructure: Spending on infrastructure, which is a no-brainer and has broad public support (Chart 6), has not seen a concrete plan despite Trump's emphasis on it during his inaugural address and campaign. Chart 5Trump's Approval Ratings Dismal Chart 6Everyone Loves New Roads In addition to the domestic political agenda, investors must deal with a packed European political calendar that we elucidated in last week's report5 (Table 1) and a potential U.S.-China trade war that could spill over into military tensions in the South China Sea.6 Table 1Busy Calendar For Europe This Year Investors may have been lulled into complacency by the February 10 phone call between presidents Xi and Trump. During the call, Trump committed to uphold the "One China" policy that has formed the bedrock of the Beijing-Washington rapprochement since 1972. A week later, on February 16, China suspended all imports of coal from North Korea - 50% of the country's entire export haul - until the end of the year. The move was a big nod to Donald Trump, a message by Beijing that China can play the role of an indispensable partner - if not outright ally - in the region. These moves have put fears of trade protectionism, our main candidate for a catalyst of a market correction, on the backburner. Investors can certainly be disappointed by smaller-than-expected tax cuts and tepid infrastructure spending, but such policy reversals will only encourage the Fed to stay easy and thus prolong the party. In the context of a synchronized global growth recovery - with both the global (Chart 7) and U.S. (Chart 8) economies looking decent - investors will not be deterred from bullishness merely by congressional intrigue. Chart 7Global Growth Looks Solid ... Chart 8... And So Does U.S. Growth The problem for investors is that the main two risks to global markets in 2017 have no set timeline. Last week, we pointed out that the main political risk in Europe is the Italian election whose date could be in autumn, or even as late as spring 2018. Today we add the French election to the list, where Marine Le Pen is mounting a furious rally on the back of rioting in the banlieue of Aulnay-sous-Bois. Similarly, Trump's mercantilism may remain dormant as he focuses on immigration, the "dishonest media," and cabinet appointees, even though it is very real. His administration is laser-focused on correcting a major perceived ill of the U.S. economy: the current account deficit. Therefore, investors should certainly welcome the Xi-Trump phone call, but the fact that the two leaders spent valuable time reaffirming a policy set 45 years ago should not be encouraging. In fact, the Trump administration has since asked the U.S. Trade Representative's office to consider changing how it calculates the U.S. trade deficit. According to the Wall Street Journal, Trump's White House is looking to exclude "re-exports" - goods imported into the U.S. merely so they can be assembled and then exported - from the calculation of U.S. exports.7 This would naturally balloon the U.S. trade deficit and give the Trump administration greater political ammunition - particularly against Mexico - for retaliation. Given solid global growth data, extremely positive surveys, and a market narrative still focused on the "Upside of Populism," it is tempting for investors to throw caution to the wind. Every time we encounter a bear in a client meeting or conference, we ask if he or she would "buy on dips" in case a correction happened. Their answer is almost universally "yes." It is difficult to see how a correction occurs in such an environment, where nobody actually expects a bear market. Although we are throwing in the towel with our two hedges - both the S&P 500 and Eurostoxx hedges have stopped out, we continue to stress that the market has priced in none of the left-tail risks that remain. We have a Fat-Tail President in the White House and an increasingly binary resolution to the euro area saga in the making in Europe. Fat Tails In Europe Since late 2016, we have suspected that Merkel's rule is unsustainable.8 However, while most investors fretted that Merkel would be replaced by a Euroskeptic, we considered that outcome extremely unlikely (at least in the current electoral cycle). For one, the refugee crisis that befell Europe would be short-lived, and indeed it is now over (Chart 9). For another, Germans are not Euroskeptics. What is astonishing is how quickly the German political establishment has realized and sought to profit from these facts. Instead of opposing Merkel with a cautious choice, the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) has turned to an unabashed Europhile, former President of the European Parliament Martin Schulz. Schulz is a relative unknown in Germany and was perceived by Merkel's coterie as a lightweight. On the surface, this made sense. Schulz has no university education and worked as a bookseller before becoming a politician. However, he knows EU politics extremely well, as he has been a member of the European Parliament since 1994. He has therefore heard every Euroskeptic argument on the continent and has learned to counter it emphatically. And he seems to understand the benefits that euro area membership has bestowed upon Germany, a view he appears to share with 80% of the German public, if the latest polls are to be believed (Chart 10)! Chart 9Migrant Crisis Waning Chart 10Germans See The Euro As A Great Deal Thus far, Schulz's campaign has focused on three main lines of attack: the traditional SPD call for greater economic redistribution, general appeal for European solidarity, and blaming Merkel for the rise of populists. To everyone's surprise - other than folks who understand how Germany works - this has been a successful approach. In just three weeks, the SPD has gone from trailing Merkel's Christian Democratic Union (CDU) by double digits to leading in the polls for the first time since 2001 (Chart 11). What should investors make of Schulz's meteoric rise? For one, nobody should get too excited, as the election is still a long seven months away. However, the SPD's resurrection suggests that the German political marketplace has been demanding a genuinely pro- euro area political alternative to the overly cautious Angela Merkel for some time. In other words, Schulz has realized that the median voter in Germany is far more Europhile than the conventional wisdom and Merkel have thought. Again... Chart 10 says it all! Unfortunately for the euro, Germany's Europhile turn may be too little too late. Italy's election is a major risk. As with the threat of American mercantilism, Italian elections are a risk that we cannot properly time. Furthermore, polls remain extremely close in Italy, suggesting that the election could go either way between the establishment and Euroskeptic parties. At this point, the best outcome may be a hung parliament. Meanwhile, the ongoing unrest in the northeast suburb of Paris, Aulnay-sous-Bois, appears to have given Marine Le Pen some wind in her sails (Chart 12). She has closed her head-to-head polling gap against Francois Fillon and Emmanuel Macron to just 12% and 20% respectively. Our net assessment is that she is not going to win, but our conviction level is declining. Her subjective probability has climbed to well over 20% at this point. Chart 11Pro-Europe Sentiment Drives SPD Revival Chart 12Le Pen Lags By 12-20% In Second Round Similar rioting in 2005 launched the political career of one Nicolas Sarkozy, who, as the country's Minister of Interior, took a hard line approach to the unrest, which launched him into the presidency. The lesson from Sarkozy's rise is important for two reasons. First, unrest in France's banlieues is politically relevant. These frequent bursts of violence support the National Front (FN) narrative that the integration of migrants has failed, that the country needs full control over its borders, and that the elites in Paris are not serious about law and order. The second lesson is that centrist, establishment politicians have no problem with being tough on crime, minorities, or immigrants. Sarkozy's rhetoric in 2007 mirrored much of the FN electoral platform. There is enough time, in other words, for Macron and Fillon to do the same in 2017. This will be particularly easy for Fillon, whose immigration policies already echo those of the FN. Chart 13ECB Policy Will Stimulate Core Europe Macron, however, could be in trouble in the second round. And at the moment, he is more likely to face Le Pen in the second round than Fillon. As we pointed out in last week's missive, Macron could struggle to get right-wing voters to support him in the second round. We still do not have a historical case where right-wing voters were the ones who swung against the FN. In both the 2002 presidential election and the 2015 regional elections, it was mostly left-wing voters who swung to the center-right to keep the FN out of power. Will French conservative voters come out and support a centrist candidate like Macron who may be perceived as "soft" on crime? Time will tell. His polling appears to be holding up well against Le Pen, but her momentum is now rising. Bottom Line: Europe faces its own version of Fat Tails in 2017. On the one hand, we expect the ECB to remain easier than consensus would have it, given the mounting political risks in the periphery. We expect the ECB to ignore the broad euro area economy and focus on the interest rates that the periphery - namely Italy - needs (very low for very long time) (Chart 13). When combined with a Europhile turn in Germany and a positive fiscal thrust as the EU Commission turns against austerity, we see a Goldilocks scenario for euro area assets over the short and medium term. We are betting that this right-tail risk will ultimately prevail. On the other hand, Italian elections could knock the train off the rails at any time. Due to the announced leadership race in the ruling Democratic Party (PD), the election will most likely have to take place after the summer. Or, it may have to be put off until Q1 2018. But whenever it is announced, it will become the risk to European and global assets. For now, we continue to recommend that clients remain overweight euro area equities. However, vigilance will be needed as the market climbs the wall of worry. Investment Implications - Trading Fat Tails In A Low-Vol World What should investors do in a world that is increasingly exemplified by our Fat-Tails thesis? Current levels of the VIX suggest that the market is not pricing in a potentially higher level of volatility, which we would intuitively expect to rise in a Fat-Tail world (Chart 14). On the other hand, current low levels of volatility may merely be the calm before the storm. Investors may be "frozen" by the high probability of both left- and right-tail outcomes and thus choosing to sit on the sidelines instead of committing to any one narrative. Chart 14Volatility Extremely Low One way to think about investing in this world is to turn to the options market. The options market is unique in that it allows investors to take a view on the dispersion of the expected returns of the asset against which the option is written.9 This is because one of the critical components of a call or put option's value is the expected volatility of returns for the asset underlying the option itself. Volatility is trading-market shorthand for the annualized standard deviation of expected returns for the underlying asset. Volatility is a calculated value, whereas the other components of an option's price - i.e. the underlying asset's price, the strike price, time to expiration, and interest rates - are known inputs. Volatility, like the price of the underlying asset, is "discovered" when a trade occurs. After an option trades and its premium is known, an option-pricing model - e.g., the Black-Scholes-Merton model - can be run backwards, so to speak, to see what level of volatility solves the pricing model for the value that cleared the market. This is known as the option's implied volatility, because it is the expected standard deviation of returns implied by the price at which the option clears the market. One reason investors and traders buy and sell options is to express a view on implied volatility. Option buyers who think the market is underestimating the likelihood of sharply higher returns can express this view by buying out-of-the-money options. This can arise for any number of reasons, but they all boil down to one essential point: option buyers think there is a higher probability that returns will be higher or lower during the life of an option than what is being priced in the options market.10 Option sellers, on the other hand, are expressing the opposite view. We believe the geopolitical tail risks we have discussed in this report are not being fully reflected in the options markets most sensitive to this information, among them the gold market. Our own assessment of these risks implies much fatter tails than we currently observe in out-of-the-money gold options. For this reason, we are recommending investors consider buying $1,200/oz gold puts and $1,300/oz gold calls expiring in either June or December of this year. This is a strategic recommendation. We leave it to investors to set their own stop-loss, if they are not comfortable foregoing the full premium paid to hold these options to expiry, possibly expiring worthless. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Geopolitical Strategy marko@bcaresearch.com Robert Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Downside To Full Employment," dated February 3, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Upside To Populism," dated August 19, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Bridging The Gap," dated February 6, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Congress Pass The Border Adjustment Tax?" dated February 8, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Climbing The Wall Of Worry In Europe," dated February 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "The 'What Can You Do For Me' World?," dated January 25, 2017, and "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin," dated January 18, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 "Please see William Mauldin and Devlin Barrett, "Trump Administration Considers Change In Calculating U.S. Trade Deficit," Wall Street Journal, February 19, 2017, available at www.wsj.com. 8 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "De-Globalization," dated November 9, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Call options give the buyer the right to go long an underlying asset at the price at which an option contract is struck - i.e. the option's strike price. Puts give option buyers the right to go short the underlying asset at the price at which the contract is struck. While an option buyer is not required to ever exercise an option, option sellers must take the other side of the deal if the buyer chooses to exercise. Option buyers pay a premium for the put or call they purchase. 10 This probability also can be expressed in terms of price levels, which allows investors to take an explicit view of the likelihood of a particular price being realized during the life of the option being purchased. Please see Bob Ryan and Tancred Lidderdale, "Energy Price Volatility and Forecast Uncertainty," published by the U.S. Energy Information Administration (2009), for a discussion of options markets and implied volatility. "Appendix II: Derivation of the Cumulative Normal Density for Futures Prices" beginning on p. 22 shows how to transform the returns distribution into a price distribution. It is available at https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/special/pdf/2009_sp_05.pdf. Geopolitical Calendar
Highlights The Fed & Yields: Positive U.S. growth and inflation momentum is maintaining the credibility of the Fed's 2017 rate hike plans. U.S. bond yields, in particular, and global yields, in general, will remain under upward pressure in this environment, despite the aggressive short positioning in the U.S. Treasury market. Maintain a below-benchmark portfolio duration stance. "Soft" vs. "Hard" Data: After a deep dive into the economic data for the major countries, both "hard" demand indicators and "soft" survey measures, we have little doubt that a tangible global growth acceleration is underway. This positive economic backdrop will continue to put upward pressure on government bond yields while boosting the relative return performance for corporate credit. Australia: The cyclical outlook Down Under has become murkier of late, even with the RBA starting to shift in a more hawkish direction. We are taking profits on our recommended pro-growth tilts in Australia. Feature The positive momentum on global growth continues to put upward pressure on bond yields, despite the large short positioning already in place in the government bond markets. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield returned to 2.5% at one point last week, led by a rash of better-than-expected data on U.S. retail sales and inflation, combined with hawkish comments from numerous Fed officials (Chart of the Week). Markets started to more seriously consider a March Fed rate hike, although we still see June as the more likely date for the Fed's next tightening move. As we have discussed in several recent reports, it is a surge in global economic survey data that suggests that a broad-based upturn currently underway. While this is all good news for risk assets, there is some concern among investors that a pick-up in growth has been slow to appear clearly in the "hard" economic data related to final demand. Without a boost in actual economic activity, and not just "feel good" surveys, the pro-growth momentum currently embedded in equity and bond markets may melt away as rapidly as it was built up. Mark McClellan, the Chief Strategist at BCA's flagship publication, The Bank Credit Analyst, is releasing a report this week that digs into the differences between "soft data" (i.e. surveys) and "hard data" (i.e. employment and production).1 We present some excerpts from that report in the following section. Global Growth Pickup: Fact Or Fiction? Investors have taken some comfort from the fact that leading indicators are trending up across most of the developed and emerging economies. BCA's Global Leading Economic Indicator is moving higher and will climb further in the coming months given that its diffusion index is well above 50 (Chart 2). The Global ZEW indicator and the BCA Boom/Bust growth indicator are also constructive on the growth outlook. Chart of the WeekNo Bond-Bearish Data In The U.S. Chart 2A Consistent, Positive Message On Growth Consumers and business leaders are feeling more upbeat as well, both inside and outside of the U.S. (Chart 3). Importantly, the improvement in sentiment began before the U.S. election. Surveys of business activity, such as the Purchasing Managers Indices (PMI), are painting a uniformly positive picture for near-term global output in both the manufacturing and service industries. While this is all good news for risk assets, there is concern that a growth impulse has been slow to show up clearly in the "hard" economic data related to final demand. The good news is that there is more to the cyclical upturn than hope. The improved tone in the forward-looking data is now clearly showing up in some measures of final demand. The caveat is that there is no evidence yet that the cyclical mini up-cycle in 2017 is any less vulnerable to negative shocks than was the case in previous upturns since the Great Recession. The Hard Data First, we start with some bad news. There has been a worrying loss of momentum in job creation in recent months (Chart 4). While employment gains have accelerated in Japan, Canada and Australia, the payroll slowdown is mainly evident in the U.S. and U.K. This may reflect supply constraints as both economies are near full employment, but it is difficult to determine whether it is supply or demand-related. The good news is that the employment component of the global PMI has rebounded sharply following last year's dip, suggesting that the pace of job creation will soon turn up. Chart 3Surging Confidence, Production Following Suit Chart 4Global Employment Growth Cooling Off Also on the positive side, households are opening their wallets a little wider according to the retail sales data (Chart 5), where growth has accelerated sharply in all the major economies except U.K. and Australia (NOTE: we discuss the Australian bond outlook later in this Global Fixed Income Strategy report). Similarly, business capital spending is finally showing some signs of life following a rocky 2015 and early 2016. An aggregate of Japanese, German and U.S. capital goods orders2 is a good leading indicator for G7 real business investment (Chart 6). The acceleration of imported capital goods for our 20-country global aggregate corroborates the stronger new orders reports (bottom panel). Chart 5On Your Mark, Get Set, Shop!! Chart 6Global Capex Cycle Turning Positive Recent data on industrial production show that the global manufacturing sector is clearly emerging from last year's recession. Short-term momentum in production growth has accelerated over the past 3-4 months across all of the major advanced economies (Chart 7). Production growth has been particularly robust in the Eurozone, U.K. and Japan. Industrial output related to both household and capital goods is showing increasing signs of vigor in recent months (Chart 8). Chart 7A Global Manufacturing Upturn Chart 8A Broad-Based Acceleration At the moment, the upturn in manufacturing production is being driven by a broader pickup in business spending. The acceleration in production and orders related to consumer goods in the major countries suggests that household final demand is also showing increased vitality, consistent with the retail sales data. The Soft Data Chart 9Global GDP Growth Is Accelerating Notwithstanding the nascent upturn in the hard data, some believe that the soft data are sending an overly constructive signal in terms of near-term growth. The soft data generally comprise measures of confidence and surveys of business activity. One could discount the pop in U.S. sentiment as simply reflecting hope that President Trump's election promises to cut taxes, remove red tape and boost infrastructure spending will come to fruition. Nonetheless, improved sentiment readings are widespread across the major countries, which means that it is probably not just a "Trump" effect. Moreover, there is no reason to doubt the surveys of actual business activity. Surveys such as the PMIs, the U.K. CBI Business Survey, the German IFO current conditions index and the Japanese Tankan survey are all measures of activity occurring today or in the immediate future (i.e. 3 months). There is no reason to believe that these surveys have been contaminated by "hope" and are sending a false signal on actual spending. To test the reliability of the growth message from the "soft data", we employed these indicators in regression models for real GDP in the four major advanced economies and for the G7 as a group (Chart 9). The models predict that G7 real GDP growth will accelerate to 2½% on a year-over-year basis in the first quarter of 2017. We expect growth of close to 3% in the U.S. and a little over 2½% in the Eurozone, although the model for the latter has been over-predicting somewhat over the past year. Japanese growth should accelerate to about 2% in the first quarter based on these indicators. The implication is that the survey data are not sending a distorted message; underlying growth is accelerating even though it is only now showing up in the hard economic data. Turning for a moment to the emerging world, output is picking up on the back of an upturn in exports. However, we do not see much evidence of a domestic demand dynamic that will help to drive global growth this year. The main exception is China, where private sector capital spending growth has clearly bottomed. Stronger Chinese capital spending in 2017 will boost imports and thereby support activity in China's trading partners, particularly in Asia. Conclusions We have little doubt that a meaningful global growth acceleration is underway. Our sense is that 'animal spirits' are finally beginning to stir, following many years of caution and retrenchment. American CEOs appear to have more swagger these days. Since the start of the year there have been a slew of high-profile announcements of fresh capital spending and hiring plans from companies such as Amazon, Toyota, Walmart, GM, Lockheed Martin and Kroger. A return of animal spirits could prolong a period of stronger growth, even if President Trump's growth-boosting policies are delayed or largely offset by spending cuts or trade wars. This economic backdrop is positive for risk assets and bearish for government bonds. Bottom Line: After a deep dive into the economic data for the major countries, both "hard" demand indicators and "soft" survey measures, we have little doubt that a tangible global growth acceleration is underway. This positive economic backdrop will continue to put upward pressure on government bond yields while boosting the relative return performance for corporate credit. Australia: The Equation Gets More Complicated Two weeks ago, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) unsurprisingly left its cash rate unchanged at 1.5%. The post-meeting statement by RBA Governor Philip Lowe was considered hawkish by economic analysts. Nonetheless, the market reaction has been relatively muted, with the Australian government bond yield curve steepening by only 5 bps, and the Aussie dollar remaining stable, since the meeting. Pricing in the OIS curve suggests that the RBA will probably remain on hold throughout 2017, but the implied odds of a rate hike are rising, standing now at 20%. The RBA's assessment of the current global economic backdrop was relatively constructive, pointing to above-trend growth expectations in a number of advanced economies. Domestically, the RBA foresees a boost to Australian export growth from the resource sector, an end to the decline in mining investment and a pick-up in non-mining capital spending.3 With such a tone, the central bank might have set up the market for some disappointments. The new forecast of economic growth around 3% for the next couple of years seems overly optimistic. This is higher than the median expectation of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, who foresee 2.5% and 2.8% growth for 2017 and 2018, respectively. The IMF does not expect growth to reach 3% until 2019. Granted, several parts of the economy have shown very robust performances of late. The service sector PMI has surged to pre-crisis levels. The NAB survey of business conditions also shot higher last week. Goods exports have exploded at a 40% annual growth rate, causing the December trade balance to jump to $3.5bn, nearly double the consensus $2.0bn estimate (Chart 10). Those jumps in activity are hard to ignore. From a big picture perspective, however, Australian economic data has not been surprising to the upside, unlike the trend in in the rest of the world over the past few months (Chart 11). This is intriguing, since an easy monetary policy, loose bank credit conditions, improving profit expectations and a reflationary impulse coming from China were all tailwinds that should have supported Australian growth; this was our view last year.4 Now, those favorable factors have started to reverse, raising the chances of a cyclical economic downturn. Chart 10Surging Numbers Chart 11Surprisingly Unsurprising Foremost, overall labor market conditions are uninspiring (Chart 12): Although the monthly employment change for January did positively surprise, at 13.3k versus an expected 10k, the pace of job creation remains under 1% year-over-year, which is low by historical standards. The diverging trend between plunging full-time and steady part-time job growth indicates a sub-optimal labor market. The labor force participation rate declined from 65.2 to 64.6 in 2016, suggesting an increasing amount of discouraged workers. Underemployment has not budged in the last two years and is stuck at historically high levels. As result, a rise in labor market slack poses a risk for the Australian consumer; wage growth has already been in a downtrend since 2011 (Chart 12, bottom panel). The construction sector further confirms our apprehensions on the true strength of the economy. Households believe that it is not a good time to buy a home, while building approvals for new dwelling units fell from bubbly levels at the end of last year. At the same time, speculative money, which was supposed to have been curbed by macroprudential policy measures, has returned to the housing market (Chart 13). Lower supply and increased speculation could push residential prices even higher, inflating debt burdens, and leaving households with fewer dollars to consume. Chart 12Consumption: Set To Deteriorate Chart 13The Foundations Are Shaking Externally, the Chinese reflationary mini-boom - which boosted the prices of iron ore and other commodities exported by Australia last year - will probably retreat to some extent in 2017. Although China's overall cyclical momentum remains solid, according to our GFIS China Checklist,5 government spending growth has severely relapsed, potentially signaling an end to last year's largesse (Chart 14). With that in mind, it has become difficult to envision a continuation of the positive effects from the terms of trade shock experienced by Australia in 2016. In a similar vein, but domestically-driven, Australia's credit growth has become a headwind. Between 2013 and 2015, business credit growth was expanding, creating a positive impulse for the economy. Unfortunately, this trend changed tack in 2016, with slowing credit growth now representing a negative economic force (Chart 15). With Australian banks having suffered declining profits and rising bad debt charges in the last few quarters, credit conditions could tighten going forward. This is especially worrisome since personal credit was already contracting in 2016. Chart 14China Mini-Boom Could Be Over Chart 15Negative Credit Impulse top of all this, the IMF is projecting that Australia's fiscal thrust - the change in the primary government budget balance - will be negative in each of the next five years (Chart 16). As such, this economy could run out of supporting impulses in the short to medium term. Summing it all up, we agree with the current market pricing of interest rates, given the economic uncertainties. The RBA will most likely remain on hold for the foreseeable future. The story remains the same; the central bank wants to depreciate the overvalued Aussie dollar, but excesses in the housing market prevent them from weakening the currency through interest rate cuts (Chart 17). Now, the declining cyclical outlook will only complicate the equation. Chart 16Negative Fiscal Impulse Chart 17The RBA Has Little Room To Maneuver Investment Implications Our updated and more balanced economic view of Australia leads us to neutralize our recommended pro-growth Australia bond tilts: Asset allocation. As discussed above, the previously favorable factors supporting the Australian economy are progressively reversing. This is not the case in most of the other bond markets where additional cyclical upward pressure on global yields is anticipated. To reflect this view, today we are upgrading our recommended Australian bond exposure to neutral, from below-benchmark, within global hedged bond portfolios. This underweight position produced +188bps of excess return versus the global benchmark since inception in June 2016. Duration. The 10-year Australian government bond yield, 1-year forward, is 3.04%, 25bps above the current yield of 2.79%. There is a good chance that yields will rise at a faster pace than implied by the forwards at times over the course of the year, given the improving global growth and inflation backdrop. However, these instances will be opportunities to extend duration within dedicated Australian fixed income portfolios. Current Australian government bond valuation has become very cheap and is now at a level that has been associated with the beginning of positive absolute performance in the past. Moreover, the 10-year inflation breakeven is already pricing in a fair amount of inflation increases; those expectations will be hard to surpass, especially considering the low starting point (Chart 18). Curve. In May 2016, we initiated an Australian butterfly curve trade, going long the 2-year/6-year barbell versus the 4-year bullet. At the time, the 2/4/6 part of the government bond yield curve was kinked, with the 4-year sector trading very expensive versus the 2-year and 6-year maturities, reflecting the perception of a dovish stance by the RBA. then, the market has priced out these rate cut expectations, as we expected, and this part of the curve has bear steepened (Chart 19). Today, we close this trade at a +36bps profit. The RBA's future potential actions - or, more likely, inaction - are now properly discounted in the curve and reflect our neutral stance on the RBA. Chart 18Time To Buy Australian Bonds Chart 19Taking Profits On Our 2/4/6 Butterfly Trade Credit trades. Developing economic uncertainties warrant more cautiousness towards Australian credit. In March 2016, we recommended going long Australian semi government debt versus federal government bonds as an initial way to play what was, at the time, a relatively constructive view on the Australian economy.6 Now, given the increased economic risks, we are closing this relative value trade with a +133bps profit. Mark McClellan, Senior Vice President markm@bcaresearch.com Jean-Laurent Gagnon, Editor/Strategist jeang@bcaresearch.com Robert Robis, Senior Vice President rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, Section II, "Global Growth Pickup: Fact Or Fiction?," dated March 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Machinery orders used for Japan 3 http://www.rba.gov.au/media-releases/2017/mr-17-02.html 4 For details, please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Last Minute Recommendations Before The Brexit Vote," dated June 21, 2016, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 5 For details concerning this indicator, please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "How To Assess The "China Factor" For Global Bonds," dated November 11, 2016, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "Australian Credit: Time To Test The Waters," dated March 29, 2016, available at gfis.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
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Add the S&P asset manager & custody banks index to the high-conviction overweight list. Prospects for higher interest rates bode well for a catch up phase with the rest of the financials sector. Initiate a long S&P consumer staples/short S&P technology pair trade, a truly out of consensus call. Housing-related equities are likely to gain ground as housing activity should stay resilient amidst rising borrowing costs. Recent Changes S&P Asset Managers & Custody Banks - Added to our high-conviction overweight list on February 16th. Long S&P Consumer Staples/Short S&P Technology - Initiate this pair trade today. Table 1Sector Performance Returns (%) Feature Momentum continues to drive the broad market trend. The drag from a reduction in global liquidity courtesy of depleting foreign exchange reserves continues to be overwhelmed by economic optimism. The latter is fueling a major rotation from bonds to stocks, which is the dominant market force. Valuations have taken a backseat, emblematic of blow-off phases. Two weeks ago we introduced our Complacency-Anxiety Indicator, which hit a new high. Another way to measure greed overwhelming fear is the relentless rise of the forward P/E over the VIX. The spread between these two measures can also gauge complacency. This Indicator has also soared to an all-time high (Chart 1). Chart 2 applies this methodology for the broad S&P sectors, using forward P/E and implied equity volatility, and then standardizes the result to remove biases from perennially low and high P/E sectors. A low reading suggests lower risk, and vice versa. Chart 1Buy At Your Own Risk Chart 2Sector Vulnerabilities And Opportunities At the moment, financials, telecom, utilities, REITs and health care have the lowest implicit vulnerability, while cyclical sectors carry the most risk. How long can this overshoot phase last? There are obviously no easy answers. However, from a purely technical perspective and in the absence of any major monetary, economic and/or geopolitical shocks, an examination of our Composite Technical Indicator (CTI) suggests some running room remains. Our CTI is driven primarily by momentum components. Overbought conditions are signaled once it hits one standard deviation above the mean. Currently, the TI remains slightly below this threshold (Chart 3). Even then, it can cross decisively into the danger zone before the S&P 500 eventually sells off in a meaningful fashion. Chart 3Overbought Conditions Can Persist Importantly, when the CTI swings quickly from deeply oversold to overbought levels, there can be a multi month lead before the broad market crests or suffers a sustained setback (Chart 3), and the bulk of those moves are associated with economic recessions and/or growth disappointments. The implication is that even though extended broad market valuations virtually guarantee paltry long-term returns and economic expectations are now sky-high, technical conditions suggest that momentum may continue to carry the day for a while longer. That does not mean investors should abandon a largely defensive portfolio structure, given that this is where the reward/risk tradeoff is most attractive and timing corrections is inherently difficult. Two weeks ago we recommended buying both gold and packaging stocks. As part of our ongoing rebalancing, this week we are further tweaking our portfolio. We recommend a pair trade to position for the inevitable sub-surface mean reversion heralded by our Indicators in the coming 3-6 months. Asset Managers: Shifting To High-Conviction Status The interest rate and market-sensitive S&P asset managers & custody banks index (AMCB) has lagged most other financials sub-indexes at a time when macro forces are lining up bullishly, particularly in view of the sector's attractive ranking on a forward P/E to volatility basis. While the capital markets and banks groups are seen as having higher torque to these positive forces, these three groups tend to move together. Lately, a divergence has opened, but a number of factors point to an imminent AMCB catch up phase (Chart 4), especially given that AMCB is not levered to overall credit growth, which has dried up. Fed Chair Yellen's testimony last week was interpreted to be slightly more on the hawkish side. That, coupled with the recent upside surprise in core inflation, raises the possibility of more 2017 tightening than currently discounted. That would provide further relief for custody banks, as ultra-low interest rates have been an anchor on this group's profitability as fees earned on funds held in trust have been minimal. The increase in short-term Treasury yields heralds a share price rally (Chart 5, top panel). Chart 4Catch Up Ahead Chart 5Time To Rally Moreover, the boost in economic expectations signals scope for an increase in fee generating activity, such as M&A, stock issuance and even stock lending. BCA's Global Economic Sentiment Index also indicates that the share price ratio has undershot (Chart 5). Most importantly, the asset preference shift from bonds to stocks reverses another major drag on profitability (Chart 5, third panel). Fixed income products carry lower margins than equity products, so as equity assets under management grow, profit margins should expand. If so, then we would anticipate a relative valuation re-rating, especially if the pace and scale of financial sector deregulation disappoints. The latter has been a key factor propelling capital markets and banks, and any disappointment could cause a capital rotation into the lagging AMCB index. Bottom Line: We are already overweight the S&P asset management & custody banks index, and added it to our high-conviction list in a daily Sector Insight on February 16th. New Pair Trade This week we are recommending what can be considered a highly contrarian pair trade: long the S&P consumer staples sector and short the S&P technology sector. It may be difficult to swallow executing such a non-consensus position while the broad market is going gangbusters. However, the objective message from our Indicators and increasing odds of a vicious, un-telegraphed correction, argue that the reward/risk trade-off is too attractive to ignore. As outlined in last week's Cyclical Indicator Update, the technology sector's relative earnings profile has deteriorated, because the corporate sector is not spending much yet and tech companies have suffered a serious loss of pricing power. Conversely, the consumer staples sector has a better chance of earnings outperformance, according to our model (Chart 6). Both sectors appear to have discounted the opposite outcome. Moreover, from a technical perspective, tech stocks are overbought and consumer staples are extremely oversold (Chart 6). Even a simple technical/momentum renormalization would imply a sharp jump in the share price ratio. Both sectors lose competitiveness when the U.S. dollar rise, but given that the technology sector's share of foreign sales (58%) is much higher than that of consumer staples (28%), the pain is disproportional. Importantly, consumer staples exports are accelerating, whereas tech exports are shrinking (Chart 7). Chart 6Contrasting Profiles Chart 7The Strong Dollar Is Worse For Tech Non-durable consumer goods are less sensitive to emerging market prospects, and thus when their currencies weaken, momentum in the consumer staples/tech share price ratio tends to accelerate (EM currencies shown inverted and advanced, bottom panel, Chart 7). Moreover, a strong U.S. dollar tends to reduce input costs for many consumer staples vendors, both through lower commodity prices and a reduced cost of imported goods sold. We have shown that tech stocks fare poorly toward the latter stages of a U.S. dollar bull market, when consumer staples start to shine. This dynamic reflects the economic fallout abroad from a strong U.S. dollar, particularly on developing economies, as well as the drag on U.S. corporate profits, and by extension, capital spending. While the U.S. dollar and stocks have risen in tandem in recent months, that cannot continue indefinitely, and when the correlation breaks down, the defensive consumer staples sector should outperform. In terms of economic dynamics, this share price ratio tends to accelerate when consumer spending outperforms capital spending. Consumer confidence is outpacing business confidence (Chart 8, top panel), signaling such an environment ahead. That sentiment mismatch has already translated into faster consumption than business investment on tech goods (Chart 8, second panel). Unless the gap between the return on and cost of capital reverses course and widens anew, then this trend is likely to persist. As a result, the surge in consumer staples vs. technology pricing power will continue, ultimately flattering the share price ratio through relative profit performance (Chart 8, bottom panel). The message is that consumer staples profits can have the upper hand over tech even when overall GDP growth is positive, provided the underlying driver is consumption rather than capital spending. From an external standpoint, it is notable that consumer staples have a better track record than tech stocks during inflationary periods. Chart 9 shows that the uptrend in long-term inflation expectations and increase in actual inflation both forecast a revival in this pair trade. Chart 8Unsustainable Divergences Chart 9Inflation Pressures? Buy This Ratio Rising inflation ultimately heralds tighter monetary policy, which is a precursor to elevated broad market volatility and a rise in the discount rate, to the detriment of long duration sectors. History shows that the high priced tech sector is more vulnerable than the safe haven staples sector in such an environment. In sum, the time is ripe for a contrary pair trade favoring consumer staples vs. technology. Notable risks to this trade are that the U.S. dollar weakens meaningfully and/or global capital spending re-accelerates decisively, relative to consumer spending. Bottom Line: We recommend a market neutral long consumer staples/short technology pair trade. The time horizon for this trade is 3-6 months. Will Housing Stocks Go Through The Roof? Housing-related stocks have delivered positive earnings surprises, but anxiety about rising mortgage rates challenges the outlook. While the latter is a risk, cheap valuations and consumers' underappreciated ability to absorb rising borrowing costs offset these concerns. Sensitivity analysis shows that even a 200 basis point (bps) spike in interest rates from current levels would fail to push housing affordability back to the long-term average (Chart 10). Moreover, mortgage payments as a percentage of incomes and effective borrowing costs would also remain below their respective historic means even with such a spike. Importantly, housing market fundamentals are improving. Lumber prices are on fire. Lumber has been the best performing commodity year-to-date. This is a real time indicator of housing demand (Chart 11). Similarly, railroad carloads of lumber are also firming, signaling that the price rise is demand-driven rather than a speculative bet in the trading pits. Sustained house price inflation, solid housing turnover and the acceleration in building permits reinforce that housing activity remains robust (Chart 11). Chart 10Higher Rates Are Not A Show Stopper Chart 11Lumber Strength Is Housing Bullish The credit tap to sustain strong activity is still open. According to the latest Fed Senior Bank Loan Officer Survey, banks are willing and able to extend residential mortgage credit (bottom panel, Chart 11). This contrasts with many other credit categories, where banks are tightening the screws and credit demand is faltering: C&I loans have shrunk over the past three months, as has total bank credit. First time home buyers are also reappearing and anecdotes of increased house flipping activity signal a vibrant market with unobstructed access to credit. All of this should continue to support earnings-led outperformance from both homebuilders and home improvement retailers (HIR). The bullish outlook for the S&P homebuilding index rests on four pillars. The latest National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) survey revealed that sales expectations remain over 20 points above the boom/bust line and just shy of recent cyclical highs (Chart 12). Homebuilders are clearly still seeing strong traffic. New home prices are still expanding at a healthy clip (Chart 12). Sales growth and new home price inflation are tightly linked. The mortgage application purchase index has picked up steam despite the mortgage rate increase, confirming that first time homebuyers are entering the market after a long hiatus as the financial motivation to buy vs. rent has improved. This optimism is causing an aggressive re-rating in earnings estimates from chronically bearish levels (Chart 12), a harbinger of further gains in relative share prices. The S&P HIR index also has a concrete foundation. Higher lumber prices flow straight to the bottom line, because HIR companies typically earn a set margin on lumber-related sales. Moreover, higher housing turnover is a boon for industry sales volumes (Chart 13). Historically, home sales momentum has been an excellent leading indicator of renovation activity. Chart 12Buy Homebuilders... Chart 13... And Building Supply Retailers Encouragingly, the NAHB remodeling survey is still in expansion territory, and tends to follow the trend in home sales, underscoring that home renovation activity is set to improve (Chart 13). Our HIR model encapsulates many of these key drivers, and has climbed anew (Chart 13). The message is that profits, and share prices, are on track to outperform. Adding it all up, the housing backdrop remains attractive, and even a steady increase in borrowing costs should not disrupt momentum. The time to become concerned will be if inflation becomes a serious risk, causing the Fed to get 'tight' and credit availability to dry up. The next few interest rate hikes won't move the monetary settings to that phase yet. Until then, we recommend erring on the bullish side. Bottom Line: We reiterate our high-conviction overweight in the S&P home improvement retail index (HD, LOW) and continue to recommend an above benchmark allocation in the S&P homebuilding index (PHM, DHI, LEN). Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights Recent economic and inflation data can be characterized as Goldilocks: strong enough to keep recession fears at bay, yet not hot enough to warrant Fed tightening. Historical precedent suggests that the current period of positive economic surprises could persist for at least another month or two, fueling ever-more lopsided positioning into equities. Despite a lot of good news already discounted, we retain a cyclical bias toward small caps. Currently, the main driver of style performance is sector weightings. Value stocks are likely to perform slightly better than Growth by virtue of a smaller weighting in technology and larger weighting to financials. Higher conviction in Value stocks outperformance awaits better credit growth trends. Feature The term Goldilocks is used to describe an economy that is growing, but is not quite hot enough to create serious inflation risks, and not so cold that it fosters recession fears. Last week's major data reports fit this view of the world and helped U.S. equity prices soar to a new all-time high (Chart 1): NFIB Small Business Survey: Since small businesses have long been considered the job engine of the U.S. economy, monitoring the sentiment of small businesses owners, their likelihood to undertake expansion plans, and raise/cut prices, can often give a good glimpse into the likelihood of financial market trends to be sustained on a cyclical basis. In January, the NFIB small business sentiment indexes surged and to our surprise, the positive sentiment did not correct in February (Chart 2). The expectations component actually rose even further! Chart 1Rotation Into Stocks Chart 2Will Hopes Be Dashed? We continue to believe the survey reflects a lot of hope and is likely to reverse substantially. According to the survey, business conditions are the best in thirty years, save for a brief period in the early 2000s. Even the most ardent of Trump supporters will find it difficult to explain how a handful of executive orders and memoranda have so significantly altered the business landscape in such a short space of time! This radical shift in sentiment makes risk asset prices vulnerable: the pace of economic expansion has only gradually improved, but investors and other economic agents have drastically revised upward their expectations. Retail Sales: A number of cyclical tailwinds are beginning to finally align for consumers, as discussed in January 16 Weekly Report, and consumers appear to be in slightly better shopping moods in 2017. January retail sales beat expectations and prior months were revised higher. Spending improved across categories and these broad-based gains reinforce our view that the consumer can lead a gradual, self-reinforcing economic recovery (Chart 3). Inflation: We do not worry that cyclical inflation trends will be strong enough to force the Fed to raise rates faster than the FOMC's current expectations (three rate hikes by end-2017). True, both headline and core CPI were stronger than consensus expectations in January, and producer prices are in a noticeable uptrend. But this should not be viewed as the beginning of a new, more dangerous inflation problem. As Chart 4 shows, producer prices - at all stages of production - have been rising for the past few months. But only a fraction of any price rise at the producer level is likely to be passed on to consumers. Chart 5 shows that core goods prices have decoupled with finished goods producer prices (i.e. the last stage of production) since 2000. This speaks to the massive deflationary impulse at the end of the supply chain: a combination of deflation via imported goods, major technological advances in supply chain management and logistics, and changing consumer behavior in an e-commerce age means that consumers are not price takers. These factors imply that any budding inflation pressures will stay "trapped" at the earlier stages of the supply chain and it should not be a foregone conclusion that PPI can drive CPI prices higher. Chart 3Consumer Supports Are In Place Chart 4Producer Prices Turning Higher... Chart 5...But PPI Barely Leaks Into CPI Similarly, the rise in the headline inflation rate - for the first time since 2013 above core CPI - should not be viewed as an omen for what lies ahead for broader inflation trends. As Chart 6 shows, the relationship between energy prices and core CPI broke down during the early 1980s: a rise in energy prices does not correlate with non-energy consumer prices. Chart 6Energy Prices Uncorrelated With Core CPI Since The 1980s Finally, we note that despite general optimism about business conditions in the NFIB survey, the pricing backdrop remains a glaring exception. In the most recent survey, the number of businesses expecting to raise prices actually fell. With respect to last week's core CPI print, the monthly increase of 0.3% is unlikely to be sustained. A few components were behind the upside surprise. For example, new car prices increased 0.9% m/m, apparel prices rose 1.4% m/m and airline fares spiked 2.0% m/m. The usual suspects behind outsized price gains were actually quite tame in January. Homeowners' equivalent rents increased by 0.2% m/m versus several months of 0.3% gains. Similarly, medical care was up 0.2% m/m. Our CPI diffusion index fell further below the zero line, confirming that inflation pressures are not broad based. Perhaps the only negative development last week was that positive data surprises, combined with a slightly hawkish interpretation of Janet Yellen's testimony, have pushed forward the bond market's expectations of the next Fed interest rate hike. We expect the most likely outcome will be that the next rate hike will be in June. If that forecast proves correct, then any upward pressure on bond yields should be modest in the next few months. We do not expect a resumption of the cyclical bond bear market to be a headwind for stocks until later this year at the earliest. How long can the Goldilocks backdrop persist? As Chart 7 shows, positive economic surprises have been propping up financial markets alongside optimism about a Trump-led Republican government. Importantly, for the first time since 2011, positive economic surprises are occurring in the first quarter of the calendar year. During past episodes, this level (i.e. above 40) in the Economic Surprise Index has persisted for upwards of three months. The implication is that economic surprises may continue to help fuel the momentum in equity prices for another month or even longer. Chart 7Economic Surprises Could Persist A While Longer This corroborates our review two weeks ago of technical indicators, which showed that apart from extreme sentiment and despite the persistent run-up in equity prices, most short-term indicators are not yet flashing warning signs. In sum, recent data prints show that the U.S. economy is on sturdier footings. The absence of a meaningful inflation threat implies that a prolonged economic cycle can feed positive gains in the stock/bond ratio over a cyclical horizon. But these positive underpinnings cannot explain the speed and magnitude of the recent financial market adjustments. Although the bulk of our indicators suggest that positioning may become more lopsided in the short term, the current phase of the rally is high-risk. Size And Style Guide Several clients have asked about size and style investing in recent weeks. We remain overweight small caps relative to large, and are only slightly more optimistic about Value versus Growth. In the case of Value versus Growth, we echo the advice of our Global ETF strategy:1 the Value/Growth decision has become, more than ever, a matter of sector preference. As Table 1 shows, there are three sectors with vastly differing weights between S&P Growth and Value Indexes. The Value index is dominated by Financials (27% of the index, versus a 4% weight in the Growth index and 15% in the S&P 500) and Energy (12% in the Value Index versus 3% and 7% in the Growth and S&P 500 Indexes, respectively). Meanwhile, technology stocks make up a whopping 34% of the Growth Index. It is no wonder then that Value stocks shot higher on the back of a post-election financial sector outperformance streak (Chart 8). Financials (as well as the energy sector) received a big boost due to the promise of drastic de-regulation of the industry under a majority-Republican government. TABLE 1Sector Composition Our U.S. Equity Strategy service is underweight the technology sector, but only neutral on financials and energy stocks. On this basis, only a slight Value bias would make sense. At present, relative sector weightings appear to be the highest conviction argument in favor of a particular style, since many indicators that have reliably gauged style performance are not convincingly tilting in one direction or another. For example, growth stocks tend to need rising long-term earnings expectations to help them outperform. But this cycle, Growth stocks outperformed long before long-term earnings expectations started to move higher. Now that EPS have adjusted upward, it is hard to see - absent a repeat of the tech bubble in the late 1990s - long-term earnings growth rising enough to drag relative share performance higher. Conversely, the conditions for a plunge in long-term earnings expectations do not exist (Chart 8). Similarly, Value stocks tend to require improving global growth conditions in order to sustain relative outperformance over Growth stocks (Chart 8, bottom panel). That condition is in place, though the strength of the trend is unclear. In an upcoming publication by our Bank Credit Analyst, BCA editors uncover that although it is clear that an upswing in global growth is occurring in both the "soft" and "hard" data, there is little concrete evidence that this cyclical upturn will be any more enduring than previous mini-cycles so far in this lackluster expansion. The bottom line is that the outperformance in Value stocks relative to Growth may endure, by virtue of Value stocks having a comparably small allocation to technology stocks and a relatively larger allocation to financials (and energy). A more compelling case for Value stocks requires a higher conviction view in a prolonged financial sector outperformance phase. The latter awaits a move from promises to watch action on financial deregulation and more importantly, a more positive outlook on credit creation. As for small caps relative to large, we expect that the cyclical outperformance trend in small caps is sustainable (Chart 9). True, in the near term, there is room for overbought conditions to be further unwound. The consensus opinion that corporate tax reform and Trump trade policy will disproportionately benefit small companies is likely already fully discounted, making small cap share prices vulnerable to political disappointment. Chart 8Growth Will Struggle ##br##To Keep Up With Value Chart 9Small Cap Outperformance##br## Is Not Constrained By Valuation Meanwhile, if the dip in the U.S. dollar becomes a more sustainable trend, then small caps will be at further risk. However, that is not our base case: we expect broad dollar strength to be supportive of small cap stocks over the next six to twelve months. The U.S. economy is on sounder footing than its global counterparts and the Fed is far out in front; both of these conditions are supportive of a stronger dollar. Fortunately, small caps earnings are far more insulated from dollar strength, by virtue of the fact that small caps revenues are much more domestically oriented than large caps. The one area that small caps earnings may come under more pressure than large caps is margins. As noted above, small businesses are not yet particularly optimistic about their ability to raise prices in order to match wage hikes. Nonetheless, we expect better domestic (and thus small-cap positive) top-line growth to outweigh a margin squeeze felt more heavily for small caps versus large. Finally, small caps are often viewed as a higher beta play on growth (although this has not always been the case). Since relative valuations are not yet problematic, then if our base case of a prolonged, albeit not necessarily overly robust, non-inflationary economic expansion pans out, then the small cap outperformance phase could also endure for a prolonged period. Lenka Martinek, Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy lenka@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global ETF Strategy/ETS Equity Trading Strategy Special Report “Smart-Beta ETF Selection, Part I - Value Funds,” dated February 15, 2017, available at bcaresearch.com.
Dear Client, In addition to our regular Weekly Report, we sent you a Special Report on Wednesday prepared by my colleague Marko Papic, BCA's chief geopolitical strategist, assessing the election landscape in Europe this year. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy Highlights Global growth has accelerated, corporate earnings are rebounding, and leading indicators suggest that these positive trends will persist over the remainder of the year. This supports our cyclically bullish view on global equities. Looking further out, the impulse to growth from the easing in financial conditions that began in early 2016 will fade, setting the stage for a slowdown in 2018. If growth does falter next year, easier fiscal policy could provide an offsetting tailwind. However, there continues to be a large gap between what politicians are promising and what they can realistically deliver. What is different this time is that spare capacity is much lower than it was during previous mid-cycle slowdowns. Thus, while global bond yields could eventually dip, they remain in a secular uptrend. Feature The Elusive Correction We have been arguing since last fall that stronger global growth will help fuel a variety of reflationary trades.1 This part of our view has panned out nicely. What has surprised us is just how relentlessly the market has traded that view. With the exception of a few small wobbles, the S&P 500 has basically marched higher since the morning following the U.S. presidential election. Reflecting this development, the VIX fell to near record low levels earlier this week (Chart 1). The market's failure to take a breather has sabotaged our efforts to have our cake and eat it too - to maintain an overweight stance on global equities, while also profiting from the occasional correction. In contrast to our last three tactical hedges - which generated a cumulative return of 42% - our latest hedge is now down 9%. That's a lot of red ink. Out of pure risk management considerations, we will close this trade if the loss breaches 10%. Nevertheless, most indicators continue to warn of a looming correction. In particular, our U.S. equity strategists' new "Complacency-Anxiety" index is at an all-time high, suggesting that stocks have entered a technical overshoot phase (Chart 2).2 Chart 1VIX Is Near Record Lows Chart 2Complacency Reigns Cyclical Picture Still Solid In contrast to the short-term outlook, the 12-month cyclical picture for risk assets still looks reasonably good. Measures of current activity are rebounding as animal spirits begin to kick in (Chart 3). Falling unemployment and stronger wage growth are causing households to open their wallets. Against the backdrop of decreasing spare capacity, firms are reacting to this by increasing investment spending. Capital goods orders in the G3 economies have jumped higher in recent months, and capex intention surveys are pointing to further upside (Chart 4). Chart 3Current Activity Indicators Are Rebounding Chart 4An Upswing In Capex Corporate earnings have also accelerated on the back of faster economic growth. Consensus estimates call for global EPS to expand by 12% in local-currency terms this year, with the S&P 500 registering 10.4% growth, the STOXX Europe 600 gaining 14.3%, Japan's TOPIX adding 12.5%, and MSCI EM leading the pack at 16%. Outside the U.S., year-to-date earnings revisions have generally been positive, particularly in Japan and EM (in the U.S., 2017 EPS estimates have ticked down a modest 0.8%). BCA's in-house earnings models are consistent with this optimistic profit picture (Chart 5). What accounts for this fortuitous turn of events? A number of reasons help explain why growth accelerated in the second half of 2016: The drag on global growth from the plunge in commodity sector investment ran its course. U.S. energy sector capex, for example, tumbled by 70% between Q2 of 2014 and Q3 of 2016, knocking 0.7 percent off the level of U.S. GDP. The fallout for commodity-exporting EMs such as Brazil and Russia was considerably more severe. The global economy emerged from a protracted inventory destocking cycle (Chart 6). In the U.S., inventories made a negative contribution to growth for five straight quarters starting in Q2 of 2015, the longest streak since the 1950s. The U.K., Germany, and Japan also saw notable inventory corrections. Fears of a hard landing in China and a disorderly devaluation of the RMB subsided as the Chinese government ramped up fiscal stimulus, helping to reflate the economy. Global growth benefited with a lag from the easing in financial conditions that began in earnest in early 2016. Government bond yields fell to record low levels in July. In addition, junk bond spreads collapsed, dropping from a peak of 7.9% in February to 4.3% by year-end (Chart 7). Higher equity prices, particularly in a number of beaten down emerging markets, also helped. Chart 5Broad-Based Acceleration In Corporate Earnings Chart 6Inventory Destocking Was A Drag On Growth Chart 7Corporate Borrowing Costs Have Fallen How Much Longer? Chart 8Improvement In Global ##br##Leading Economic Indicators The key question for investors is how long the good times will last. Right now, most leading indicators that we follow are signaling that the expansion will endure for the remainder of this year (Chart 8). As we look towards 2018, however, things get murkier. Conceptually, it is the change in financial conditions that matters for growth. While the ongoing rally in global equities and continued narrowing in credit spreads has contributed to some easing in financial conditions since the U.S. presidential election, this has been partly offset by higher government bond yields. A stronger dollar has also led to an incremental tightening in the U.S., as well as in some emerging markets with high levels of U.S. dollar-denominated debt. As such, it is likely that the positive "impulse" to economic growth from the easing in financial conditions that took place last year will begin to dissipate towards the end of this year. Fiscal Policy To The Rescue? If growth does slow next year, easier fiscal policy could provide an offsetting tailwind. The fiscal thrust for developed economies turned positive in 2016, the first year this happened since 2010 (Chart 9). However, it remains to be seen whether this trend will continue. There is little support among Republicans in Congress for a big infrastructure program. It once seemed possible that Chuck Schumer and his fellow Democrats could find common ground with President Trump on this issue, but that is looking less likely with each passing day, given the level of vitriol in Washington. Broad-based tax cuts are a certainty, but the risk is that they will be coupled with cuts to government spending. Empirically, the latter have a larger "multiplier effect" on GDP than the former. To complicate matters, the introduction of a border adjustment tax - something to which we assign 50% odds - could generate significant near-term dislocations for the global economy.3 Meanwhile, much of Trump's regulatory agenda is in limbo. A repeal of Dodd-Frank is off the table. Senate Republicans do not have the 60 votes needed to scrap it. The Volcker rule is here to stay. On the other side of the Atlantic, the European Commission has recommended a further loosening in fiscal policy this year, but member states themselves are actually targeting somewhat smaller fiscal deficits (Chart 10). As is often the case, budgetary overruns are likely, but with the Greek bailout program now back on the ropes, Germany and a number of other countries may begin to dial up the austerity rhetoric. Chart 9Will Fiscal Policy Continue To Ease? Chart 10European Commission Recommending Greater Fiscal Expansion Uncertainty over the slew of European elections slated for this year could also weigh on business sentiment. Marine Le Pen is likely to place first in the initial round of the French presidential election, but faces an uphill battle in the subsequent runoff. Nevertheless, betting markets are assigning a one-in-three chance of Le Pen becoming president - similar to the odds they were assigning to a Brexit "yes vote" and a Trump victory (Chart 11). Italy also remains a risk, as my colleague Marko Papic, BCA's chief geopolitical strategist, discussed in this week's Special Report.4 Anti-euro sentiment is now stronger there than in any other major European economy (Chart 12). Chinese fiscal policy has already tightened significantly, with the year-over-year rate of change in government spending falling from a high of 25% in November 2015 to zero at present (Chart 13). So far the Chinese economy has held up well, but there is a risk that this may change. Despite Trump's backpedaling on the "One China" question, we expect the Trump administration to declare China a currency manipulator later this year. This will pave the way for higher tariffs on a variety of Chinese goods, which could lead to retaliatory measures by China. Chart 11Brexit, Then Trump... Is Le Pen Next? Chart 12Italy: Anti-Euro Sentiment Is A Risk Chart 13China: Fiscal Stimulus Is Fading Investment Conclusions Chart 14Diminished Slack In The Global Economy Global growth continues to be strong, and is likely to stay that way for the remainder of this year. However, there is a heightened risk that the global economy will falter in 2018. We remain cyclically overweight global equities and underweight government bonds, but are not dogmatic about this view. As the discussion above suggests, plenty of things could derail the reflation trade. If evidence begins to mount that a slowdown is coming earlier than we think, we will turn more bearish on stocks. Given that equities are technically overbought at present, we would not fault anyone for taking some money off the table. If growth does slow in 2018, does this mean that bond yields will fall back towards last year's lows? We don't think so. For one thing, a major deflationary commodity bust of the sort we endured in 2014-15 is not in the cards. In addition, there is less slack in the global economy now than there was last year, or for that matter, anytime since early 2008 (Chart 14). As we discussed in our Q1 Strategy Outlook, potential GDP growth is likely to remain structurally depressed across much of the world, owing to slower productivity and labor force growth.5 Lower potential growth means that excess capacity could continue to be absorbed even if growth slows somewhat from its current well-above trend pace. In the U.S., this absorption of excess capacity is nearly complete, with most labor market indicators suggesting that the economy is approaching full employment (Chart 15). In this vein, we would heavily discount the decline in average hourly earnings in January's employment report. Chart 16 shows that this was mainly driven by an anomalous drop in compensation in the financial sector. Broader measures continue to point to brewing wage pressures (Chart 17). We expect the Fed to raise rates three times this year, one more hike than the market is now pricing in. If this happens, the dollar is likely to strengthen modestly over the remainder of the year. Chart 15U.S. Economy Approaching ##br##Full Employment Chart 16Financial Sector Dragging ##br##Down Hourly Earnings In The U.S. Chart 17U.S.: Broad Measures Pointing ##br##To Rising Wage Pressures Peter Berezin, Senior Vice President Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Better U.S. Economic Data Will Cause The Dollar To Strengthen," dated October 14, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Bridging The Gap," dated February 6, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Border Adjustment Tax: A Potential Monster Issue For 2017," dated January 20, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Climbing The Wall Of Worry In Europe," dated February 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy, "Strategy Outlook First Quarter 2017: From Reflation To Stagflation," dated January 6, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Key Portfolio Highlights Improved world economic growth and rising inflation expectations have buoyed global equities (Chart 1). The downside is that financial conditions are tightening and U.S. dollar-based liquidity is contracting, which is growth restrictive (Chart 2). The massive outperformance of the financials and industrials sectors since the U.S. election implies that U.S. markets have been largely politically-motivated. Positive economic surprises remain mostly sentiment/confidence driven, rather than from upside in hard economic data (Chart 3). That unusually large gap implies that a big jump in 'hard data' surprises is already discounted and represents a latent risk, as it did in the spring of 2011 just before the summertime equity market swoon. Federal income tax receipts are contracting, suggesting that an economic boom is not forthcoming (Chart 4). In fact, there has never been a contraction in tax receipts without a corresponding slump in employment growth. Corporate sector pricing power gains have not been evenly distributed. Deep cyclicals gains came off a low base and may already be experiencing a relapse. Conversely, defensive and interest rate-sensitive sectors are demonstrating the most strength (Chart 5). Our macro models are not signaling that investors should position as if robust and self-reinforcing economic growth lies ahead. Our Deep Cyclical indicators are the weakest, while defensive and interest rate-sensitive models are grinding higher (Chart 6). Deep cyclical sectors are very overvalued and overbought, while defensives are deeply undervalued and oversold (Charts 7 and 8). Mean reversion is an apt theme for the next few months. The most attractive combination of macro, valuation and technical readings are in the consumer staples, health care sectors. The financials sector is a close second, but it is overbought. The least attractive combinations are in energy, materials and industrials. Prospects for elevated market volatility, stronger economic growth in developed vs developing economies, a tighter Fed and expensive U.S. dollar are consistent with maintaining a largely defensive portfolio structure (Charts 9-12). Chart 1Pricing Power Revival... Chart 2... But A Liquidity Drain Chart 3Show Me The Money Chart 4Yellow Flag Chart 5Pricing Recovery Is Not Broad Based Chart 6Indicator Snapshot Chart 7Focus On Value Chart 8Mean Reversion Ahead Chart 9Fundamentals Favor Defensives... Chart 10... As Do Market Signals Chart 1112-Month Performance After Fed Hikes Chart 1224-Month Performance After Fed Hikes Chart 13Staples Will Cushion A Volatility Resurgence Chart 14Media Stocks Like A Strong Currency Chart 15Unduly Punished Chart 16Strong Fundamental Support Chart 17Less Production... Chart 18... Means More Rigs Chart 19End Of Sugar High Chart 20A Toxic Mix Chart 21Tech Stocks Don't Like Inflation Chart 22Time To Disconnect Feature S&P Consumer Staples (Overweight - High Conviction) The Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) has been grinding higher for several months, even climbing through last year's share price shellacking. The CMI has been supported by the uptrend in relative consumer spending on essential items and consumer preference for saving vs. spending. More recently, a pricing power recovery in a number of groups has provided an assist as has a rebound in staples export growth. Booming consumer confidence and business confidence have held the CMI in check. The strong U.S. currency, particularly bilaterally against China, also implies a reduction in the cost of imported goods sold, and has also been an indication of relative valuation expansion because it often signals increased financial market volatility (Chart 13 on page 6). The attractive valuation starting point this cycle, and historic outperformance when the Fed raises interest rates (Chart 13 on page 6), were key factors behind our upgrade to high conviction status in January. Technical conditions are completely washed out. Sector breadth and momentum have reached oversold extremes. That signals widespread bearishness, which is positive from a contrary perspective. Chart 23 S&P Consumer Discretionary (Overweight) Our CMI is forming a tentative trough, supported by rebounding relative outlays on media services, low prices at the pump, a budding recovery in mortgage equity withdrawal and firming wage growth. The biggest drags over the past few months have come from higher Treasury yields and consumers increased propensity to save. However, rising job certainty and a vibrant residential real estate market suggest that consumers should loosen their purse strings. The VI has deflated toward the neutral zone, although remains moderately expensive from a long-term perspective. Our TI started to rebound from oversold levels. History shows that a recovery in the TI from one standard deviation below the mean has heralded a playable relative performance rally. Overweight positions should remain concentrated in housing-related equities and the media space, both of which benefit from U.S. dollar appreciation (Chart 14 on page 6). Chart 24 S&P REITs (Overweight - High Conviction) Our new REIT CMI has ticked lower, but the share price ratio has over-exaggerated this small move down. REITs have traded as if the back up in global bond yields will persist indefinitely, and that they are the only factor that drives relative performance. Improving cash flows and cheap valuations suggest that REITs can decouple from bond yields. Banks have tightened standards on commercial real estate loans, but this appears more likely to limit supply growth than create a slowdown. Commercial property prices are hitting new highs and our REIT Demand Indicator (RDI) has climbed into positive territory, signaling higher rental inflation. The latter is already outpacing overall CPI by a wide margin (Chart 15 on page 7). While REITs are back to fair value from a long-term perspective, on a shorter term basis the sector is very undervalued (Chart 15 on page 7), particularly with Treasury yields now in undervalued territory. Our REIT TI is extremely oversold, at a point which forward relative returns typically shine on a 12 and 24 month basis, even excluding the dividend yield kicker. Chart 25 S&P Health Care (Overweight) Our CMI continues to grind higher, opening a massive divergence with relative performance. This gap can be explained by the political attack on the pharmaceutical industry, the sector's heavyweight, rather than by a downturn in relative earnings drivers. Pharmaceutical shipments are hitting new highs and pricing power continues to grow at a robust mid-single digit rate. Future pricing gains may slow if government gets more heavily involved in setting prices, but this is already discounted. Pricing power in the rest of the sector remains strong, while wage inflation is tame. Health care spending is still growing as a share of total spending, but the pace is decelerating. Typically, this backdrop signals outperformance for health care insurers, who may also receive a risk premium reduction from a potential revamp of the Affordable Care Act, albeit the timing will likely be drawn out. Relative valuations are very attractive. The sector has been used as a source of capital to fund purchases in areas expected to benefit from increased fiscal stimulus. That is an overreaction, and flows should be restored to reflect the sector's appealing investment profile, particularly given the sector's track record during Fed tightening cycles (Chart 16 on page 7). The TI is deeply oversold. Breadth measures are beginning to recover from completely washed out levels. These conditions reinforce that an exploitable undershoot has occurred. Chart 26 S&P Financials (Neutral) Our Financial CMI has surged, underscoring that the advance in relative performance reflects more than just a reaction to anticipated sector deregulation by the Trump Administration. Leading indicators of capital formation, such as the stock-to-bond ratio, have jumped sharply. Moreover, the yield curve has steepened in recent months, bolstering the CMI. An improvement in overall profit growth and the tight labor market suggest that the credit cycle may not become a profit drag until the economy begins to cool. While not yet evident, the restrictive move in oil, the dollar and bond yields warn that disappoint may emerge in the coming months. It is notable that bank loan growth has dropped to nil over the last 3 months. C&I loan growth is contracting over that time period. Banks are hiring more aggressively, yet are tightening lending standards, suggesting productivity disappointment ahead. Despite the share price jump, value remains attractive after 8 years of financial repression. Our TI is overbought and breadth is beginning to recede, which is often a precursor to a consolidation phase. We are not willing to move beyond a market weight allocation at this juncture. Chart 27 S&P Energy (Neutral) Our CMI has plunged, probing all-time lows. Rising oil inventories and spiking wage inflation are exerting severe gravitational pull on the CMI, more than offsetting the budding recovery in domestic production. Refining margins are probing six year lows as the Brent/WTI spread has evaporated. Nevertheless, OPEC is finally curtailing production, joining non-OPEC producers (Chart 17 on page 8), which should ultimately help eat into excess global oil supply. History shows that once supply growth peaks, the rig count typically firms. That is a plus for energy services (Chart 18 on page 8), even though rising oil production will prove self-limiting for oil prices. High yield spreads have narrowed significantly from nosebleed levels, but industry balance sheets remain bruised. Net debt is historically elevated, EBITDA has yet to return to its glory days, and interest coverage remains anemic and vulnerable to any downside energy price surprises. The surge in our VI reflects depressed cash flow, and is overstating the degree of overvaluation. The TI has returned to the neutral zone, and will need to hold at current levels otherwise a relapse in the share price ratio toward previous lows is probable. Selectivity is still warranted in the energy complex. We remain underweight refiners and overweight the energy services index. Chart 28 S&P Utilities (Neutral) Our utilities sector CMI is stabilizing. That is a surprise, given the rebound in inflation expectations and firming global leading economic indicators, which are typically bearish for this defensive, fixed-income proxy. The latter negative exogenous factors are being offset by falling wage inflation, better pricing power and rising electricity output growth. Power demand is linked with manufacturing activity, underscoring that there is an element of cyclicality to sector profits. The share price ratio has held up better than most other defensive sectors since the U.S. election, perhaps on the hope that an overhaul of the tax code will benefit this domestic sector. Regardless, valuations have retreated from the extremely expensive zone where we took profits and downgraded to neutral last summer, but are not yet at a level that warrants re-establishing overweight positions. An upgrade could occur once our TI becomes fully washed out, provided that occurs within the context of additional CMI strength and a peak in global growth and inflation momentum. Chart 29 S&P Industrials (Underweight - High Conviction) The CMI has edged lower after a modest recovery in recent months. The strong U.S. dollar, relapse in short-term pricing power measures and sector productivity contraction are offsetting improvement in global PMI surveys. The lack of confirmation of an industrial sector revival from emerging markets is also holding back the CMI. There continues to be a deflationary undercurrent in the form of more rapid capacity than industrial sector output growth, suggesting that durable pricing power gains may remain elusive (Chart 19 on page 9). The post-election surge in share prices is slowly being unwound, as the sector was quick to discount expectations for massive domestic fiscal stimulus. Our valuation gauge is not at an extreme, although a number of individual groups are trading at historically rich multiples, such as machinery and railroads. Participation is beginning to fray around the edges, as our relative advance/decline line has rolled over, as has breadth. Our TI is pulling back from overbought levels, warning that a further correction in the share price ratio looms. It would be nearly unprecedented for the share price ratio to trough before our TI hits oversold levels. Industrials fare poorly when the Fed tightens. Chart 30 S&P Materials (Underweight) The CMI has nosedived, reflecting China's diminishing fiscal thrust and the recent tightening in monetary policy. Commodity price inflation peaked in mid-December concurrent with the Fed raising rates, signaling that emerging markets end-demand, in general and Chinese in particular, is likely past its prime. The nascent rebound in EM currencies represents a positive offset, but not by enough to turn around the CMI. Select heavyweight EM manufacturing PMIs are still below the boom/bust line. Relative valuations are becoming extended according to our VI, and stretched technical conditions are waving a red flag. Keep in mind the materials sector has an abysmal performance history after the Fed starts tightening (Chart 20 on page 9). The heavyweight chemical index (75% of the sector) bears the brunt of the downside risks owing to excess capacity (Chart 20 on page 9). On the flipside, overweight exposure in gold mining (via the GDX:US ETF) and the niche containers & packaging sub-indexes is recommended. Chart 31 S&P Technology (Underweight) The CMI has rolled over, driven lower by contracting relative pricing power, decelerating new orders-to-inventories growth, lack of capital expenditure traction and the appreciating greenback. Tech stocks thrive in a disinflationary/deflationary environment and suffer during inflationary periods (Chart 21 on page 10). Inflation is making a comeback, so it will be an uphill battle for tech companies to successfully raise selling prices at a fast enough pace to keep profits on a par with the broad corporate sector. While a capital spending cycle would be a welcome development, the narrowing gap between the return on and cost of capital warns against extrapolating improvement in business sentiment just yet. Our S&P technology operating profit model warns that tech profits are likely to trail the broad market as the year progresses, a far cry from what is embedded in analysts' forecasts. The good news is that valuations are not demanding nor are technical conditions overbought, which should cushion the magnitude and sharpness of downside risks. Chart 32 S&P Telecom Services (Underweight) Our CMI for telecom services has gained ground of late, primarily on the back of a sharp decline in wage inflation. However, we recently downgraded exposure to underweight, because of a frail spending backdrop. Our telecom services sales model is extremely weak (Chart 22 on page 10). Softening outlays on telecom services have reinvigorated the industry price war, and our pricing power gauge is sinking like a stone (Chart 22 on page 10). Telecom carrier capital expenditures have been running at a healthy clip, which could further pressure profit margins. Undervaluation exists, but this has been a chronic feature for the sector over the past decade, and does not foretell of cyclical upside or downside risks. Our TI has plunged into the sell zone, but remains above levels that would signal that a countertrend rally is imminent. Chart 33 Size Indicator (Overweight Small Vs. Large Caps) The small/large cap ratio is correcting short-term overbought conditions. The dip in the U.S. dollar has provided a fundamental reason for corrective action in this domestically-oriented asset class. However, we doubt a trend change is at hand. Our style CMI is climbing steadily. Small company business optimism has soared, partly because of an increase in planned price hikes, but also from an anticipated reduction in the regulatory burden. If small company price hikes persist, then rising labor costs will be more easily absorbed. That is critical to narrowing the profit margin gap between small and large firms. A stronger domestic vs. global economy and the potential for trade barriers is also unambiguously positive for small firms that do the bulk of their business at home. Despite the surge in the share price ratio post-U.S. election, our valuation gauge is not yet at an overvalued extreme. The lack of extreme overvaluation suggests that positive momentum will persist, perhaps similar to the 2004-2006 period, when the share price ratio stayed in overbought territory for years. Chart 34
Highlights Chart 1Strong Growth & An Easy Fed More than a month has passed since the Fed's latest rate hike and, at least so far, the economy is displaying no ill effects. While the economic data continue to surprise to the upside, Fed rate hike expectations have moderated since mid-December (Chart 1). The combination of accelerating growth and accommodative monetary policy sets the stage for further outperformance in spread product. This message was underscored by last Friday's employment report which showed robust payroll gains of +227k alongside a slight deceleration in wage growth. This is consistent with an environment where growth remains above trend but the recovery in inflation proceeds more gradually. Against this back-drop we favor overweight positions in spread product and TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries, while also positioning for a bear-steepening of the Treasury curve. While we would not rule out a near-term correction in risk assets, due to extended positioning and elevated policy uncertainty, we would view any correction as a buying opportunity given the supportive growth and monetary policy back-drop. Feature Investment Grade: Overweight Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 5 basis points in January (Chart 2). The index option-adjusted spread tightened 2 bps on the month and, at 121 bps, it remains well below its historical average (134 bps). In a recent report1 we examined historical excess returns to corporate bonds given different levels of core PCE inflation. We found that excess returns are best when year-over-year core PCE is below 1.5%. This should not be surprising since an environment of low inflation is most likely to coincide with extremely accommodative monetary policy. When inflation is between 1.5% and 2% (year-over-year core PCE is currently 1.7%), average monthly excess returns are close to zero and a 90% confidence interval places them between -19 bps and +17 bps. Excess returns do not turn decisively negative until core PCE is above 2%. Given the Fed's desire to nurture a continued recovery in inflation, we expect corporate bond excess returns to be low, but positive. The Technology sector is relatively defensive and is close to neutrally valued according to our model (Table 3). In addition, our Geopolitical Strategy service has observed that many of the firms in this sector carry significant exposure to China, a risk as U.S. protectionism ramps up.2 We therefore downgrade our position in Technology from overweight to neutral, and upgrade our positions in Wirelines, Media & Entertainment and Other Utilities from underweight to neutral. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* High-Yield: Neutral Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 124 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread tightened 21 bps on the month and, at 376 bps, it is currently 144 bps below its historical average. As we highlighted in our year-end Special Report,3 the uptrend in defaults is likely to reverse this year, mostly due to recovery in the energy sector. However, still-poor corporate health and tightening monetary policy will lead to a resumption of the uptrend in 2018 and beyond. Given the improving default outlook, last week we upgraded high-yield from underweight to neutral. Still-tight valuation is the reason we maintain a neutral allocation as opposed to overweight. Our estimate of the default-adjusted high-yield spread - the average spread of the junk index less our forecast of 12-month default losses - is currently 152 bps (Chart 3). This is close to one standard deviation below its long-run average. Historically, we have found that a default-adjusted spread between 150 bps and 200 bps is consistent with positive 12-month excess returns 65% of the time, but with an average 12-month excess return of -164 bps. With the spread in this range a 90% confidence interval places 12-month excess returns between -500 bps and +171 bps. MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 24 basis points in January. The conventional 30-year MBS yield rose 5 bps in January, driven by a 7 bps widening of the option-adjusted spread. The rate component of the yield held flat, while the compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) declined by 2 bps. MBS spreads remain extremely tight, relative both to history and Aaa-rated credit. Historically, the option-adjusted spread is correlated with net MBS issuance and robust issuance will eventually lead this spread wider. At least so far, net MBS issuance shows no sign of slowing down. While refinancing applications declined alongside the recent spike in Treasury yields, purchase applications have remained resilient (Chart 4). The Fed ceasing the reinvestment of its MBS portfolio would also significantly add to MBS supply. As we explained in a recent report,4 we expect the Fed will not start to wind down its balance sheet until 2018. However, if growth is stronger than we expect there is a chance the process could begin near the end of this year. In that same report we also observed that nominal MBS spreads are very low relative to both the slope of the yield curve and implied rate volatility. This poses a risk to MBS in the near-term. Government-Related: Cut To Underweight Chart 5Government-Related Market Overview The government-related index outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 21 basis points in January. Sovereign bonds outperformed by 75 bps, while Foreign and Domestic Agency bonds outperformed by 6 bps and 14 bps, respectively. Local Authorities outperformed by 34 bps and Supranationals outperformed by 2 bps. This week we downgrade the government-related sector from overweight to underweight, although we recommend maintaining an overweight allocation to both the Foreign Agency and Local Authority sectors. Sovereigns are not attractive compared to corporate credit, according to our model, and will struggle to outperform if the dollar remains in a bull market, as we expect it will. A stronger dollar increases the cost of debt servicing from the perspective on non-U.S. issuers. Foreign Agencies and Local Authorities both appear attractive relative to corporate credit, after adjusting for differences in credit rating and duration. Foreign Agencies in particular will perform well if oil prices continue to trend higher. Supranationals offer very little spread, and are best thought of as a hedge in spread widening environments. Domestic Agency debt can also be thought of in this vein, but with the added risk that spreads start to widen if any progress is made toward GSE reform. While any concrete movement on GSE reform is still a long way off, the new administration has brought the topic back into the headlines and this has led to some increased volatility in Domestic Agency spreads in recent weeks (Chart 5). Municipal Bonds: Upgrade To Neutral Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 40 basis points in January (before adjusting for the tax advantage). The average Municipal / Treasury (M/T) yield ratio fell 2% in January and currently sits just below its post-crisis average. Even though net state & local government borrowing edged higher in Q4, issuance has rolled over in recent weeks and fund flows have sharply reversed course (Chart 6). As a result, our tactical yield ratio model - based on issuance, fund flows and ratings migration - shows that yield ratios are very close to fair value. Although the average M/T ratio still appears expensive if we include the global economic policy uncertainty index as an additional explanatory variable.5 While we remain cautious on the long-term prospects for state & local government health, we expect that improving trends in fund flows and issuance will support yield ratios for the next several months. Eventually we expect that increased state & local government investment will lead to higher issuance, but this will take some time to play out. In the meantime it will be crucial to monitor the federal government's progress on tax reform, particularly if there appears to be any appetite for removing municipal bonds' tax exempt status. Our sense is that the tax exemption will remain in place due to the administration's stated preference for increased infrastructure spending. But that outcome is highly uncertain. Treasury Curve: Favor 5-Year Bullet Over 2/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview After a volatile end to last year, the Treasury curve was relatively unchanged in January. The 2/10 slope steepened by 1 basis point on the month and the 5/30 slope steepened by 2 bps. In previous reports we detailed how the combination of accelerating economic growth and still-accommodative Fed policy will cause the Treasury curve to bear-steepen this year. This steepening will be driven by a continued, but gradual, recovery in long-dated TIPS breakeven inflation back to pre-crisis levels (2.4% to 2.5%). Once inflation expectations return to pre-crisis levels, it is possible that the Fed will shift to a monetary policy that is focused more on tamping out inflation than supporting growth. At that point the curve will shift from a bear-steepening to a bear-flattening regime. However, as we posited in a recent report,6 it could take until the end of this year before TIPS breakevens return to pre-crisis levels and core inflation returns to the Fed's target. To position for a steeper Treasury curve, we recommend that investors favor the 5-year bullet versus a duration-equivalent 2/10 barbell. Not only will the bullet outperform the barbell as the curve steepens, but the 5-year bullet is currently very cheap relative to the 2/10 slope (Chart 7). This trade has so far returned +29 bps since initiation on December 20. TIPS: Overweight Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 58 basis points in January. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate increased 10 bps on the month and, at 2.05%, it remains well below its pre-crisis range of 2.4% to 2.5%. The Fed will be keen to allow TIPS breakevens to rise toward levels more consistent with its inflation target, and will quickly adopt a more dovish policy stance if breakevens fall. This "Fed put" is a key reason why we remain overweight TIPS relative to nominal Treasuries, although we expect the uptrend in breakevens will moderate during the next few months. As we detailed in a recent report,7 while accelerating wage growth will ensure that inflation remains in an uptrend, the impact from wages will be mitigated by deflating import prices. Diffusion indexes for both PCE and CPI have also rolled over recently, suggesting that inflation readings will soften during the next couple of months. The anchor from slowly rising inflation will prevent TIPS breakevens from increasing too quickly, and breakevens are also too high compared to the reading from our TIPS Financial model - based on the dollar, oil prices and the stock-to-bond total return ratio (Chart 8). At the moment, only pipeline measures of inflationary pressure such as the ISM prices paid index (panel 4) suggest that breakevens will move rapidly higher in the near term. Remain overweight TIPS but expect the uptrend in breakevens to moderate in the months ahead. ABS: Maximum Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 6 basis points in January. Aaa-rated issues outperformed by 5 bps while non-Aaa issues outperformed by 17 bps. Credit card issues outperformed by 8 bps and auto loans outperformed by 5 bps. The index option-adjusted spread for Aaa-rated ABS tightened 3 bps on the month. At 51 bps, the spread remains well below its average pre-crisis level. As was noted in the Appendix to our year-end Special Report,8 consumer ABS provided better volatility-adjusted excess returns than all fixed income sectors except Baa-rated corporates and Caa-rated high-yield in 2016. With ABS spreads still elevated relative to other similarly risky fixed income sectors, we expect this risk-adjusted performance to continue. The spread on Aaa-rated credit card ABS tightened 4 bps in January, and now sits at 49 bps. Meanwhile, the spread on Aaa-rated auto loan ABS tightened 1 bp on the month, and now sits at 54 bps. In early November we recommended favoring Aaa-rated credit cards relative to Aaa-rated auto loans. Collateral credit quality between credit cards and auto loans is clearly diverging in favor of credit cards (Chart 9, bottom panel), and in early November, our measure of the volatility adjusted breakeven spread (days-to-breakeven) was displaying no discernible valuation advantage in autos. Since November, however, autos have started to look more attractive (Chart 9, panel 3). If auto loan spreads continue to widen relative to credit cards we may soon shift back into autos. Non-Agency CMBS: Underweight Chart 10CMBS Market Overview Non-agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 60 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread for non-agency Aaa-rated CMBS tightened 6 bps on the month, and is now close to one standard deviation below its pre-crisis mean (Chart 10). Rising CMBS delinquency rates and tightening commercial real estate lending standards make us cautious on non-agency CMBS. This caution has only intensified now that spreads are at their tightest levels since prior to the financial crisis. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS outperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 22 basis points in January. The index option-adjusted spread for Agency CMBS tightened 4 bps on the month, and currently sits at 51 bps. The spread offered from Agency CMBS is similar to what is offered by Aaa-rated consumer ABS (52 bps) and greater than what is offered by conventional 30-year MBS (30 bps) for a similar amount of spread volatility. We continue to recommend an overweight position in Agency CMBS. Treasury Valuation Chart 11Global PMI Model The current reading from our 2-factor Global PMI model (which includes the global PMI and dollar sentiment) places fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.44% (Chart 11). Our 3-factor version of the model, which also incorporates the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, places fair value at 2.08%. The lower fair value is the result of a large spike in the uncertainty index in November that has yet to unwind (bottom panel). Large spikes in uncertainty that do not coincide with deterioration in other economic indicators tend to mean revert fairly quickly. So we would be inclined to view the fair value reading from our 2-factor model as more indicative of true fair value at the moment. It is for this reason that we recently moved back to a below-benchmark duration stance.9 For further details on our Global PMI models please refer to the U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Message From Our Treasury Model", dated October 11, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. At the time of publication the 10-year Treasury yield was 2.44%. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin", dated January 18, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Is It Time To Cut Duration?", dated January 17, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 For further details on the model please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 7 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Inflation: More Fire Than Ice, But Don't Sound The Alarm", dated January 24, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 8 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes for 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 9 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Another Update", dated January 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification Corporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation Total Return Comparison: 7-Year Bullet Versus 2-20 Barbell (6-Month Investment Horizon)
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Food price deflation bodes well for increased volumes, and by extension, packaging stocks. Upgrade to overweight. Prospects for intensifying market and economic volatility argue for reestablishing a portfolio hedge in gold shares. The tech sector underperforms when there is upward pressure on inflation, and the next twelve months is unlikely to prove an exception. Stay clear. Recent Changes S&P Containers & Packaging - Upgrade to overweight from neutral. Gold Mining Shares - Upgrade to overweight from neutral. Table 1 Feature Equity markets finally took a breather last week, as investors digested spotty earnings and began to discount the possible economic downside of U.S. isolationism. While profits should dictate the trend in stocks over the long haul, equity valuations have soared since the election, it is critical to consider the durability of this trend and other influences at this juncture. The recent string of positive economic surprises raises the risk that monetary conditions will tighten further, especially amidst rising inflation pressures and a tight labor market. As such, the broad market remains in a dangerous overshoot phase, predicated on hopes for a sustained non-inflationary global economic mini-boom. The risk is that these hopes are dashed by nationalistic policy blunders (i.e. protectionism and trade barriers) or a more muted and drawn out improvement in global economic growth than double-digit earnings growth forecasts would imply. There appears to be full buy-in to a durable bullish economic/profit outcome. We have constructed a 'Complacency-Anxiety' Indicator (CAI), using a number of variables that gauge investor positioning, sentiment and risk on/off biases (Chart 1). The CAI is at its highest level ever, signaling extreme confidence/conviction in the outlook for equities. While timing market peaks is difficult, because momentum can persist for longer than seems rational, the level of investor complacency is disturbingly high given that policy uncertainty is such a large economic threat. Global economic growth has never accelerated when global economic policy uncertainty has been this high (Chart 2, shown inverted). Chart 1Complacency Reigns Chart 2Uncertainty Is A Growth Impediment If rhetoric about anti-globalization measures turns into reality, that will deal a serious blow to burgeoning economic confidence before it translates into actual economic growth. Thus, the risk of sudden market downdrafts has risen to its highest level of this bull market. Chart 3 shows that positive economic surprises remain primarily sentiment/confidence driven, rather than from upside in hard economic data. To be sure, the stock market trades off of 'soft data' given its leading properties, but the size of the current gap is unusually large and reinforces that a big jump in 'hard data' surprises is already discounted. This gap represents a latent risk, as it did in the spring of 2011 just before the summertime equity market swoon. Chart 3A Big Gap Means Big Shoes To Fill Worryingly, the behavior of corporate insiders suggests that their confidence does not match their share price valuations. According to Barron's1, the insider sell/buy ratio has soared to an extremely bearish level for markets. For context, their gauge is close to 60; anything over 20 is deemed bearish while less than 12 falls into the bullish zone. Chart 4An Increasing Supply Of Stock The spike in secondary issuance corroborates insider selling (Chart 4). Insiders would not be unloading their shares if they felt earnings prospects would outperform what is discounted in current valuations. Even the pace of share buybacks has slowed considerably, to the point where the number of shares outstanding (excluding financials) has moved higher for the first time in 6 years (Chart 4). An increase in the supply of shares, from sources that have incentive to sell when the reward/risk tradeoff is unattractive, is a yellow flag. All of this argues for maintaining a capital preservation mindset rather than chasing market euphoria in the near run. Elevated complacency suggests that the consensus is focused solely on return rather than risk. It will be more constructive to put money to work when anxiety levels are higher than at present. This week we recommend adding a defensive materials sector gem, buying some portfolio insurance and we update our tech sector views. Packaging Stocks Are Gift Wrapped While our materials sector Cyclical Macro Indicator is hitting new lows, this is often a sign that the countercyclical S&P containers & packaging index deserves a second look. We have shown in past research that its strongest relative performance phases often occur when the overall materials sector is struggling. This group offers a more attractively valued alternative to play a transportation recovery than either rails or air freight, as discussed in last week's Report. From a macro perspective, deflation in global export prices should provide a strong tailwind. Why? Low prices spur volume growth. Global export volumes have begun to rebound, consistent with the increase in U.S. port traffic and intermodal (consumer) goods shipments (Chart 5). Any increase in global trade would bolster sentiment toward this high volume industry. Companies in this index are also highly exposed to the food and beverage business since the bulk of consumable non-durable goods products require packaging materials. As such, its fortunes rise and fall with swings in food prices. When food inflation is rising, consumers spend less in real terms, undermining the volume of food packaging demand. The opposite is also true. The current contraction in the food CPI has spawned a boom in food consumption, as measured by the surge in real (volumes) personal outlays on food & beverage products (Chart 6). This phenomenon is also true on a global basis, as food exports are booming (Chart 6, bottom panel), a remarkable development given U.S. dollar appreciation. Chart 5Stealth Play On Volume Growth Chart 6Booming Food Demand... Chart 7... Should Drive Up Multiples If food and beverage consumption stays robust, then the relative valuation expansion in packaging stocks will persist (food demand shown advanced, Chart 7). Increased demand for packaging products has become evident in the budding rebound in pricing power (Chart 8). The producer price index for containers has picked up nicely on a 6-month rate of change basis, albeit it is still low in annual growth terms. Nevertheless, any increase in pricing power would support profit margins if volume expansion persists, given the industry's disciplined productivity focus. Headcount remains in check, likely reflecting automation and investment, and is falling decisively relative to overall employment (Chart 8). The implication is that profit margins have a chance to outperform, particularly if energy prices stay range-bound (Chart 8). U.S. protectionism, and/or a continued rise in bond yields on the back of improving global economic momentum constitute relative performance risks to this position. Chart 9 shows that relative performance is mostly inversely correlated with global bond yields, given that it is a disinflationary winner. Chart 8Productivity Gains Chart 9A Risk Factor However, the global economy has already been through a phase of upside surprises. Moreover, now that China has moved to cool housing, investors should temper expectations for more stimulus to cause Chinese growth to accelerate. Conversely, economic disappointment could materialize before midyear if financial conditions tighten further. In sum, packaging stocks offer attractive exposure within an otherwise unattractive S&P materials sector. Bottom Line: Raise the S&P containers & packaging index to overweight. Gold: Back To Overweight As A Portfolio Hedge Gold mining shares look increasingly attractive, at least as a portfolio hedge. We took profits on our overweight position in the middle of last summer, just prior to the share price crunch, because tactical sentiment and positioning had gotten too stretched. Thereafter, the equity risk premium melted, dimming appetite for portfolio insurance (Chart 10). Moreover, bond yields rose in response to firming economic expectations, increasing the opportunity cost of holding an income-free asset like gold. However, in the absence of a global economic boom, which seems unlikely, and if trade barriers are erected and policy uncertainty continues to escalate, there is a limit to how high real rates can rise. Potential GDP growth remains low throughout the world, weighed down by excessive debt, weak productivity and deflationary demographics (Chart 11, second panel). Chart 10End Of Correction? Chart 11Structurally Bullish A revival in market volatility and an unwinding of previously frothy technical conditions have created an attractive re-entry point in gold shares. The yield curve stopped steepening when the Fed raised interest rates last month (Chart 12). The last playable rally began when the yield curve started to flatten, signaling doubts about the longevity of the business cycle. If the yield curve does not steepen anew, and interest rate expectations move laterally, then the U.S. dollar is less likely to be a barrier to gold price gains. Sentiment toward the yellow metal is no longer overheated, as evidenced by both surveys and investor behavior. Flows into gold ETFs have been trending lower in recent months, reversing last summer's buying frenzy (Chart 12). Speculative positions have also been unwound (Chart 12). Netting it out, the surge in U.S. policy uncertainty, prospects for economic disappointment relative to increasingly elevated expectations and any pause in the U.S. dollar rally support reestablishing overweight positions in gold mining stocks as a portfolio hedge, especially now that overbought conditions have been unwound (Chart 13). Chart 12No Longer Frothy Chart 13Time To Buy Hedges Bottom Line: Return to an overweight position in gold mining shares, using the GDX as a proxy. A Tec(h)tonic Shift Our Special Report published in early-December showed that the tech sector underperforms when inflation pressures accelerate. Companies in the S&P technology sector are typically mature and have shifted from reinvesting for growth to paying dividends and buying back stock. Thus, the rise in bond yields and headline inflation imply higher discount rates and by extension, lower valuations, all other things equal, for the long duration tech sector (Chart 14). Tech companies exist in a deflationary business model mindset. While relative pricing power had been in an uptrend since 2011, it has recently relapsed into the deflationary zone (Chart 15, middle panel). As shown in last Monday's Weekly Report, the tech sector is one of the few suffering from deteriorating pricing power. Chart 14Stiff Headwinds Chart 15Pricing Power Disadvantage Among the broad eleven sectors, tech stocks have the highest international sales exposure, so a higher dollar is also a net negative for exports, revenues and by extension profit growth, relative to the broad market. Industry sales growth is nil, significantly trailing the S&P 500's recent pick up in top line growth rate. History shows that tech relative performance is negatively correlated with the U.S. dollar in the latter stages of a currency bull market. While the temptation to position for an increase in capital spending via the tech sector is high, data do not show any demand improvement. Tech new order growth is decelerating. The tech new orders-to-inventories ratio is on the verge of contracting, and further weakness would herald downward pressure on forward earnings estimates (Chart 16). Net earnings revisions have swung violently downward recently. Any prolonged de-rating would warn of negative share price momentum given the tight correlation between the two (Chart 16). Meanwhile, the loss of tech sector competitiveness and a retreat from globalization via protectionism de-globalization pose serious headwinds to the industry's longer-term prospects. Return on equity is already ebbing, reflecting more intense profit margin pressure from the surge in wage growth and a lack of revenue gains. As a result, EBITDA growth has been non-existent (Chart 17). Chart 16Momentum Is Fading Chart 17Growth Remains Elusive Chart 18Profits Set To Underperform All of these factors are encapsulated in our S&P technology operating profit model, which has an excellent record in forecasting tech earnings. Chart 18 shows that tech profits are likely to contract as the year progresses, a far cry from what is expected for the broad market and the 450bps of profit outperformance embedded in analyst forecasts in the coming 12 months. Bottom Line: Reducing tech exposure on price strength is a prudent strategy. Stay underweight. 1 http://www.barrons.com/public/page/9_0210-instrans.html Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights Empirical evidence shows the clear existence of 'mini-cycles' - with the credit impulse and bond yield cycles 'out of phase' with each other by about 6 months. The credit impulse mini-cycle rolled over in October, suggesting that the bond yield mini-cycle will roll over in April. The bond yield mini-cycle is also approaching a technical limit. Hence, on a 3-month horizon, lean against the rise in bond yields and bank equities. And underweight the bank-heavy Italian MIB and Spanish IBEX versus the Eurostoxx600. Feature The euro area's flash GDP print for Q4 confirms that the single-currency bloc has been one of the world's top-performing major economies through recent quarters. Furthermore, the latest inflation data confirm that euro area inflation is no different to other major economies when compared on an apples for apples basis - supporting our argument last week in Fake News In Europe.1 Having said that, the economy's latest 'mini-upswing' is likely approaching its end. And according to our framework, the euro area might not be alone in this experience. Mini-Cycles Everywhere Empirically, the economy exhibits very clear 'mini-cycles' whose upswings and downswings last 6-12 months. These economic mini-cycles overlay the much longer business cycle which lasts multiple years. Compelling evidence for these 6-12 month mini-cycles is everywhere. Just look at the credit impulse, the bond yield, commodity price inflation, or perhaps most fundamentally, GDP growth rates (Chart of the Week and Chart I-2, Chart I-3 and Chart I-4). Chart of the WeekThe 6-Month Credit Impulse Rolled Over In October Chart I-2Mini-Cycles In The Bond Yield Chart I-3Mini-Cycles In Commodity Price Inflation Chart I-4Mini-Cycles In 6-Month GDP Growth But bear in mind that to see any cycle it is crucial to focus on the right periodicity. If you look at a clock pendulum once every second, you will not see its cycle. The pendulum will appear motionless. Only when you look at the pendulum once every half-second will you see its regular cycle. Likewise, to see the economic mini-cycles you need to look at rates of change not over a year but over a half-year. The Economy: A Naturally-Oscillating System The economy's clear mini-cycles are the hallmark of any system that possesses two characteristics: Internal regulating feedback. Time delays in the system response to the feedback. As a familiar example, think of the thermostat that controls the central heating in your home. If there is a delay in the thermostat's response to a temperature setting of 20 degrees, the thermostat will switch the heating on and off slightly late. Which will cause the temperature to oscillate perpetually between 19 and 21 degrees, rather than to stay at a constant 20 degrees. A better example is the cruise control on your car. In the internal regulating feedback: the speed regulates the gas pedal; the gas pedal regulates the gasoline flow; the gasoline flow regulates the engine; and the engine regulates the speed. Assuming this internal regulating feedback works instantaneously from start to finish, the car will cruise at a constant 60 mph. But if there are delays in the system response, the speed will oscillate between, say, 58 mph and 62 mph. Now let's translate this to the economy with the following equivalences (Figure I-1): Speed = GDP growth data Gas pedal = Bond yield Gasoline flow = Credit flow Engine = Economy Figure I-1Internal Regulating Feedback + Time Delays = Mini-Cycles In the economy's internal regulating feedback: the GDP growth data regulates the bond yield; the bond yield regulates the credit flow; the credit flow regulates the economy; and the economy regulates the GDP growth data. But just like the cruise control, if there are delays in the system response, the economy will exhibit oscillations. Crucially, there are delays in the economic system response. For a change in the bond yield to register with households and firms and fully impact credit flows, it clearly takes time - empirically in the range of 3-9 months. The credit flows do not generate instantaneous economic activity either. Fully spending the credit flows takes time - again empirically in the range of 3-9 months. Once you accept these assumptions of internal regulating feedback combined with clear delays in economic response, the economy has to be a naturally-oscillating system. For those who are mathematically inclined, Box I-1 shows how to derive the differential equation of the economic mini-cycle using first principles. Box I-1The Mathematics Of Mini-Cycles From Theory To Practice So much for the elegant theory, does it actually work? The real economy is complicated by other factors which can stretch and distort the theory. Specifically, aggressive and experimental policy from central banks can cause bond yields to overshoot or undershoot fundamentals. Financial or political shocks can depress animal spirits or, as we have just seen, make them euphoric. A flight to or from safety can distort both bond yields and short-term economic activity. These distortive overlays can shorten or extend the amplitude and/or duration of a mini-cycle. So each mini-cycle is slightly different in size and length from its predecessor. The distortions also explain how a mini-upswing or mini-downswing can become amplified into a boom or recession. The analogy would be a car's cruise control trying to slow the speed to 60 mph whilst also coping with a very steep hill and gale-force headwind. Quite likely, the speed would slow to well below 60 mph. For the past 10 years, aggressive monetary policy shifts, financial shocks and political shocks have been a regular distortive feature of the economic landscape. Yet Chart I-5 clearly shows that 6-12 month mini-upswings and mini-downswings have existed with remarkable consistency and durability through the whole period. Chart I-5The Credit Impulse And Bond Yield Cycles Are 'Out Of Phase' By About 6 Months The empirical evidence shows the clear existence of mini-cycles - with the credit impulse and bond yield cycles 'out of phase' by about 6 months, exactly in line with theory. What Does This Mean For European Investors? The credit impulse mini-cycle rolled over in October. Using the average 6-month lag, this means that the bond yield mini-cycle should roll over in April. However, the current cycle could have a slightly shorter lag or a slightly longer lag than the average cycle. So today, we are delighted to introduce a new piece of proprietary analysis. For the bond yield itself, we can independently assess the extent of groupthink in its recent trend, and how close that is to its limit. Previously, we have done this using its 65-day (3-month) fractal dimension.2 But given that mini-cycle upswings and downswings average 6 months, it is more logical to use a 130-day (6-month) fractal dimension. As readers can see in Chart I-6, this indicator has an excellent track-record in identifying mini-cycle turning points. And it is now signalling that the current trend is reaching its technical limit. Chart I-6A Near-Perfect Indicator For Bond Market Turning Points Bottom Line: On a 3-month horizon, lean against the rise in bond yields3 and bank equities. And underweight the financial-heavy Italian MIB and Spanish IBEX versus the Eurostoxx600. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Published on January 26, 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, titled "The Use And Abuse Of Liquidity", June 9, 2016 available at eis.bcaresearch.com 3 The house view is tactically below benchmark duration Fractal Trading Model* Pleasingly, both of our most recent trades: short MIB/long Hang Seng and long NOK/RUB hit their profit targets in classic liquidity triggered trend-reversals. This week's trade is to go short Basic Materials equities. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-7 * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations