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Feature Leading indicators of inflation, and hence a hawkish Fed, remain biased to the upside. The S&P 500 is close to all-time highs, the U.S. dollar has been strong this year, and wage growth has been resilient. Almost exactly eight years ago, we published a report examining historical sector performance across the various Fed tightening cycles.1 We now find ourselves on the other side with a Fed that has adopted an abruptly dovish stance and a recently inverted 10-year/fed funds rate yield curve indicating the market’s expectation that the next Fed move will be a cut. Accordingly, we have updated our research to analyze the opposite perspective when rates are falling and answer the question: what sectors perform best when the Fed eases? Such an exercise may seem ill-timed; leading indicators of inflation, and hence a hawkish Fed, remain biased to the upside. The S&P 500 is close to all-time highs, the U.S. dollar has been strong this year, and wage growth has been resilient (Chart 1). Nevertheless, we have been inundated by client requests on this topic and, while we may well be early in its production, its use as a sector positioning/return road map is evergreen and not necessarily to forecast that a Fed cut is nearing. Chart 1Inflation Indicators Still Don’t Point To A Cut Inflation Indicators Still Don’t Point To A Cut Inflation Indicators Still Don’t Point To A Cut The results of our analysis of the seven Fed loosening cycles since 1965 are presented in Table 1. While we highlight the May 1980 iteration as an easing cycle, we have excluded it from our analysis owing to its returns overlap with the March 1981 iteration less than a year later, which offers a cleaner analysis. Table 1Sector Relative Performance And Seven Fed Easing Cycles Sector Performance And Fed Loosening Cycles: A Historical Roadmap Sector Performance And Fed Loosening Cycles: A Historical Roadmap Still, the sector results are telling: defensives lead the pack in advance of a rate cut as market participants smell trouble and a defensive rotation occurs. Some of the results should be taken with a grain of salt. As shown in Table 1, the broad market delivers significant returns 24 months after an easing cycle begins. However, the last two easing cycles (January 2001 and September 2007) witnessed the S&P returning -37% and -31%, respectively, two years post rate cut. Thus, a rate cut does not signal with certainty a positive two year return. The key source of funds in this defensive rotation in advance of a loosening cycle is S&P tech which underperforms early and continues to underperform dramatically through the initial stages of the loosening cycle. Still, the sector results are telling: defensives lead the pack in advance of a rate cut as market participants smell trouble and a defensive rotation occurs (Chart 2). However, the results are not unambiguous as the rate-sensitive defensive S&P utilities and S&P telecoms indexes both underperform early while S&P consumer staples and S&P health care are the top performers of all sectors prior to, and both one and two years post rate cut (Charts 4 & 5). Chart 2 Chart 3 The key source of funds in this defensive rotation in advance of a loosening cycle is S&P tech which underperforms early and continues to underperform dramatically through the initial stages of the loosening cycle (Chart 3). This is an excellent and consistent leading signal that we are monitoring closely. S&P tech’s deep cyclical peer S&P industrials surprisingly does not show advance warning of a loosening cycle, though persistently underperform once the cycle is underway. Also surprising is S&P energy’s outperformance in the early stages of a lower rate environment. Chart 4 Chart 5 The current implied fed funds probabilities are roughly 50-50 for a rate cut at the Fed’s December 2019 meeting and move increasingly towards a rate cut thereafter. While we are not forecasting a cut and BCA’s view remains one of no recession for the coming 12 months, were a Fed cut to materialize, our barbell portfolio approach will likely be able to absorb the Fed shock. We highlight our overweight recommendation on S&P consumer staples and S&P energy along with our neutral recommendation on S&P health care as sector winners in an easing cycle and our underweight recommendation for S&P consumer discretionary as a sector laggard as rates fall. We further note our neutral recommendation on S&P tech. The reference charts below show individual sector relative performance charts along with the fed funds rate (shaded areas depict the initial Fed rate cut).   Chris Bowes, Associate Editor U.S. Equity Strategy ChrisB@bcaresearch.com Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com   Chart 6 CHART 6 CHART 6 Chart 7 CHART 7 CHART 7 Chart 8 CHART 8 CHART 8 Chart 9 CHART 9 CHART 9 Chart 10 CHART 10 CHART 10 Chart 11 CHART 11 CHART 11 Chart 12 CHART 12 CHART 12 Chart 13 CHART 13 CHART 13 Chart 14 CHART 14 CHART 14 Chart 15 CHART 15 CHART 15   Footnotes 1      Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Special Report, “Sector Performance And Fed Tightening Cycles: An Historical Roadmap” dated April 25, 2011, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Recent data suggest central bankers remain behind the curve in boosting inflation expectations. Ergo, expect a dovish bias to persist over the next few months. Our thesis remains that global growth is in a volatile bottoming process. However, market focus could temporarily flip towards short term data weakness, which warrants taking out some insurance. Meanwhile, in an environment where volatility is low and falling, it also pays to have insurance in place. Rising net short positioning in the yen and Swiss franc is making them attractive from a contrarian standpoint. Maintain a limit-buy on CHF/NZD at 1.45. The path of least resistance for the dollar remains down. This is confirmed by incoming data that suggests the euro area economies have bottomed, which should boost the EUR/USD. The rising dollar shortage remains a key risk to our sanguine view. But the forces driving dollar liquidity lower are largely behind us. Feature Investors looking for more clarity on the global growth picture from the April data print have been left in a quandary. In the U.S., the headline first-quarter real GDP growth number of 3.2% was well above consensus but was boosted by volatile components such as inventories and net exports. Real final sales to domestic purchasers, a cleaner print for final demand, came in at 1.5%, the lowest increase since 2015. Assuming trend growth in the U.S. is around 2%, a view shared by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), then the increase in first-quarter final sales was a big miss. Most importantly, the U.S. ISM manufacturing index fell to 52.8 in April, a drop that was broad-based across seven of the 10 components. Chart I-1At The Cusp Of A V-Shaped Recovery? At The Cusp Of A V-Shaped Recovery? At The Cusp Of A V-Shaped Recovery? Across the ocean, European growth was a tad stronger. Italy managed to nudge itself out of a technical recession, while Spanish year-on-year growth of 2.4% helped drive euro area GDP growth to the tune of 1.2%. The most volatile components of euro area growth tend to be investment and net exports. Should both pick up on the back of stronger external demand, then GDP could easily gravitate towards 1.5%-2%, pinning it well above potential. The German PMI is currently one of the weakest in the euro zone. But forward-looking indicators suggest we are at the cusp of a V-shaped bottom over the next month or so (Chart I-1). China remains the epicenter of any growth pickup and the headline PMI numbers were soft, with the official NBS manufacturing PMI falling to 50.1 from 50.5, and the private sector Caixin manufacturing PMI falling to 50.2 from 50.8. Still, the numbers remain above the critical 50 threshold level, and well beyond the 45-48 danger zone. Export growth numbers across southeast Asia remain weak, and after a brisk rise since the start of the year, many China plays including commodity prices, the yuan, emerging market stocks, and Asian currencies are all rolling over. The bearish view is that there are diminishing marginal returns to Chinese stimulus, and the authorities need to be more aggressive to turn the domestic economy around. The reality is that policy stimulus works with a lag, and we need about three to six months before we see the effects of the current policy shift. Southeast Asian exports track the Chinese credit impulse with a lag of six months, and there is little reason to believe this time should be different (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Global Trade Should Soon Bottom Global Trade Should Soon Bottom Global Trade Should Soon Bottom The broad message is that global growth likely bottomed in the first quarter. However, before evidence of this fully unfolds, markets are likely to be swayed by the ebbs and flows of higher-frequency data, making for a volatile bottoming process. We recommend maintaining a pro-cyclical bias, but taking out some insurance against a potential spike in volatility.  The Fed On Hold This week’s FOMC meeting focused on the lack of inflationary pressures in the U.S. but was largely a non-event for financial markets, aside from a spike in volatility. Nonetheless, there were three key takeaways. First, the dip in inflation appears to be “transitory,” driven by lower clothing prices and financial services fees. Second, Chair Powell made it clear that the Fed will only feel the need to ease policy if inflation runs “persistently” below target. Finally, the Fed’s interpretation of its “symmetric” inflation target is slowly shifting. Many FOMC members increasingly believe that the Fed should explicitly pursue an overshoot of its 2% inflation target to make up for past misses. Taken together, we expect the Fed to remain on hold for the time being, but to eventually start raising rates again as inflationary pressures pick up. Chart I-3Inflation Should Be Higher In The U.S. Versus The Euro Area Inflation Should Be Higher In The U.S. Versus The Euro Area Inflation Should Be Higher In The U.S. Versus The Euro Area The bigger picture is that in a very globalized world with fully flexible exchange rates, it is becoming more and more difficult for any one central bank to independently achieve its inflation objective. This is because, should inflation be on the rise and moving higher in one country, expectations of higher interest rates should lift its currency, which eventually tempers inflationary pressures, and vice versa. This is obviously a very simplistic view of the world economy, since other factors such as demographics, productivity, labor mobility, openness of the economy, and policy divergences among others, play important roles. However, it is remarkable that almost every developed market central bank has continued to attempt to boost inflation to the 2% level since the Global Financial Crisis, but very few have been able to achieve this independently. In a very globalized world with fully flexible exchange rates, it is becoming more and more difficult for any one central bank to independently achieve its inflation objective.  Take the case of Europe versus the U.S., two economies that could not be more different. Euro area imports constitute about 41% of GDP, while the number in the U.S. is only 15%, so tradeable prices matter a lot more for the former. Meanwhile, the demographic profile is worse in Europe, with the old-age dependency ratio at 32% in Europe versus 23% in the U.S. Finally, other measures of supply-side constraints such as labor market slack or capacity utilization suggest the euro area is well behind the U.S. on the path toward a closed output gap (Chart I-3). Despite this, since 2015, headline inflation in both the U.S. and euro area have moved tick-for-tick. Yes, policy divergences between the two countries have been very wide, either via the lens of quantitative easing or simply the differential in policy rates (Chart I-4). But the fact that the magnitude and direction of overall inflation has moved homogenously, begs the question of the ability of either central bank to influence overall prices. One explanation could be that variations in headline CPI are largely driven by volatile items that tend to be exogenous, while variations in core CPI tend to be mostly driven by endogenous factors. This is confirmed by most research that suggest there is a weak link between rising commodity prices and longer-term inflation.1 That said, over the shorter run, commodity price gyrations can dominate and be the main driver of inflation expectations (Chart I-5). Chart I-4U.S. And Euro Area Overall CPI Are Broadly Similar U.S. And Euro Area Overall CPI Are Broadly Similar U.S. And Euro Area Overall CPI Are Broadly Similar Chart I-5In The Short Term, Commodity Prices Matter For Inflation Expectations In The Short Term, Commodity Prices Matter For Inflation Expectations In The Short Term, Commodity Prices Matter For Inflation Expectations The bottom line is that muted inflationary pressures are a global phenomenon, and not centric to the U.S. This means that as a whole, global central banks are set to stay accommodative for the time being, which will be bullish for global growth (Chart I-6). This warrants maintaining a pro-cyclical stance but being extremely selective in what might be a volatile bottoming process. Chart I-6Global Monetary Policy Needs To Ease Further bca.fes_wr_2019_05_03_s1_c6 bca.fes_wr_2019_05_03_s1_c6 Maintain A Pro-Cyclical Stance With the S&P 500 breaking to all-time highs, crude oil prices up around 40% from their lows, and U.S. 10-year Treasury yields rolling over relative to the rest of the world, this has historically been fertile ground for high-beta currency trades. That said, the lack of more pronounced strength in pro-cyclical currencies like the Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian dollars suggest that caution prevails. Our bias is that currency markets continue to fight a tug-of-war between strong dollar fundamentals and fading tailwinds. Our portfolio consists mostly of trades along the crosses, but we have been cautiously adding to U.S. dollar short positions over the past few weeks: Long AUD/USD: Our limit-buy on the Aussie was triggered at 0.70. Data out of Australia are showing tentative signs of a bottom. Last week’s important jobs report showed that the economy continues to offer more employment than the consensus expects. Meanwhile, the credit growth data out of Australia this week suggests that macro-prudential policies continue to drive a wedge between owner-occupied and investor housing (Chart I-7). House prices in Australia are already deflating to the tune of around 6%. Once the cleansing process is through, we expect house price growth to eventually converge toward levels of credit and/or natural income growth. Moreover, the Australian dollar remains a commodity currency, and will benefit from rising terms-of-trade. Iron ore prices remain firm on the back of supply-related issues. Meanwhile, a rising mix of liquefied natural gas in the export basket will provide tailwinds as China continues to steer its economy away from coal. Finally, Chinese credit growth has been a key determinant of the re-rating of Australian equities. Ergo, a rising Chinese credit impulse will ignite Australian share prices, and by extension the Australian dollar (Chart I-8). Chart I-7Australian Credit Growth Converging To Steady State Australian Credit Growth Converging To Steady State Australian Credit Growth Converging To Steady State Chart I-8More Chinese Credit Will Help Australian Equities More Chinese Credit Will Help Australian Equities More Chinese Credit Will Help Australian Equities Long GBP/USD: Our buy-limit order on the British pound was triggered at 1.30 on March 29th. As we argued back then, the pound is sitting exactly where it was after the 2016 referendum results, but the odds of a hard Brexit have significantly fallen since then. On the domestic front, economic surprises in the U.K. relative to both the U.S. and euro area continue to soar. The reality is that the pound and U.K. gilt yields should be much higher – solely on the basis of hard incoming data. Employment growth has been holding up very well, wages are inflecting higher, and the average U.K. consumer appears in decent shape. Full-time employees continue to creep higher as a percentage of overall employment (Chart I-9). This view was echoed in yesterday’s Bank Of England (BoE) policy meeting, where the central bank raised its growth forecast while striking a more hawkish tone. Chart I-9U.K.: What Brexit? U.K.: What Brexit? U.K.: What Brexit? Chart I-10Sweden: Volatile Bottom Sweden: Volatile Bottom Sweden: Volatile Bottom   Long SEK/USD: The Swedish krona should be one of the first currencies to benefit from any bottoming in European growth (Chart I-10). The Swedish economy appears to have bottomed relative to that of the U.S., making the USD/SEK an attractive way to play USD downside. From a technical perspective, the cross is trading at its lowest level since the global financial crisis (Chart I-11). Economic surprises in the U.K. relative to both the U.S. and euro area continue to soar. The main appeal of the Swedish krona is that it is extremely cheap. Meanwhile, despite negative interest rates, Swedish household loan growth has been slowing as consumers are increasingly financing purchases through rising wages. This will alleviate the need for the Riksbank to maintain ultra-accommodative policy, despite its recent dovish shift. Buy Some Insurance Given current low levels of volatility and elevated equity market valuations, the dollar would have been a great insurance policy for any stock market correction. But with U.S. interest rates having risen significantly versus almost all G10 countries in recent years, the dollar has itself become the object of carry trades. This has also come with a good number of unhedged trades, as the rising exchange rate has lifted hedging costs.  Chart I-11How Much Lower Could The Swedish Krona Go? How Much Lower Could The Swedish Krona Go? How Much Lower Could The Swedish Krona Go? Chart I-12Buy Some##br## Insurance Buy Some Insurance Buy Some Insurance It will be difficult for the dollar to act as both a safe-haven and carry currency, because the forces that drive both move in opposite directions. As markets become volatile and some carry trades are unwound, unhedged trades will become victim to short-covering flows. Currencies such as the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc that could have been used to fund carry trades are ripe for reversals. This suggests at a minimum building some portfolio hedges. One such hedge is going long the CHF/NZD. This trade has a high negative carry, so we do not intend to hold it for longer than three months. But it should pay off handsomely on any rise in volatility (Chart I-12). Maintain a limit-buy at 1.45.   Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Stephen G Cecchetti and Richhild Moessner, “Commodity Prices And Inflation Dynamics,” Bank Of International Settlements, Quarterly Review, (December 2008). Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.S. continue to moderate: Annualized Q1 GDP came in at 3.2% quarter-on-quarter, well above estimates. Personal income increased by 0.1% month-on-month in March, below the estimated 0.4%. On the other hand, personal spending increased by 0.9% month-on-month in March. PCE deflator and core PCE deflator fell to 1.5% and 1.6% year-on-year, respectively in March. Michigan consumer sentiment index slightly increased to 97.2 in April. Markit manufacturing PMI increased from 52.4 to 52.6 in April, while ISM manufacturing PMI fell to 52.8. Q1 nonfarm productivity increased by 3.6%, surprising to the upside. DXY index fell by 0.3% this week. On Wednesday, the Fed announced their decision to keep interest rates on hold at current levels, further suggesting that there is no strong case to move rates in either direction based on recent economic developments. Moreover, Fed chair Powell reiterated their strong commitment to the 2% inflation target. Report Links: Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns- April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 Recent data in the euro area are improving: Money supply (M3) in the euro area increased by 4.5% year-on-year in March. The sentiment in the euro area remains soft in April: economic sentiment indicator fell to 104; business climate fell to 0.42; industrial confidence fell to -4.1; consumer confidence was unchanged at -7.9. Q1 GDP came in at 1.2% year-on-year, surprising to the upside. Unemployment rate fell to 7.7% in March. Markit PMI increased to 47.9 in April. EUR/USD appreciated by 0.3% this week. European data keep grinding higher. Italian GDP moved back into positive territory in Q1. Spanish GDP also rebounded in Q1. Positive Chinese credit data suggests the euro will soon benefit from rising Chinese imports.  Report Links: Reading The Tea Leaves From China - April 12, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 A Contrarian Bet On The Euro - March 1, 2019 Japanese Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have been positive: The unemployment rate in March increased slightly to 2.5%; job-to-applicant ratio was unchanged at 1.63. Tokyo consumer price inflation increased to 1.4% year-on-year in March, the highest level since October 2018. Industrial production fell by 4.6% year-on-year in March. However, projections for April suggest a 2.7% month-on-month jump. Retail sales grew by 1% year-on-year in March, higher than expected. Housing starts grew by 10% year-on-year in March. This is the highest growth level since February 2017. USD/JPY fell by 0.2% this week. The Japanese government’s intention to raise sales tax this October could be a highly deflationary outcome. However, there is still an outside chance that the tax hike will be postponed. We continue to recommend yen as a safety hedge. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Tug OF War, With Gold As Umpire - March 29, 2019 A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been positive: U.K. mortgage loans in March increased to 40K.  Nationwide housing prices increased by 0.9% on a year-on-year basis in April. Markit manufacturing PMI came in above expectations at 53.1 in April, even though it fell; Markit construction PMI however increased to 50.5. Money supply (M4) increased by 2.2% year-on-year in March. GBP/USD increased by 1% this week. The Bank of England kept rates on hold at 0.75% this week. In the May inflation report, the BoE mentioned that U.K.’s economic outlook will depend significantly on the nature and timing of EU withdrawal, and the new trading agreement with EU in particular. But governor Carney struck a slightly hawkish tone, revising up GDP estimates and guiding the next policy move as a rate hike. Report Links: Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have shown tentative signs of recovery: Private sector credit growth fell to 3.9% year-on-year in March. However, this is heavily biased downwards by lending to home investors that has slowed to a crawl. The Australian Industry Group (AiG) manufacturing index increased to 54.8 in April. RBA commodity index increased by 14.4% year-on-year in April. AUD/USD fell by 0.4% this week. The data are starting to look brighter in Q2, suggesting that the economy might have bottomed in Q1. The Australian dollar is likely to grind higher, especially driven by rising terms of trade. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns- April 19, 2019 Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand are mixed: ANZ activity outlook increased by 7.1% in April. ANZ business confidence in April improved to -37.5. On the labor market front in Q1, the employment change fell to 1.5% year-on-year; unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.2%, but participation rate fell to 70.4%; labor cost index fell to 2% year-on-year. Building permits contracted by 6.9% month-on-month in March. NZD/USD depreciated by 0.4% this week. The data from New Zealand continue to underperform its antipodean neighbor. We anticipate this trend will persist. Stay long AUD/NZD, currently 0.5% in the money. Report Links: Not Out Of The Woods Yet - April 5, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada continue to underperform: GDP in February contracted by 0.1% on a month-on-month basis. Markit manufacturing PMI fell below 50 to 49.7 in April.  USD/CAD fell by 0.1% this week. During Tuesday’s speech, Governor Poloz acknowledged recent negative developments in the Canadian economy, and blamed it on the U.S.-led trade war, as well as the sharp decline in oil prices late last year. While a bottoming in the global growth could be a tailwind for the Canadian economy near-term, a Ricardian equivalence framework will suggest fiscal austerity over the next few years, will be a headwind for long-term CAD investors. Report Links: Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 Recent data in Switzerland have been negative: KOF leading indicator fell to 96.2 in April. Real retail sales contracted by 0.7% year-on-year in March. SVME PMI fell below 50 to 48.5 in April. USD/CHF fell by 0.1% this week. The reduced volatility worldwide could make the Swiss franc less attractive. Moreover, the relative outperformance of the euro area is a headwind for the franc. Our long EUR/CHF position is now 1% in the money. We intend to trade the franc purely as an insurance policy near-term. Report Links: Beware Of Diminishing Marginal Returns - April 19, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been positive: Retail sales increased by 0.6% in March, in line with expectations. This was a marked improvement from the 1.2% drop in February. The unemployment rate held low at 3.8% USD/NOK increased by 1% this week. We expect the Norwegian krone to pick up based on the strong fundamentals and positive oil price outlook. Report Links: Currency Complacency Amid A Global Dovish Shift - April 26, 2019 A Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies - March 22, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 Recent data in Sweden have been mostly positive: Retail sales increased on a month-on-month basis by 0.5% in March, but fell to 1.9% on a yearly basis. Producer price index was unchanged at 6.3% year-on-year in March. Trade balance came in at a large surplus of 7 billion SEK in March. Manufacturing PMI fell to 50.9 in April, but notably, import orders and backlog orders rose.  USD/SEK increased by 0.4% this week. Despite the RiksBank’s dovish shift last week, we continue to favor our long SEK position. Our conviction is rooted in the fact that the Swedish krona is undervalued, and relative PMI trends favor Sweden vis-à-vis the U.S. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Highlights Open an equity market relative overweight to Europe versus China. Upgrade Denmark to neutral. Downgrade the Netherlands to underweight. Maintain Switzerland at overweight. With the Euro Stoxx 50 now up almost 20 percent from its January 3 low, the majority of this year’s absolute gains have already been made. Core euro area bond yields will edge modestly higher… …and EUR/USD will appreciate, as the backward-looking data on which the ECB depends catches up with the more perky real-time economic data.   Feature Vertical charts scare us, as we contemplate falling over the edge. But they also excite us, as we contemplate a lucrative investment opportunity. Right now, the vertical chart that is causing us palpitations is technology versus healthcare (Chart of the Week).  Chart of the WeekTechnology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical! Technology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical! Technology Versus Healthcare Has Gone Vertical! The technology versus healthcare sector pair is critical, because it looms large in several stock markets’ ‘fingerprint’ sector skews. Meaning that the technology versus healthcare relative performance has unavoidable consequences for regional and country stock market allocation (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). The technology versus healthcare sector pair is critical, because it looms large in several stock markets’ ‘fingerprint’ sector skews. Chart I-2When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, Netherlands Underperforms Switzerland Chart I-3When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland When Technology Underperforms Healthcare, China Underperforms Switzerland Specifically, from a European stock market perspective, the Netherlands is overweight technology while Switzerland and Denmark are both overweight healthcare. Further afield, the U.S. is overweight technology while China is both overweight technology and underweight healthcare. Explaining Verticality And The Subsequent Fall What creates vertical charts? To answer the question, let’s turn it on its head: what prevents vertical charts? The answer is: the presence of value investors. In a healthy market, a cohort of value investors will sit on the side lines and only transact with the marginal seller when the price falls to a semblance of value. In other words, the value sensitive investors help to set the price, preventing verticality. But if the value sensitive cohort switches out of character to join a strong uptrend, the cohort will suddenly become value insensitive. In this case, the marginal seller will set the price higher and the formerly uninterested value sensitive buyer will now buy at the higher price. The market has morphed into a trend-following market. As more of the value cohort switch sides, the process adds rocket fuel to the rally. Driven by the ‘fear of missing out’ the marginal buyer will buy at larger and larger price increments, and the chart becomes vertical. What triggers the subsequent fall? When all of the value cohort have joined the uptrend, the fuel has run out: the marginal seller will no longer find a willing marginal buyer at the elevated price. At this critical point, one of two things will happen. Either: a completely new cohort of even deeper value investors will switch out of character and provide new fuel to the trend, allowing it to continue. Or: the deep value investors will stay true to character and will only deal with the marginal seller when the price falls, perhaps sharply, to a semblance of deep value. Technology versus healthcare is now at this critical technical point at which the probability of trend-reversal has significantly increased. Both the theoretical and empirical evidence suggests that at this critical point, the probability of trend-continuation decreases to about a third and the probability of a trend-reversal increases to about two-thirds. Technology versus healthcare is now at this critical technical point at which the probability of trend-reversal has significantly increased (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High Technology Versus Healthcare: The Probability Of A Trend-Reversal Is High Therefore, on a tactical horizon, it is now appropriate to underweight technology versus healthcare – which, to reiterate, carries unavoidable consequences for country and regional stock market allocation: Open an overweight to Europe versus China. Upgrade Denmark to neutral. Downgrade the Netherlands to underweight. Maintain Switzerland at overweight. Distinguishing Between Valuation And Growth Is Extremely Difficult There is another problem for value investors. Over short periods – meaning less than a year – it is very difficult, if not impossible, to decompose a price return into its two components: the component coming from the change in valuation and the component coming from the change in earnings growth expectations. A stock market’s actual earnings are highly sensitive to small changes in economic growth. This is universally the case but is especially true in Europe, because the European stock market’s skew towards growth-sensitive cyclicals gives it a very high operational leverage to GDP growth: a seemingly minor 0.5 percent change in economic growth translates into a major 25 percent change in stock market earnings growth (Chart I-5). The slightest improvement in economic growth expectations causes the market to upgrade its forecasts for earnings very sharply. Chart I-5A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth A Minor Upgrade To Economic Growth = A Major Upgrade To Profits Growth Given this very high operational leverage, the slightest improvement in economic growth expectations causes the market to upgrade its forecasts for earnings very sharply. Which of course lifts the market’s price, P, very sharply. In contrast, equity analysts’ forecasts for earnings, which drive the market’s ‘official’ forward earnings, E, adjust much more slowly. As my colleague, Chris Bowes explains: “analysts get married to a view and usually require overwhelming evidence to materially change it.” The upshot is that the P rises very sharply but the official forward E does not, meaning that the official forward P/E also rises very sharply. This gives the impression that the move is mostly valuation driven, but the truth is that the move is mostly earnings growth driven. In a similar vein, when central banks guide interest rates lower, how much of the equity market’s move is due to a higher valuation, and how much is due to improved prospects for economic growth resulting from the central bank policy change? Over relatively short periods of time, it is extremely difficult to tell. All of which provides an important lesson: over short periods, do not focus on separately forecasting the valuation change and earnings growth change of a stock market. Much better to forecast the stock market price directly, by focussing on the two main things which will drive it: changes to central bank policy, and changes to short-term real-time economic growth. Focus On Central Banks And Short-Term Economic Growth Central bank policy now ‘depends’ on relatively longer-term changes (say, year-on-year) in backward-looking data, most notably the consumer price index. Whereas the stock market’s earnings growth expectations take their cue from shorter-term changes in real-time economic indicators (Chart I-6). Chart I-6Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding Quarter-On-Quarter Growth Is Rebounding Hence, the ‘sweet spot’ for equity markets is when, in simple terms, year-on-year CPI inflation is decelerating, implying central banks will become more dovish, while quarter-on-quarter economic growth is accelerating, implying the market will upgrade earnings growth (Chart I-7). The stock market’s earnings growth expectations take their cue from shorter-term changes in real-time economic indicators. The ‘weak spot’ for equity markets is the exact opposite, when year-on-year CPI inflation is accelerating, implying central banks will become less dovish, while quarter-on-quarter economic growth is decelerating, implying the market will downgrade earnings growth. As 2019 progresses, our high-conviction prediction is that equity markets will move from a sweet spot to a weak spot. With the Euro Stoxx 50 now up almost 20 percent from its January 3 low, it implies that the majority of 2019’s gains have already been made in the first four months of the year – and the market is unlikely to be significantly higher at the end of the year. Compared to the equity market, the bond, interest rate, and currency markets are – almost by definition – much more dependent on central banks’ lagging reaction functions than on real-time growth. Which solves the mystery as to why bond yields are close to new lows while equity markets are close to new highs. It also solves the mystery as to why EUR/USD has lagged the very clear recovery in euro area real-time growth and in euro area stock markets (Chart I-8). Central banks are following lagging indicators. Chart I-7Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators Stock Markets Take Their Cue from Real-Time Indicators Chart I-8Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators Central Banks Are Following Lagging Indicators, Stock Markets Are Following Real-Time Indicators But as the backward-looking data, on which the ECB depends, catches up with the more perky real-time data, core euro area bond yields will edge modestly higher, and EUR/USD will gently appreciate. Next week, in lieu of the usual weekly report, I will be giving this quarter’s webcast titled ‘From Sweet Spot to Weak Spot?’ live on Wednesday May 8 at 10.00 AM EDT (3.00 PM BST, 4.00 PM CEST, 10.00 PM HKT). Through a series of key charts, the webcast will reveal the prospects and opportunities for all asset-classes through the remainder of 2019. At the end of the webcast, I will also unveil a brand new investment recommendation. So don’t miss it! Fractal Trading System* Supporting the arguments in the main body of this report, fractal analysis suggests that the recent rally in China’s stock market is at a technical point that has reliably signaled previous major reversals. Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is a stock market pair trade, short China versus Japan. Set the profit target at 2.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. We now have six open positions. 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-9Short China Vs. Japan Short China VS. Japan Short China VS. Japan   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.   * 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.     Dhaval Joshi, Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations    
Feature GAA DM Equity Country Allocation Model Update The GAA DM Equity Country Allocation model is updated as of April 30, 2019.  The quant model has not made significant changes in the major country allocations, but has upgraded Australia to slight overweight from underweight and downgraded Sweden to slight underweight from overweight, as shown in Table 1.  Table 1Model Allocation Vs. Benchmark Weights GAA Quant Model Updates GAA Quant Model Updates As shown in Table 2 and Charts 1, 2 and 3, the overall model outperformed the MSCI World benchmark by 43 bps in April, with 113 bps of outperformance from the Level 2 model, offset by 11 bps of underperformance from Level 1.  Directionally, 8 out of the 12 choices generated positive alpha. The largest contributions to the outperformance in April came from the overweight in Germany and Netherlands, as well as the underweight in Japan and the U.K. Since going live, the overall model has outperformed by 152 bps, with 365 bps of outperformance by the Level 2 model, offset by a slight underperformance from Level 1. Table 2Performance (Total Returns In USD %) GAA Quant Model Updates GAA Quant Model Updates Chart 1GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World GAA DM Model Vs. MSCI World Chart 2GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1) GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1) GAA U.S. Vs. Non U.S. Model (Level 1)     Please see also the website http://gaa.bcaresearch.com/trades/allocation_performance. For more details on the models, please see Special Report, “Global Equity Allocation: Introducing The Developed Markets Country Allocation Model,” dated January 29, 2016, available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com. Please note that the overall country and sector recommendations published in our Monthly Portfolio Update and Quarterly Portfolio Outlook use the results of these quantitative models as one input, but do not stick slavishly to them. We believe that models are a useful check, but structural changes and unquantifiable factors need to be considered too in making overall recommendations. Chart 3GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2) GAA Non U.S. Model (Level 2)     GAA Equity Sector Selection Model The GAA Equity Sector Model (Chart 4) is updated as of April 30, 2019. Chart 4Overall Model Performance Overall Model Performance Overall Model Performance Table 3Model’s Performance (March 1, 2019 - Current) GAA Quant Model Updates GAA Quant Model Updates Table 4Current Model Allocations GAA Quant Model Updates GAA Quant Model Updates         The model’s relative tilts within cyclicals and defensives have changed compared to last month. The model has turned more cautious on Materials and cut it from overweight to underweight due to a weakness in its momentum component. This in turn increases the overweight allocations to Industrials and Utilities, the model’s two overweights, and decreases the underweight allocation to the nine remaining sectors. While global growth is set to bottom, the hard data has not fully materialized yet, therefore preventing the model from being outright bullish on cyclicals. The valuation component remains muted across all sectors. The model is still overweight Utilities due to positive inputs from its growth and liquidity components. For more details on the model, please see the Special Report “Introducing the GAA Equity Sector Selection Model,” dated July 27, 2016, as well as the Sector Selection Model section in the Special Alert “GAA Quant Model Updates,” dated March 1, 2019 available at https://gaa.bcaresearch.com.   Xiaoli Tang, Associate Vice President xiaoliT@bcaresearch.com Amr Hanafy, Research Associate amrh@bcaresearch.com
Feature What Could Sour The Sweet Spot? This continues to look like a very benevolent environment for risk assets. Growth in the U.S. remains decent, with Q1 GDP growth beating expectations at 3.2% QoQ annualized (albeit somewhat distorted by rising inventories). Leading indicators point to U.S. GDP growth of around 2.5% for 2019. The rest of the world is showing the first “green shoots” of economic recovery. China continues to expand credit, and the effects of this are starting to stabilize growth in Europe, Japan, and the Emerging Markets (Chart 1). Recommended Allocation Monthly Portfolio Update Monthly Portfolio Update Chart 1China Reflation Helping Growth To Bottom China Reflation Helping Growth To Bottom China Reflation Helping Growth To Bottom At the same time, central banks everywhere have turned accommodative. Following the Fed’s dovish shift late last year, the market has priced in rate cuts by end-2019. The ECB is about to relaunch its TLTRO funding program, and is expected to keep rates in negative territory for at least another year (Chart 2) – though there are worries whether Mario Draghi’s successor as ECB president might be more hawkish. The Bank of Canada and Bank of Japan, among others, have recently reemphasized monetary caution. Chart 2No Rate Hikes Anywhere No Rate Hikes Anywhere No Rate Hikes Anywhere Chart 3Term Premium Keeping Down Yields Term Premium Keeping Down Yields Term Premium Keeping Down Yields This goes some way to explain the biggest puzzle in markets currently: why, despite global equities being less than 1% below a record high, long-term interest rates remain so low, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield at 2.5%, and yields in Germany and Japan hovering around zero. There are other explanations too. A decomposition of the U.S. 10-year yield shows that most of the downward pressure has come from a sharp drop in the term premium (Chart 3). This is partly because lousy growth in other developed economies, such as Germany and Japan, has pushed down yields in these countries and, given that spreads to the U.S. were at record highs, depressed U.S. rates too. It also reflects a lingering pessimism among investors who bought Treasuries at the end of last year to hedge against recession and who remain concerned about the economy. This is evidenced by continuing strong flows into bond funds in 2019 (Chart 4). A decomposition of the U.S. 10-year yield shows that most of the downward pressure has come from a sharp drop in the term premium. Chart 4Investors Buying Bonds, Not Equities Investors Buying Bonds, Not Equities Investors Buying Bonds, Not Equities Chart 5Why Has Inflation Fallen? Why Has Inflation Fallen? Why Has Inflation Fallen? A further explanation is the recent softness in inflation, with the Fed’s focus measure, core PCE inflation, slowing to an annual rate of only 0.7% over the past three months (Chart 5). This is probably mostly due to the economic slowdown late last year. But it may also have structural causes: the recent improvement in labor productivity can perhaps allow wages to rise without feeding through into consumer price inflation (Chart 6). Chart 6Maybe Because Of Better Productivity Maybe Because Of Better Productivity Maybe Because Of Better Productivity Chart 7Indicators Suggest Inflation Will Still Trend Up Indicators Suggest Inflation Will Still Trend Up Indicators Suggest Inflation Will Still Trend Up How is this all likely to pan out?  We think it improbable that inflation will stay low for long if growth is as robust as we expect. Leading indicators of inflation continue to suggest prices will trend higher (Chart 7). The Fed may not rush to raise rates (not least since, with the lower inflation recently, the Fed Funds Rate in real terms is now at neutral according to the Laubach-Williams model, Chart 8). But we also find it inconceivable that the Fed will cut rates, if growth remains strong, stocks continue to rise, and global risks recede. By the end of this year, it should be able to make a renewed case for a further hike. But even if it doesn’t do that – and permits either inflation to overheat for a while, or asset bubbles to form – these scenarios should be more conducive to equity outperformance, than bond outperformance. Global equities have already risen by 22% since last December’s low and may struggle to make rapid progress over the next few months. The key to further upside for stocks will be earnings: since analysts have cut EPS forecasts for S&P 500 companies for this year to only 4%, those expectations should not be hard to beat. In the Q1 earnings season, for instance, 79% of companies have so far come in ahead of the consensus EPS forecast. For global asset allocators, the key decision is always at the asset-class level. Will equities outperform bonds over the coming 12 months? Equities should have further upside if our macro scenario proves correct. On the other hand, we find it hard to imagine that global bond yields will not rise moderately if global growth recovers, the Fed refrains from cutting rates, inflation rises somewhat, and investors turn less wary of equities. We continue, therefore, to expect the stock-to-bond ratio (Chart 9) to rise further over the next 12 months. We think it improbable that inflation will stay low for long if growth is as robust as we expect. Chart 8Is Fed Now At Neutral? Is Fed Now At Neutral? Is Fed Now At Neutral? Chart 9Stock-To-Bond Ratio Can Rise Further Stock-To-Bond Ratio Can Rise Further Stock-To-Bond Ratio Can Rise Further   Chart 10Europe And EM Outperform Only Briefly Europe And EM Outperform Only Briefly Europe And EM Outperform Only Briefly Equities: We remain overweight global equities, but are reluctant to take higher beta country exposure until there is greater clarity on the bottoming out of ex-U.S. growth. Moreover, the structural headwinds that have prevented anything more than short-term outperformance for eurozone stocks (banking sector weakness) and Emerging Markets (excess debt and poor productivity) since 2010 remain powerful negative factors (Chart 10). Our moderately pro-cyclical sector recommendations (overweight energy and industrials) should hedge us against upside risk emanating from a strong rebound in Chinese imports. Fixed Income: Over the past few years, periods where equities have decoupled from bond yields have been resolved with bond yields playing catch-up (Chart 11). We expect the same to happen over the next few months, with global government bond yields rising moderately. The risk-on environment continues to be positive for credit. We prefer credit to government bonds within fixed income, but are only neutral within our overall recommended portfolio. U.S. high-yield bonds in particular look attractively valued, as long as growth continues and default rates don’t start to rise too much (Chart 12). Chart 11When Bonds And Equities Diverge… When Bonds And Equities Diverge... When Bonds And Equities Diverge... Chart 12Junk Bonds Attractively Valued Junk Bonds Attractively Valued Junk Bonds Attractively Valued Currencies: A pick-up in global growth would be negative for the U.S. dollar, typically a counter-cyclical currency (Chart 13). BCA’s currency strategists have slowly been moving towards a more positive stance on some currencies versus the dollar, particularly the euro and Australian dollar. We would expect to see the trade-weighted dollar start to depreciate in H2 once global growth accelerates, fueled by the very skewed long-dollar positioning currently. However, this may be only a six- to 12-month move, since growth and interest-rate differentials suggest that the structural dollar bull market that began in 2012 has not yet fully run its course. Commodities: Oil remains dominated by supply-side dynamics. How much the ending of waivers on Iranian oil sanctions, plus troubles in Venezuela and Libya, push up oil prices will depend on whether President Trump can persuade Saudi Arabia and UAE to increase production. BCA’s energy team expects he will be only partially successful in doing so, and see Brent reaching $80 a barrel and WTI $77 (from $72 and $64 currently) during 2019. Industrial commodities prices will depend on the strength and nature of China’s reflation: our commodities strategists see copper, the most sensitive metal to Chinese demand, as the best way to play this.1 Garry Evans Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Chart 13Stronger Growth Would Be Dollar Negative Stronger Growth Would Be Dollar Negative Stronger Growth Would Be Dollar Negative   Footnotes 1       Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, “Copper Will Benefit Most From Chinese Stimulus,” dated April 25, 2019, available at ces.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation  
Highlights Oil & Bond Yields: Global growth indicators are starting to rebound, risk assets have returned to previous cyclical highs, and oil prices remain buoyant. This is a combination that will eventually result in rising global bond yields, but more through higher inflation expectations that will bear-steepen yield curves. Stay below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration, but enter new reflationary trades in core Europe (long inflation breakevens) and Australia (yield curve steepeners). EM vs DM Credit: Signs of a pickup in Chinese growth will be more supportive for growth in EM economies. Hedging against an extended downturn in China is no longer needed. Upgrade EM U.S. dollar denominated sovereign and corporate debt to neutral (3 of 5), at the expense of a smaller overweight position in U.S. investment grade corporates. Feature Chart of the WeekA Consistent Message On Rebounding Growth A Consistent Message On Rebounding Growth A Consistent Message On Rebounding Growth Evidence is starting to point to a bottoming in global economic momentum. Credit growth has notably picked up in China, global leading economic indicators are stabilizing and sentiment measures like our Duration Indicator have started to climb (Chart of the Week). While it is still early in this reflation process, the leading data is now moving in a direction that bodes well for continued gains in global equities and growth-sensitive spread product. The sharp rallies across risk assets seen so far this year have merely retraced the stinging losses incurred in the final months of 2018. Those moves were fueled by a combination of slowing global growth and overly hawkish central bankers. Now that policymakers have “course corrected” towards dovishness, led by the Fed’s 180-degree turn on the outlook for rate hikes in 2019 that drove U.S. Treasury yields lower, the next leg of the risk rally can begin, led by improving global growth. At some point, looser financial conditions – higher equity prices, tighter credit spreads and lower market volatility – will require global central bankers to retreat from dovish forward guidance (Chart 2). Policymakers who have been focused on sluggish global growth, “persistent uncertainty” (as ECB President Mario Draghi has described it), and falling inflation expectations will eventually have to adjust their policy bias once those factors reverse. On that front, the combination of improving global growth, rising oil prices and an increasingly likely U.S.-China trade deal will help boost global bond yields through rising inflation expectations first and higher interest rate expectations later (Chart 3). Chart 2A Full Unwind Of Late-2018 Moves...Except For Inflation A Full Unwind Of Late-2018 Moves...Except For Inflation A Full Unwind Of Late-2018 Moves...Except For Inflation Chart 3Get Ready For A Bond-Bearish Turn In Growth Get Ready For A Bond-Bearish Turn In Growth Get Ready For A Bond-Bearish Turn In Growth We continue to recommend a high-level fixed income portfolio construction that will benefit from these trends: below-benchmark on overall duration exposure with overweights on global corporate debt versus government bonds. We also see a case to selectively position for steeper yield curves and higher inflation expectations in countries more sensitive to higher oil prices and where central banks will be less hawkish/more dovish. Most importantly, we no longer see a need to maintain a defensive underweight in emerging market (EM) hard currency spread product, as we discuss later in this report. Yes, Oil Prices Still Matter For Bond Yields Global oil prices hit a new 2019 high last week on news that the Trump administration was letting waivers expire on U.S. sanctions of Iranian oil exports. Coming on top of the lost output from Venezuela, increased tensions in Libya and persistent production discipline from the major oil players (OPEC, the so-called “OPEC 2.0” of Russia and Saudi Arabia, and even U.S. shale producers), a boost to global oil demand from faster global growth is likely to result in even higher oil prices in the next 6-9 months. The combination of improving global growth, rising oil prices and an increasingly likely U.S.-China trade deal will help boost global bond yields. Our colleagues at BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy remain steadfast bulls on oil prices, with a year-end price target of $80/bbl on the Brent crude benchmark. They view the supply constraints as large and persistent enough to cause oil prices to continue rising alongside firmer global demand. Our most optimistic forward-looking growth indicator, the diffusion index of global leading economic indicators, is now calling for a sharp rebound in cyclical data like the global manufacturing PMI in the latter half of 2019. A move back to the 55-60 range for the global PMI, which the diffusion indicator is pointing towards (Chart 4, bottom panel), would be consistent with the +50% year-over-year growth rates in oil prices implied by BCA’s bullish oil forecasts (middle panel). Chart 4The 2019 Oil Rally Is Not Over Yet The 2019 Oil Rally Is Not Over Yet The 2019 Oil Rally Is Not Over Yet Over the past several years, there has been a strong correlation between oil prices and government bond yields in most developed economies (Chart 5). Since the most recent bottom in global yields back on March 27, that behavior has persisted. Longer-term bond yields have risen more than shorter-dated yields, alongside higher inflation expectations further out the yield curve (Table 1). Chart 5Inflation Expectations Still Driving Bond Yields Inflation Expectations Still Driving Bond Yields Inflation Expectations Still Driving Bond Yields Such “bear-steepenings” do not usually last for long periods of time. Inflation targeting central banks typically look at the reflationary implications of higher oil prices – faster economic growth with more future inflation as energy costs seep into core inflation measures – as a sign to maintain a more hawkish bias for monetary policy. That is not the case today, though, as data dependent central bankers have been more focused on past soft readings on both growth and inflation momentum. This should support a growth-driven rise in global oil prices in the coming months, as policymakers will be reluctant to alter the current dovish guidance without signs of both faster growth and higher realized inflation. Within the major developed markets, the recent correlations between oil prices (in local currency terms) and inflation expectations have been weakest in regions where central banks are most likely to keep policy interest rates stable. In the euro area, Japan and Australia – where core inflation rates are well below central bank targets and money markets are discounting flat-to-lower interest rate expectations over the next 1-2 years – market-based measures of inflation expectations like CPI swap rates have diverged from the rising path of local-currency denominated oil prices (Chart 6). In the U.S. and Canada, which have only recently paused their rate hike cycles, the correlation between oil prices and inflation expectations has been a bit more in line with the experience of the past several years. The same goes for the U.K., although inflation expectations there seem more driven by currency weakness stemming from the Brexit uncertainty rather than a central bank that is perceived to be too hawkish (even though the Bank of England only recently shifted away from its past language signaling a desire to start normalizing very low interest rates). Table 1A Reflationary Bear-Steepening Of Yield Curves Since Yields Troughed In March It's Time To Break Out The Fine China It's Time To Break Out The Fine China Correlations between longer-term inflation expectations and the slopes of government bond yield curves have also become less consistent across countries (Chart 7). In particular, 2-year/10-year yield curves been more positively correlated to inflation expectations in the euro zone, Australia and even Japan (where the BoJ is actively targeting the yield curve) than in the U.S., U.K. and Canada. Chart 6Higher Oil, Higher Inflation Expectations Higher Oil, Higher Inflation Expectations Higher Oil, Higher Inflation Expectations Chart 7Position For Reflationary Yield Curve Steepening Position For Reflationary Yield Curve Steepening E Position For Reflationary Yield Curve Steepening E Given BCA’s bullish oil forecast, we recommend positioning for higher inflation expectations and steeper yield curves in selected countries based on the above correlations. We are already doing this in the U.S., where we are running a long position in U.S. 10-year TIPS breakevens. This week, we are entering the following new positions in our Tactical Trade portfolio (see page 15): Long 10-year CPI swaps (or inflation-linked bonds versus nominal debt) in Germany A 2-year/10-year government bond curve steepener in Australia We are not confident enough about the growth outlook in Canada and Japan, and the political outlook in the U.K., to recommend inflation-focused trades in those markets at the present time. We recommend positioning for higher inflation expectations and steeper yield curves in selected countries. Bottom Line: Global growth indicators are starting to rebound, risk assets have returned to previous cyclical highs, and oil prices remain buoyant. This is a combination that will eventually result in rising developed market global bond yields, but more through higher inflation expectations that will bear-steepen yield curves. Stay below-benchmark on overall portfolio duration, but enter new reflationary trades in core Europe (long inflation breakevens) and Australia (yield curve steepeners). Upgrade EM U.S. Dollar Denominated Debt To Neutral Chart 8A Cyclical Rebound In China Is Underway A Cyclical Rebound In China Is Underway A Cyclical Rebound In China Is Underway Back in January, we upgraded our recommended allocation for global corporate debt to overweight, while downgrading developed market government bonds to underweight.1 That decision was in response to the Fed’s dovish turn, which lowered the risk of a monetary policy-induced U.S. recession that spooked investors in late 2018. Yet while a more accommodative Fed meant an extension of the U.S. business cycle expansion, it did not solve the problems of slowing growth elsewhere in the world – most notably in China and Europe. For that reason, we have maintained a preference for U.S. investment grade and high-yield corporate debt relative to European and EM spread product, even within an overall overweight recommended allocation to global corporates. In particular, we maintained an outright underweight stance on EM U.S. dollar denominated sovereigns and corporates within our model bond portfolio. That tilt served as a hedge to the risk of persistent softening growth in China – the nation to which EM economies remain most highly levered. It is the pickup in the China credit impulse that is most relevant for EM growth and asset markets. Now, amid signs that Chinese policy stimulus is starting to show up in faster credit growth – a reliable precursor to greater Chinese domestic demand (Chart 8) – that EM hedge to our overweight stance on global corporates is no longer needed. Thus, this week, we are upgrading our recommended exposure on EM USD-denominated sovereign and corporate debt to neutral, while reducing the size of our recommended overweight in U.S. investment grade corporates in our model bond portfolio (see the changes on page 14). The broadening rebound in Chinese economic data makes us more confident that growth there has turned the corner (Chart 9): Aggregate government spending is up 15.5% on a year-over-year basis. Infrastructure spending is now starting to grow again after the sharp slowdown seen in 2018. The China manufacturing PMI rose sharply in March, with the surge in the import sub-component of the overall PMI suggesting that domestic demand may be improving. In addition, with all signals pointing to a U.S./China trade deal being signed by the end of May, a major source of uncertainty weighing on the Chinese (and global) economy will soon be lifted. It is the pickup in the China credit impulse that is most relevant for EM growth and asset markets. Over the past decade, the credit impulse has led both the EM (ex-China) manufacturing PMI and annual growth in overall EM corporate earnings by around 9-12 months (Chart 10). The credit impulse bottomed back in October 2018, which means EM growth should begin to improve in the third quarter of 2019. Financial markets will discount that improvement in advance, however, which is why it makes sense to increase EM credit allocations today. Chart 9The Arrows Are Pointing 'Up' For Chinese Growth The Arrows Are Pointing 'Up' For Chinese Growth The Arrows Are Pointing 'Up' For Chinese Growth Chart 10EM Growth Is Highly Dependent On China EM Growth Is Highly Dependent On China EM Growth Is Highly Dependent On China   As can be seen in the bottom panels of Chart 11 and Chart 12, there is a strong correlation between Chinese credit (as a % of GDP) and the relative performance of EM U.S. dollar denominated spread product versus U.S. investment grade corporates. Our colleagues at BCA China Investment Strategy recently noted that if the pace of China’s credit expansion seen in Q1 were to be maintained over the rest of 2019, this would imply a credit overshoot beyond the stated medium-term goal of Chinese policymakers to avoid significant further increases in leverage.2 Such additional stimulus would very beneficial for EM growth (via strong Chinese import demand), supporting continued EM credit market outperformance. Chart 11Upgrade EM USD Sovereigns Vs U.S. IG Corporates Upgrade EM USD Sovereigns Vs U.S. IG Corporates Upgrade EM USD Sovereigns Vs U.S. IG Corporates Chart 12Upgrade EM USD Corporates Vs U.S. IG Corporates Upgrade EM USD Corporates Vs U.S. IG Corporates Upgrade EM USD Corporates Vs U.S. IG Corporates By moving our EM credit allocation only to neutral, we are merely responding to the pickup in Chinese credit growth seen over the past several months. The increasingly positive cyclical story is not yet bullish enough to justify a full-blown overweight stance on EM credit, however, for several reasons: Past periods of EM credit market outperformance have typically occurred during periods of U.S. dollar weakness. Chart 13A Weaker USD Is Good For EM Markets A Weaker USD Is Good For EM Markets A Weaker USD Is Good For EM Markets The amount of policy stimulus likely to be delivered in China in 2019 will be more limited than in past cycles, given policymakers’ concerns over high Chinese debt levels and excess industrial capacity. A U.S.-China trade deal may not involve the swift reduction in U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, if the White House chooses to use tariffs as the mechanism to ensure Chinese compliance with the terms of an agreement. “Hard data” in China that measures private sector spending (retail sales, autos sales, etc.) has yet to bottom, which may indicate that the improvement seen in the credit aggregates and survey data like the manufacturing PMI is overstating the growth rebound. The U.S. dollar remains firm, and past periods of EM credit market outperformance have typically occurred during periods of dollar weakness (Chart 13). We do anticipate moving to an overweight position sometime in the next several weeks, after getting more Chinese economic data to confirm the improvement seen in March. This also lines up with the timetable for a potential trade deal, the details of which will be critical for boosting investor sentiment towards assets sensitive to Chinese demand, like EM credit. We will also look for signs of the U.S. dollar breaking to the downside to confirm any decision to upgrade EM credit. One final point – we are only reducing our recommended overweight on U.S. investment grade credit in our model bond portfolio as part of this EM upgrade. We are leaving our U.S. high-yield credit overweights untouched, as U.S. investment grade is much closer to the spread targets laid out by our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy than U.S. high-yield. Bottom Line: Signs of a pickup in Chinese growth will be more supportive for growth in EM economies. Hedging against an extended downturn in China is no longer needed. Upgrade EM U.S. dollar denominated sovereign and corporate debt to neutral (3 of 5), at the expense of a smaller overweight position in U.S. investment grade corporates.   Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “Enough With The Gloom: Upgrade Global Corporates On A Tactical Basis”, dated January 15th, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “In The Wake Of An Upgrade: An Investment Strategy Post-Mortem”, dated April 17th, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index It's Time To Break Out The Fine China It's Time To Break Out The Fine China Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Portfolio Strategy China’s ongoing reflation trifecta, rising commodity prices, a back-half of the year global growth recovery, favorable balance sheet metrics and neutral valuations and technicals all signal that the cyclical vs. defensive outperformance phase has more running room. New home-related data releases have been a mixed bag lately and there are high odds that homebuilders have discounted all the good housing market news. Be prepared to book profits. Recent Changes There are no changes in our portfolio this week. Table 1 Updating Our SPX Target Updating Our SPX Target Feature The SPX hit fresh all-time closing highs last week, as declining profits were not as bad as previously feared. While economic and profit fundamentals remain soft at best, fear of missing out (FOMO) on the rally and proliferating talk of a melt up in stocks have provided the needed spark to fuel the recent equity breakout (Chart 1). Historically, both of these sentiment/anecdotal-type time series have led or coincided with temporary broad equity market peaks and we continue to believe that some short-term caution is still warranted. In other words, we would not chase this multiple expansion-driven market advance and specifically refrain from putting fresh capital to work (please refer to Charts 1 & 2 from last Monday’s Weekly Report)1. Moreover, the easy money on the “reflation trade” has already been made and now the risk/reward tradeoff is to the downside. Our Reflation Gauge (RG), comprising oil prices, the trade-weighted U.S. dollar and interest rates, is quickly losing steam and warns against extrapolating equity market euphoria far into the future (Chart 2). Chart 1Beware Melt Up And FOMO Narrative Beware Melt Up And FOMO Narrative Beware Melt Up And FOMO Narrative Chart 2Reflation Stalling Reflation Stalling Reflation Stalling As a reminder, crude oil prices are up over 50% from the nadir, the 10-year Treasury yield is up 25bps from the recent lows, and the greenback is on the cusp of a breakout in level terms. The implication from our decelerating RG is also consistent with a cautious equity market stance from a tactical perspective. But, on a cyclical 9-12 month time horizon we continue to have a sanguine equity market view as the U.S. will avoid recession and the Fed will likely stay on the sidelines. We recently updated the S&P 500 dividend payout for calendar 2018 and this week we are introducing our 3,150 SPX target for end-year 2020 derived via three methodologies: SPX dividend discount model (DDM), forward multiple/EPS sensitivity and forward equity risk premium (ERP) analysis. Table 2 summarizes our results. On a side note our end-year 2019 target remains unchanged since our mid-January update at 3,000.2 Table 2SPX Target Using Three Different Methods Updating Our SPX Target Updating Our SPX Target In all three ways we get a value of roughly 3,150 on the SPX, which serves as our end-year 2020 SPX target. In our DDM, we moved the recession to 2021 from 2020 previously, added a year to our 5-year rolling estimates and continue to conservatively assume no buybacks. With regard to the sensitivity analysis, our 2021 EPS estimate is $191, a discount to the $205 currently penciled in by the sell-side, and our base case calls for a 16.5x forward multiple. Finally, the bottom part of Table 2 shows our forward ERP assumptions. We lifted the equilibrium ERP from 200bps to 250bps given the recent setback it suffered and our 10-year Treasury yield also moved down 50bps to 3.5%. Consistent with our sensitivity analysis base case, the starting point is $191 2021 EPS. In all three ways we get a value of roughly 3,150 on the SPX, which serves as our end-year 2020 SPX target. (If you would like to receive our excel spreadsheet in order to adjust our assumptions please email our client requests department here). This week we update our cyclicals/defensives portfolio bent view and a set a stop sell order to an overweight early-cyclical niche subsector. Stick With Cyclicals Over Defensives, For Now Chart 3China… China… China… We were early and right in January when we posited that China’s slowdown was yesteryear’s story and more than discounted in the collapse of the U.S. cyclicals vs. defensives ratio (please refer to Chart 5 from the January 28 Weekly Report). Similarly, in early February when everyone was laser focused on the Fed’s January meeting, our report titled “Don’t Fight The PBoC” highlighted that the Chinese were serious about reflating their economy. The PBoC’s quasi-QE not only recapitalized the banks, but it also injected enormous liquidity into their financial system. The upshot was that U.S. cyclicals would reclaim the upper hand vs. defensives. Now as the story count for “China Slowdown” is coming down fast (story count shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 3) the question is how much of the looming Chinese recovery is currently priced in the V-shaped cyclical/defensives rebound? Our sense is that while most of the good news is largely reflected in the slingshot recovery in the relative share price ratio, there is some room left for additional gains. Financial variables are upbeat and signal that more gains are in store for the cyclicals/defensives ratio. China’s A-shares year-to-date have trounced the S&P already by a factor greater than 2:1 (in local currency terms, not shown). The MSCI China index is also outperforming the MSCI All-Country World Index (top panel, Chart 4). Sell-side analysts are in synchrony with the markets and they have been upgrading EPS estimates for the MSCI China index (top panel, Chart 5). Chart 4…Signals… …Signals… …Signals… Beyond the stock market, the FX market along with commodities are also underpinning relative share prices. The ADXY index (bottom panel, Chart 4) and the CRB metals index (bottom panel, Chart 5) are both moving in lockstep and suggest that commodity related profits will boost cyclicals at the expense of defensives. Chart 5…More Gains… …More Gains… …More Gains… Similarly, the broad trade-weighted U.S. dollar is no longer appreciating at the late-2018 breakneck pace and, at the margin, suggests that cyclicals profits will get an added boost from positive FX translation gains as they garner a larger slice of their revenue from international markets compared with mostly domestically-exposed defensives (U.S. dollar shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 6). Soft economic data have taken their cue from higher frequency financial market data and have also turned. China’s CAIXIN manufacturing PMI is above the 50 boom/bust line. The implication is that U.S. cyclicals’ profits will outshine U.S. defensives’ EPS (middle panel, Chart 6). Finally, monetary easing is ongoing on the Chinese front. The banks’ reserve-requirement-ratio is falling and so is the interbank lending rate as per SHIBOR (both shown inverted & advanced, top & middle panel, Chart 7). Given the trifecta of Chinese easing on the monetary, fiscal and credit front, it is inevitable that hard data will also soon turn. Chart 6…Are In Store For Cyclicals… …Are In Store For Cyclicals… …Are In Store For Cyclicals… Chart 7…At The Expense Of Defensives …At The Expense Of Defensives …At The Expense Of Defensives Chart 8Global LEI Diffusion Concurs Global LEI Diffusion Concurs Global LEI Diffusion Concurs Nevertheless, it is not only China that is emitting an unambiguously positive signal for the U.S. cyclicals/defensive ratio. BCA’s global leading economic indicator diffusion index is pushing 65%, underscoring that the majority of the countries we track showcase an improving economic outlook. As a reminder, BCA’s view remains that in the back half of the year global growth will pick up steam. Thus, under such a backdrop, cyclicals will continue to outperform defensives (Chart 8). Stick with a cyclical over defensive portfolio bent, but stay tuned. On the relative operating front, cyclicals are also flexing their muscles and crushing defensives. Since 1980 (the beginning of our dataset), the cyclical/defensive portfolio bent has followed relative return-on-assets (ROA). While over the decades there have been some divergences, this correlation has become extremely tight since early-2000. Currently, following the late-2015/early 2016 manufacturing recession, the relative ROA has jumped 400bps and is signaling that relative share prices are on a solid footing (Chart 9). Chart 9Relative ROA And… Relative ROA And… Relative ROA And… With regard to relative debt dynamics, cyclicals also have the upper hand. Net debt/EBITDA and EBIT/interest expense both show that the relative indebtedness favors cyclicals over defensives. While defensives are degrading their balance sheet, cyclicals are still repairing theirs in the aftermath of the recent manufacturing recession (Chart 10). Despite the year-to-date spike in relative share prices, relative valuations and technicals remain tame. Both our relative Valuation and Technical Indicators are timid, and remain below the respective historical averages (Chart 11). Chart 10…Indebtedness Suggests That Cyclicals Have the Upper Hand …Indebtedness Suggests That Cyclicals Have the Upper Hand …Indebtedness Suggests That Cyclicals Have the Upper Hand In sum, China’s ongoing reflation, rising commodity prices, a back-half of the year global growth recovery, favorable balance sheet metrics and neutral valuations and technicals all signal that the cyclical vs. defensive outperformance phase has more running room. Chart 11No Red Flags No Red Flags No Red Flags Bottom Line: Stick with a cyclical over defensive portfolio bent, but stay tuned. Is The Homebuilding Rally Sustainable? While we were slightly early in our upgrade of homebuilding stocks to overweight in late-September, this recommendation has generated alpha close to 10% for our portfolio. Nevertheless, some soft housing related data compel us to put this index on downgrade alert and, from a risk management perspective in order to protect gains, set a stop sell order near the 10% relative return mark. Just to be clear, this is not a negative call on residential real estate. Quite the opposite, housing market long-term drivers remain upbeat in the U.S. Chart 12 shows that household formation is still running higher than housing starts and building permits. This is a bullish industry supply/demand backdrop. Housing affordability, while not as sky-high as when house prices troughed in 2011/2012, remains above the historical mean and above previous peaks (second panel, Chart 12). Tack on still generationally low interest rates and there good odds that first-time home buyers will return to the residential real estate market. Finally, the labor market is as good as it gets with the unemployment rate plumbing multi-decade lows (unemployment rate shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 12). Job certainty and rising salaries are a healthy combination for housing market prospects. Beyond the positive structural housing market forces, some recent homebuilder specific data have also been positive. New home sales have surged and are now in expansionary territory (top panel, Chart 13). Similarly, the latest inventory data on new homes showed that newly built house inventories are whittled down, with the months’ supply metric falling by over one month (new house supply shown inverted, second panel, Chart 13). Chart 12Bullish Structural Housing Fundamentals Bullish Structural Housing Fundamentals Bullish Structural Housing Fundamentals Chart 13Select Positive… Select Positive… Select Positive… The 70bps drop in the 30-year fixed mortgage rate since November has shown up in rising mortgage purchase applications that have vaulted to multi-year highs (middle panel, Chart 13). Lumber, a key input cost for new home construction has melted of late and this building material cost relief is a boon for homebuilding margins.  True, new home prices are deflating and are an offset, but from an all-time high level and at a slower pace than lumber prices (fourth & bottom panels, Chart 13). One reason median new single family home prices are falling is that homebuilders are competing aggressively for market share with the existing stock of homes available for sale. Price concessions are paying dividends as relative volumes have spiked i.e. homebuilders are successfully grabbing market share (second & third panels, Chart 14). In absolute terms, S&P homebuilding sales are expanding at a healthy pace and the NAHB’s survey of future sales expectations point to a firming new home demand outlook (bottom panel, Chart 14). However, there are some macro headwinds that homebuilders will have to contend with in the back half of the year. While interest rates have fallen during the past six months, our fixed income strategists expect a selloff in the bond market, which, at the margin, will weigh on housing affordability (mortgage rate shown inverted, top panel,Chart 15). Chart 14…Homebuilding Data… …Homebuilding Data… …Homebuilding Data… Chart 15…But Two Key Risks Remain …But Two Key Risks Remain …But Two Key Risks Remain Netting it all out, housing related data have been a mixed bag of late and homebuilders have likely discounted most of the good housing market news. Thus, in order to protect profits we are setting a stop sell order near the 10% relative return mark. Already, bankers are making it slightly, but steadily, more difficult to get a mortgage loan (third panel, Chart 15). But, what worries us most is that according to the Fed Senior Loan Officer survey, demand for residential real estate loans has collapsed to a level last hit at the depths of the Great Recession. Historically, this bombed out demand indicator has been a precursor of a fall in relative share prices (second panel, Chart 15). Finally, actual mortgage loan origination is quickly decelerating (bottom panel, Chart 15) and short-term momentum is already contracting. Netting it all out, housing related data have been a mixed bag of late and homebuilders have likely discounted most of the good housing market news. Thus, in order to protect profits we are setting a stop sell order near the 10% relative return mark. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P homebuilding index, but we are putting it on our downgrade watch list. Be prepared to monetize gains on a pullback in relative share prices near the 10% return mark since inception. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME – PHM, DHI, LEN.   Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com     Footnotes 1      Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Mixed Signals” dated April 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2      Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Catharsis” dated January 14, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.   Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Highlights The recent dovish shift in tone from central banks around the world is here to stay this year, providing support for global growth. As a result, stock prices will benefit from a combination of easy policy and rebounding activity, while safe-haven yields will grind higher. The recent deterioration in profit margins is not due to rising costs but reflects weaknesses in pricing power. Pricing power is pro-cyclical: If global growth improves and the dollar weakens, margins should recover. Overweight financials and energy. We are upgrading European equities to neutral, and placing them on a further upgrade watch. Feature Easy Does It The global monetary environment has eased over the past four months. Some major central banks like the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Canada have backed away from tightening. Others, like the Bank of Japan, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand and the Swedish Riksbank have provided very dovish forward guidance. And one major policy setting institution – the European Central Bank – has even eased policy outright by announcing a large-scale injection of liquidity in the banking sector through its TLTRO-III operation that will begin in September. This phenomenon is not limited to advanced economies. Important EM central banks are also targeting easier liquidity conditions. The Reserve Bank of India has cut interest rates by 50 basis points; the Monetary Authority of Singapore is now targeting a flat exchange rate; and the Bank of Korea has issued a somewhat dovish forward guidance. Most importantly, Chinese policymakers are once again forcing debt through the system, with total social financing flows amounting to RMB 2.9 trillion last quarter, more than the RMB 2.4 trillion pumped through the economy in the first quarter of 2016. These reflationary efforts will bear fruit. Policy easing, especially when it relies as largely on forward guidance as the current wave does, should result in lower forward interest rates. And as Chart I-1 illustrates, when a large proportion of global forward rates are falling, a rebound in global economic activity typically follows. This time will not be different. Chart I-1Monetary Guardians Are Coming To The Rescue Monetary Guardians Are Coming To The Rescue Monetary Guardians Are Coming To The Rescue The S&P 500 and global equities have already rebounded by 18.9% and 17.2%, respectively since late December. Have markets already fully discounted the growth improvement that lies ahead, leaving them vulnerable to disappointments? Or do global stocks have more upside? While a rest may prove necessary, BCA anticipates that global equity prices have more upside over the coming 12 months. Are Central Banks About To Abandon Their Newfound Dovish Bias? We sincerely doubt it. Reversing the recent tone change soon would only hurt the battered credibility that central banks are fighting so hard to maintain. In the case of the U.S., the most recent FOMC minutes were clear: The Fed does not intend to tighten policy soon, even if growth remains decent. The minutes confirmed the idea we espoused last month, that FOMC members are focused on avoiding a Japan-like outcome for the U.S. where low expected inflation begets low realized inflation. Such an outcome would greatly increase the probability that an entrenched deflationary mindset develops in the U.S. in the next recession. As a result, we anticipate that the Fed will refrain from tightening policy until inflation expectations move back up toward their historical range (Chart I-2). Further justifying the Fed’s new stance, a small rebound in productivity is keeping unit labor costs at bay, despite a pick-up in wages. This is likely to put a lid on core inflation for now (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Inflation Expectations: Too Low For The FOMC's Comfort Inflation Expectations: Too Low For The FOMC's Comfort Inflation Expectations: Too Low For The FOMC's Comfort Chart I-3A Whiff Of Disinflation A Whiff Of Disinflation A Whiff Of Disinflation There is little reason for the ECB to adopt a more hawkish stance either. The euro area PMIs have stabilized but are still flirting with the boom/bust line. Realized core inflation is a paltry 0.8% and the ECB’s own forecast is inconsistent with its definition of price stability, which dictates that the inflation rate should be “below but close to 2% over the medium term.” Our ECB Monitor captures these dynamics, remaining in the neutral zone (Chart I-4).   In China, the case for quickly removing credit accommodation is weak. Property developer stocks have rebounded 41% from their October lows, but sales of residential floor space remain soft, keeping real estate speculation in check. Meanwhile, our proxy for the marginal propensity to consume of Chinese households – based on the ratio of demand deposits to time deposits – continues to deteriorate (Chart I-5). The recent pick up in credit growth should put a floor under those trends, but it will take some time before these variables overheat enough to call for policy tightening. Chart I-4Our ECB Monitor Supports An ECB Standing Still Our ECB Monitor Supports An ECB Standing Still Our ECB Monitor Supports An ECB Standing Still Chart I-5Key Domestic Variables Argue Against Tightening Policy In China Key Domestic Variables Argue Against Tightening Policy In China Key Domestic Variables Argue Against Tightening Policy In China   Bottom Line: The three most important policymakers in the world are not set to suddenly slam on the brake pedal. As a result, the global policy backdrop will remain accommodative for at least two to three quarters. The few economic green shoots observed around the world should therefore blossom into a full-fledge global growth pick-up. From Green Shoots To Green Gardens If central banks adopt an easier bias but global growth is slowing sharply without any end in sight, stock prices are unlikely to find a floor. After all, stock prices represent the discounted value of future cash flows. If those cash flows are expected to decline at a faster pace than the risk-free rate, then stock prices can fall – even if policy is becoming more accommodative. However, if economic activity is stabilizing, easier policy should generate substantial equity gains. Stimulative financial conditions will result in an improvement in global activity indicators, including emerging economies (Chart I-6, top panel). This is very important as emerging markets were at the epicenter of the slowdown in global trade, and because they historically lead global industrial activity (Chart I-6, bottom panel). The few economic green shoots observed around the world should therefore blossom into a full-fledge global growth pick-up. Policy easing in China is of particular significance. Our Chinese activity indicator is still slowing, but BCA’s Li-Keqiang Leading Indicator, which mostly tracks developments in the credit sector, has stabilized (Chart I-7, top panel). The rebound in the credit impulse also points to an acceleration in Chinese nominal manufacturing output (Chart I-7, bottom panel). This should lift Chinese imports, resulting in a positive growth impulse for the rest of the world. Chart I-6The Dance Of FCI And Activity The Dance Of FCI And Activity The Dance Of FCI And Activity Chart I-7Chinese Industrial Activity Will Rebound Soon Chinese Industrial Activity Will Rebound Soon Chinese Industrial Activity Will Rebound Soon   At the moment, the euro area remains weak, but it will become a key beneficiary of improving growth. As the top panel of Chart I-8 illustrates, the Eurozone’s exports to China tend to follow the trend in the Chinese Adjusted Total Social Financing impulse. Moreover, European exports to the rest of the world are set to enjoy a recovery, as highlighted by the upturn in the diffusion index of our Global Leading Economic Indicator (Chart I-8, bottom panel). This external-sector improvement is happening as the euro area domestic credit impulse is rebounding, and as the region’s fiscal thrust increases from roughly zero to 0.4% of GDP. In the U.S., it is unlikely that 2019 growth will top that of 2018, but activity should nonetheless rebound from a lukewarm first quarter. Importantly, the fed funds rate is holding below its equilibrium (Chart I-9). Additionally, household fundamentals remain solid. A tight labor market means that wages have upside and household debt levels and debt servicing costs are all well behaved relative to disposable income (Chart I-10). Moreover, housing dynamics are generally stronger than reported by the press, as mortgage applications for purchases are making cyclical highs and the NAHB Homebuilder confidence index is rebounding (Chart I-11). Offsetting some of these positives, capex intentions – a robust forecaster of actual corporate investments – have rolled over from their heady mid-2018 levels. Even so, they remain consistent with positive capex growth. Also, U.S. fiscal policy is becoming increasingly less growth-friendly starting in mid-2019. Netting it all out, U.S. growth should remain above-trend, at about 2.5%. Chart I-8Europe Will Benefit From Stabilizing Growth Elsewhere Europe Will Benefit From Stabilizing Growth Elsewhere Europe Will Benefit From Stabilizing Growth Elsewhere Chart I-9U.S. Policy Remains Accommodative U.S. Policy Remains Accommodative U.S. Policy Remains Accommodative   Chart I-10U.S. Households Are Doing Alright U.S. Households Are Doing Alright U.S. Households Are Doing Alright Chart I-11Forward-Looking Housing Indicators Point To A Pick-Up Forward-Looking Housing Indicators Point To A Pick-Up Forward-Looking Housing Indicators Point To A Pick-Up Bottom Line: While U.S. growth may be weaker than in 2018, it should not fall below trend. Meanwhile, Chinese credit trends suggest that growth there should clearly pick up in the coming months, which should also lead to stronger activity in Europe. In other words, exactly as central banks have removed policy constraints, global growth is set to re-accelerate. This is a positive backdrop for risk assets over the coming 12 months.   What Does It Mean For Asset Prices? Simply put, a dovish shift in policy along with a tentative stabilization in growth should result in both higher stock prices and rising safe-haven bond yields. First, a rebound in global economic activity means that depressed profit growth expectations could easily be bested (Chart I-12, top panel). Bottom-up estimates point to EPS growth of 3.4% in the U.S. and 5.3% in the rest of the world in 2019, using MSCI data. However, profits are extremely pro-cyclical, and a combination of easy financial conditions and improving growth conditions in the second half of the year should result in better-than-expected earnings. Chart I-12Profit Expectations Are Low Profit Expectations Are Low Profit Expectations Are Low Second, the Fed is extending its pause, as other global central banks are also adopting more accommodative policies. This implies that global real interest rates, both at the short- and long-end of the curve, will remain below equilibrium for longer than would have been the case if policy had remained on its previous path. Consequently, not only do lower real rates decrease the discount factor for stocks, they also imply a longer business cycle expansion. This should result in narrower risk premia for stocks and higher multiples. Since they offer cheaper valuations than those in the U.S., international equities may stand to benefit more from policy-led multiple expansion (Chart I-12, bottom panel). Third, the global duration indicator developed by BCA’s Global Fixed Income Strategy service is forming a bottom.1 This gauge – levered to global growth variables like the Global ZEW growth expectations survey, our Global Leading Economic Indicator and the Global LEI’s diffusion index – has perked up in response to green shoots around the globe. An upturn in global safe-haven yields is imminent (Chart I-13). Additionally, the global Policy Uncertainty Index is currently recording very high readings, congruent with depressed yields (Chart I-14). A benign resolution to the Sino-U.S. trade tensions along with the low likelihood of the implementation of a No-Deal Brexit should push this indicator down, lifting yields in the process. Chart I-13Global Dynamics Argue For Fading The Bond Rally Global Dynamics Argue For Fading The Bond Rally Global Dynamics Argue For Fading The Bond Rally Chart I-14Policy Uncertanity Is At An Apex: Look The Other Way Policy Uncertanity Is At An Apex: Look The Other Way Policy Uncertanity Is At An Apex: Look The Other Way   Fourth, while we expect the Fed to stay on pause for the remainder of 2019 and probably through the lion’s share of 2020 as well, this is a more hawkish forecast than what the market is currently pricing in (Chart I-15). As we argued last month, a fed funds rate that turns out to be higher over the next year than what is currently discounted often results in the underperformance of Treasurys relative to cash. Finally, a rebound in global growth, even if the Fed proves more hawkish than the market anticipates, generally pushes the dollar lower (Chart I-16). Since speculators currently hold large net short bets on the euro, the AUD, the CAD, and so on, the probability is high that this historical pattern will assert itself. The recent period of dollar strength is unlikely to last more than a couple of weeks. A weak dollar, easy policy and rebounding growth should boost commodity prices, especially metals and oil. The latter should benefit most from this set up as the end of the waivers of U.S. sanctions on Iran will constrain the availability of crude in international markets. Chart I-15 Chart I-16The Dollar Last Hurrah Will End Very Soon The Dollar Last Hurrah Will End Very Soon The Dollar Last Hurrah Will End Very Soon   Rebounding global growth should also allow equity prices to be resilient in the face of rising bond yields, up to a point. When yields and inflation expectations are low, multiples and equity prices tend to move in tandem. This is because in an environment where central banks are frightened by deflationary risks, monetary authorities do not lift rates as quickly as nominal activity would warrant. Thus, improving nominal growth lifts the growth component of equity multiples more than it raises yields. In other words, we expect yields and stocks to rise together because low but rising inflation expectations, but not surging real rates, will drive the upside in bond yields. Obviously, this cannot last forever. Once the Fed starts suggesting that rates will rise again, and the entire yield curve moves closer to neutral, higher yields will curtail equity advances. This is a constructive cyclical setup; but the tactical environment is murkier. The problem is that equity prices have already moved up significantly over the past four months. With volatility across asset classes having once again plunged toward historical lows, risk assets display a high degree of vulnerability to disappointing economic data. This means that unless growth rebounds strongly and quickly, stocks could experience a short-term correction in the coming months. While staying overweight equities, it is nonetheless prudent to buy some protection. Investors should also wait on the sidelines to deploy any excess cash. Rebounding global growth should also allow equity prices to be resilient in the face of rising bond yields, up to a point. Bottom Line: The current environment is favorable for risk assets on a cyclical basis. Low real rates will not only continue to nurture the nascent improvement in the global economy. They also imply lower discount rates. Meanwhile, improving economic activity and a decline in policy uncertainty will push safe-haven yields higher. Consequently, it remains sensible to be long stocks and underweight bonds for the remainder of the year, even if the risk of a short-term stock correction has risen. Within fixed-income portfolios, a below-benchmark duration makes sense, especially as oil prices are rising, Sino-U.S. trade negotiations should end in a benign outcome, and a No-Deal Brexit remains unlikely. Margins Are The Greatest Risk At the current juncture, the biggest risk for stocks is that profits fall short of depressed analysts’ estimates for 2019 – not because revenue growth disappoints, but because profit margins contract. Our U.S. Equity Sector Strategy service has recently highlighted that the S&P 500 operating earnings margin stands at 10.1% after having peaked at 12% in Q3 2018 (Chart I-17).2 Despite this decline, margins remain both elevated by historical standards and above their long-term upward-sloping trend. As Chart I-18 illustrates, the decline in margins is not an S&P 500-only phenomenon: It is an economy wide one as well, as the pattern is repeated using national accounts data. Chart I-17Will This Margin Deterioration Continue? Will This Margin Deterioration Continue? Will This Margin Deterioration Continue? Chart I-18Margins: All About Labor Costs Versus Selling Prices Margins: All About Labor Costs Versus Selling Prices Margins: All About Labor Costs Versus Selling Prices   At first glance, the Fed’s current pause may undermine profit margins. As Chart I-19 shows, when the unemployment rate stands below NAIRU, on average, wages grow faster than when the labor market is not at full employment. Since the unemployment gap stands as -0.8% today, we are likely to see continued wage pressures in the U.S. economy. Chart I-19Wages Have Upside Wages Have Upside Wages Have Upside The problem with this story is that productivity has been accelerating – from a -0.3% annual rate in the second quarter of 2016 to 1.8% in the fourth quarter of 2018. Because wage inflation did not experience as large a change, unit labor cost inflation is still growing at 1% annually, as they did in Q2 2016. In fact, real unit labor costs are currently contracting at a 0.4% pace. The pick-up in capex over the past three years suggests that productivity can continue to improve over the coming quarters. Consequently, as has been the case over the past two years, rising wages will only have a limited negative impact on margins. The key source of variance in profit margins has been, and will likely remain over the next year or so, corporate pricing power, which today stands at its lowest level since the deflationary episode of 2015-2016 (Chart I-20). As was the case back then, the slowdown in global growth has played a role, since it has resulted in falling global export prices. Not only do they affect foreign revenues for U.S. businesses, they also impact the price of goods sold at home, and thus have a broad impact on aggregate pricing power. Chart I-20Pricing Power Follows The Global Business Cycle Pricing Power Follows The Global Business Cycle Pricing Power Follows The Global Business Cycle Last year’s dollar strength amplified those headwinds. A strengthening dollar affects profitability through four channels. First, it negatively impacts global growth by tightening financial conditions for foreign borrowers who fund themselves in USD. They are thus more financially constrained when the dollar appreciates. Second, a strong dollar hurts commodity prices and industrial goods prices. Third, a strong dollar negatively impacts the competitiveness of U.S. firms, forcing them to cut their prices to stay competitive. Finally, a strong dollar hurts the translation of overseas earnings back into USDs. As a result, a strong dollar weighs on earnings estimates (Chart I-21).   Chart I-21The Dollar Amplified Margins Problems The Dollar Amplified Margins Problems The Dollar Amplified Margins Problems Since we anticipate global growth to improve and the greenback to buckle, the current pricing power problem faced by corporate America should fade and profit margins should rebound in the second half of 2019. This suggests that for now, declining profit margins remain a risk that needs to be monitored – not a base case to embrace. Our U.S. Equity Sector Strategy service has highlighted that the tech sector has the poorest earnings outlook within the S&P 500. An economic upswing could counteract some of the recent declines in tech margins, but the much more pronounced rise in labor costs in Silicon Valley than in other sectors suggests that tech profits could lag behind other heavyweights like financials and energy. Consequently, BCA recommends a neutral allocation to tech stocks. We instead recommend overweighting financials and the energy sector. Financials will benefit from an easy monetary policy setting that should help credit growth. Moreover, net interest margins are at cycle highs of 3.5%, as banks have prevented interest costs on deposits from rising in line with short rates. Finally, buybacks by financial services firms are rising and will likely battle the tech sector’s buybacks for the pole position this year (Chart I-22).3 Chart I-22Why Are We Neutral On Tech? Why Are We Neutral On Tech? Why Are We Neutral On Tech? Our positive stance on energy stems from undue pessimism surrounding the sector. Bottom-up analysts currently pencil in such a large contraction in earnings for this group that, according to their forecasts, energy will curtail 2019 S&P 500 earnings by 18%. With WTI prices back above $65/bbl, rising per-well productivity and easing financing costs, the hurdle to beat is already low. Moreover, the end of U.S. waivers on Iranian sanctions further supports oil prices. In this context, if global growth rebounds and the dollar depreciates, energy stocks could catch fire. Bottom Line: The biggest risk to our positive stance on equities is that earnings are dragged down by declining margins. While the recent softness in margins is concerning, it does not reflect an increase in labor costs. Instead, it is a consequence of eroding pricing power. Falling pricing power is itself a symptom of the slowdown in global growth and a stronger dollar. As both these ills pass, margins should recover in the second half of 2019. Within equities, we prefer financials and energy, as their earnings prospects outshine tech stocks. Upgrading European Equities To Neutral, And Looking For More For equity investors competing against a global benchmark, there is a simple way to express the view that global growth will rebound, safe-haven yields have upside, the dollar will weaken, and that profit margins are a risk to monitor. It is to abandon underweight allocations to European equities and overweight positions to U.S. stocks. This month, we are upgrading European equities to neutral and downgrading U.S. stocks to neutral. Even after this upgrade, we are putting European equities on a further upgrade watch. First, the euro area is much more sensitive than the U.S. to Chinese growth. This also has implication for equities. As Chart I-23 shows, when the ratio of M1 to M2 money supply in China perks up, as it is currently doing, European stocks end up outperforming their U.S. counterparts. This is because the M1-to-M2 ratio ultimately reflects the growth of demand deposits relative to savings deposits in the Chinese banking sector. It therefore informs how spending is likely to evolve. Currently, China’s reflationary efforts point toward a pickup in spending that should lift European exports, and European profits as well. Chart I-23Monetary Dynamics In China Favor Fading Euro Area Bearishness Monetary Dynamics In China Favor Fading Euro Area Bearishness Monetary Dynamics In China Favor Fading Euro Area Bearishness Second, European exports have upside, and unsurprisingly, the bottoming in the BCA Boom/Bust indicator – which captures global growth dynamics beyond just China – is also flagging the end of European equity underperformance (Chart I-24, top panel). Moreover, if the global reflationary period is sustained, the decline in forward interest rates will reverse. This too is consistent with a period of outperformance for European equities (Chart I-24, bottom panel). Third, our overweight stance on financials relative to tech equates to European equities beating their U.S. counterparts. This simply reflects the fact that financials constitute 17.9% of the MSCI euro area index, while tech stocks account for 9.2%. The same sectors represent 12.9% and 26.8% of the U.S. market, respectively. Not only are European banks trading at 0.6-times book value compared to 1.2-times for U.S. lenders, but European banks stand to benefit more than U.S. banks from rising bond yields as they garner a larger share of their income from lending activity. Fourth, European profit margins are toward the bottom third of their distribution relative to U.S. profit margins. As Chart I-25 shows, European profit margins tend to rise when euro area unit labor costs lag U.S. ones. Since the euro area output gap is not as positive as that of the U.S., it is unlikely that European wages will outpace U.S. wages this year. Also, since European stocks are more heavily weighted toward industrials, materials and energy, the sectors that suffered the greatest loss of pricing power during the global economic slowdown, pricing power in Europe could rebound more strongly than in the U.S. This too should flatter European profit margins relative to the U.S. Chart I-24European Equities To Benefit From Rebounding Global Growth European Equities To Benefit From Rebounding Global Growth European Equities To Benefit From Rebounding Global Growth Chart I-25European Profit Margins Can Experience A Further Cyclical Lift European Profit Margins Can Experience A Further Cyclical Lift European Profit Margins Can Experience A Further Cyclical Lift   Finally, even after adjusting for sectoral composition, European equities trade at a discount to U.S. stocks. On an equal-sector basis, the 12-month forward P/E ratio is 14.2, and the price-to-book ratio is 2.0. For the U.S., the same multiples stand at 20.7 and 4.0, respectively. This means that European stocks are not yet pricing in an improving outlook. Be warned: The positive outlook for European equities relative to the U.S. is a cyclical story. As Section II of this report argues, poor demographics and an excessively large capital stock suggest that European rates of return will continue to lag the U.S. As a result, the return from investing in European stocks is unlikely to beat that of the U.S. beyond 12 to 18 months. Bottom Line: Within a global equity portfolio, we are upgrading the euro area from underweight to neutral at the expense of the U.S., which moves to neutral. We are also putting European equities on a further upgrade watch. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst April 25, 2019 Next Report: May 30, 2019 II. Europe: Here I Am, Stuck In A Liquidity Trap An aging population, a banking sector in poor health, and a private sector focused on building up savings are the key factors undermining euro area growth on a structural basis. A large manufacturing sector makes the euro area vulnerable to EM competition. Unlike the U.S., the region’s tech sector is held back by regulatory burdens, taxes and heavy dependence on bank funding. The euro area growth faces decades of low growth and inflation. Euro area rates will stay depressed, but paradoxically, the euro can still experience structural appreciation. Euro area equities are cheap for a good reason, and banks will continue to weigh on performance. Over the past 10 years, the euro area has gone through a sovereign debt crisis, a double-dip recession, persistent below-target inflation, and most recently, yet another major growth slowdown. Moreover, this economic malaise materialized despite highly stimulative monetary policy, including negative interest rates. The ongoing economic weakness has raised the specter that the euro area is the new Japan. Nearly three decades after the bursting of the Nikkei bubble, the Land of the Rising Sun remains mired in low growth and mild but persistent deflation. Consequently, charts showing that European policy rates or bond yields are tracking Japanese developments with a 17-year lag (Chart II-1) have not only become commonplace, they elicit fears that European growth, interest rates and asset valuations will lag the rest of the world for decades to come. Chart II-1Europe Is Following The Japanese Example Europe Is Following The Japanese Example Europe Is Following The Japanese Example In this piece, we discuss the various forces that explain why the euro area economy has been so weak this decade, and why such low interest rates have had so little impact on growth. We also study what sets the U.S. and euro area apart, and whether or not Europe will follow the trail blazed by Japan nearly 30 years ago. The Three Headwinds Three ills have kept European growth particularly depressed this cycle and are likely to remain significant headwinds into the foreseeable future: demographics, the banking sector’s poor health, and nonfinancial private sector balance sheet cleansing. 1)   Demographics This is the most well understood and acknowledged problem impacting Europe today. Since 2008, the European population has grown by 2%, or only 0.2% a year, with the working age population having peaked around that year. Going forward, the picture will only deteriorate: The UN expects Europe’s population to contract by 12% over the next 27 years, and the working age population to fall by 15%. This also means that the dependency ratio – the number of individuals aged less than 15 and above 65 per 100 working-age people – will approximately double over the coming 40 years. This is a clear parallel with Japan. As Chart II-2 illustrates, Europe’s population, the number of working-age individuals and the dependency ratio are all tracking Japan with a 17-year lag. Like Japan, Europe’s trend growth will thus only deteriorate further. Not only will Europe not be able to add as many workers as the U.S. to its total, but it will need to build even fewer schools, malls, office buildings or units of housing. Consequently, both the supply and demand sides of the economy will lag due to this factor alone. 2)   Banking Sector Health The poor health of the euro area banking sector is well known. BCA’s Global Asset Allocation service published an in-depth analysis of the European banking sector last December.4 The piece demonstrated that European banks have been much slower to recognize non-performing loans, curtail credit and rebuild capital than their U.S. counterparts. U.S. bank loans to the private sector fell by 13% in the two years during the crisis, while in Europe, these same loans have only fallen by 2% since 2008. Euro area banks generally remain burdened with significant non-performing loans as a percentage of regulatory capital. Moreover, net interest margins are also dismal, implying that the income cushion against bad loans is thin. Consequently, outside of France, Finland and Germany, European banks have either not grown their loan books to the private sector or, as is the case with Spain, Portugal, and Ireland, these books are continuously shrinking (Chart II-3). Chart II-2Same Demography In Europe Now Than In Japan Then Same Demography In Europe Now Than In Japan Then Same Demography In Europe Now Than In Japan Then Chart II-3Peripheral Banks Continue To Curtail Credit Peripheral Banks Continue To Curtail Credit Peripheral Banks Continue To Curtail Credit   The poor health of the European banking system is now constraining the supply of new credit to the rest of the economy. This is a much bigger problem than is the case in the U.S. given that in Europe, 72% of corporate funding comes from the banking system while 88% of household liabilities are also funded this way. In the U.S., the share of bank funding for these sectors is 32% and 29%, respectively (Chart II-4). A weak euro area banking system prevents the nonfinancial private sector from growing as robustly as it could. Chart II-4 3)   Nonfinancial Private Sector Balance Sheet Cleanse Another major drag on European growth has been the continued efforts of the European private sector to rebuild its balance sheet. To use the terminology developed by our upcoming conference speaker Richard Koo, the euro area has been in the thralls of a powerful balance sheet recession. Households in the euro area, Japan and the U.S. are all accumulating more financial assets than liabilities. However, only in the U.S. is the nonfinancial corporate sector building more liabilities than it is accumulating assets (Chart II-5). In Japan and Europe, the nonfinancial corporate sector is also a source of savings for the economy. Moreover, in Europe, the government runs a much smaller financial deficit. The current account balance tells this story vividly. A country’s current account is equal to the private sector’s savings minus investment and minus government deficits. As Italy, Spain, and other peripheral economies increased their aggregate savings after 2008, their large current account deficits vanished. Meanwhile, the governments of countries like Germany or the Netherlands, which sported healthy public finances, did not increase their spending in a commensurate way. This adjustment transformed an overall euro area current account deficit of 1.5% in 2008 into a surplus of 3.0% of GDP today, sending some of Europe’s excess savings abroad. This mimics the post-1990 Japanese experience. In the U.S., where the private sector savings did not rise as durably as in Europe, the current account stopped improving meaningfully in 2010 (Chart II-6). Chart II-5European Businesses Are Savers, Like In Japan European Businesses Are Savers, Like In Japan European Businesses Are Savers, Like In Japan Chart II-6The Current Account Dynamics Epitomise The Savings Dynamics The Current Account Dynamics Epitomise The Savings Dynamics The Current Account Dynamics Epitomise The Savings Dynamics   A private sector squarely focused on rebuilding its balance sheet liquidity can lead to a liquidity trap. In this state, monetary policy can become ineffective as spending does not respond to lower interest rates. This is where Europe is currently stuck, explaining why the European Central Bank is finding that inflation and growth are not experiencing much lift, despite seemingly incredibly accommodative monetary conditions. Why Such An Urge To Save? The fact that the household sector is a net saver is not surprising, as this is a normal state of affairs across most economies. But why is the European nonfinancial corporate sector still trying to improve its balance sheet liquidity by accumulating more assets than liabilities? Like Japanese businesses 30 years ago, European firms have large debt loads. Another problem is the lack of capex opportunities in Europe. Why do we make this assertion? The return on assets in Europe has been at rock-bottom levels ever since the introduction of the euro (Chart II-7). In the decade from 1998 to 2008, this was a non-issue. Strong global growth flattered European sales, and easy access to credit meant that via rising leverage euro area-listed nonfinancial corporations were able to generate returns on equity comparable to U.S. firms (Chart II-8, top panel). Once European banks got cold feet and European nonfinancial businesses began focusing on deleveraging, the low level of return on assets became more apparent. Part of the problem is that European profit margins are much closer to Japanese than U.S. levels (Chart II-8, middle panel). Even more damning, asset turnover – how much sales are generated by a unit of assets – has been structurally lower in Europe than in both Japan and the U.S. for multiple decades (Chart II-8, bottom panel). Chart II-7Europe Suffers From A Lower RoA Europe Suffers From A Lower RoA Europe Suffers From A Lower RoA Chart II-8DuPont's Decomposition Shows Why The Euro Area RoA Is Poor DuPont's Decomposition Shows Why The Euro Area RoA Is Poor DuPont's Decomposition Shows Why The Euro Area RoA Is Poor   The first factor weighing on the level of asset utilization and returns in Europe is the elevated level of capital stock. As Chart II-9 illustrates, the capital stock as a share of output in Italy, Spain and France dwarfs that of Japan, China or the U.S. Even Germany’s capital stock, which stands well below that of other large euro area economies, is nearly 100 percentage points of GDP larger than the U.S’s. Europe has too large a pool of assets to make any additional investments profitable, especially in light of its poor demographic profile. Chart II-9 The second factor weighing on European asset utilization and returns is the poorer level of labor productivity. From the 1950s to the early 1980s, European GDP per worker rose relative to the U.S., albeit peaking at 92% of the levels across the Atlantic. Due to falling working hours in Europe relative to the U.S. since the 1980s, relative output per hour continued to rise until the mid-1990s, peaking at 105% of the U.S. level. However, since their respective zeniths, both relative productivity measures have collapsed (Chart II-10, top panel). Chart II-10Another Symptom Of Europe's Misallocation Of Capital In The 2000s Another Symptom Of Europe's Misallocation Of Capital In The 2000s Another Symptom Of Europe's Misallocation Of Capital In The 2000s These collapses are in fact worse than Japan’s performance since its lost decades began. As the second panel of the chart shows, since the early 1990s, Japan’s relative output per hour and per worker have flattened – not declined – at around 65% and 72%, respectively, of U.S. levels. Instead, relative European productivity levels are currently converging toward Japanese levels (Chart II-10, third and fourth panels). The particularly poor level of European asset utilization and productivity principally reflects the duality between the peripheral as well as French economies on one side, and Germany as well as the Netherlands on the other side. The exceptionally large capital stock outside of Germany is a legacy of the years directly after the euro’s introduction. Back then, the ECB kept rates low to help Germany, the then-sick man of Europe. These rates were too low for the rest of Europe, encouraging large capital stock build-ups. Moreover, this capital was misallocated, as demonstrated by the tepid growth of output per hour and output per capita in Europe post 2000. Since funds were poorly allocated, the output-to-capital ratio in the periphery collapsed. In other words, the peripheral capital-stock-to-GDP ratios continued rising because the denominator, GDP, lagged. An additional problem for Europe’s asset utilization has been its large manufacturing sector. Even after declining, 20% of Europe’s GDP still comes from the secondary sector versus less than 12% in the U.S. (Chart II-11). This has two consequences for Europe’s asset utilization relative to the U.S. First, a large manufacturing sector requires a much larger asset base than a large service or tech sector. Second, the manufacturing sector is more exposed to competition from emerging markets than the tech sector, or than the domestically-focused service sector. Chart II-11Europe Is Left Exposed To EM Competition Europe Is Left Exposed To EM Competition Europe Is Left Exposed To EM Competition In other words, not only has the U.S. experienced less capital misallocation than a large swath of the European economy, it has also re-aligned its economy to make it more robust in the face of competition from emerging economies, while Europe mostly has not. Consequently, hurt by foreign competition and unable or unwilling to re-invent itself, Europe has been left with dwindling relative productivity levels and poor degrees of asset utilization and returns. Why Did The U.S. Economy Transition Better than Europe To A Globalized World? There are many reasons why the U.S. has maintained higher RoAs and has been more successful at transitioning away from a manufacturing-led economy than the euro area. Europe has too large a pool of assets to make any additional investments profitable, especially in light of its poor demographic profile. First, the level of product and service market regulation in Europe is highly punitive. As Chart II-12 illustrates, like Japan, most euro area countries fare poorly in the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business survey. In fact, Italy scores even lower than China! Meanwhile, the U.S. ranks near the top, not far from Singapore. This means that starting new businesses, competing, and so on is easier in the U.S. than in Europe, helping foster a greater level of entrepreneurialism. Consequently, established businesses have been able to maintain the status quo longer in Europe than in the U.S., preventing creative destruction from purging the system of bad assets. Chart II-12 Second, most large euro area economies are burdened by heavy taxes. As Chart II-13 shows, while the U.S. public sector extracts taxes equal to 27.1% of GDP, German, Italian and French taxes equal 37.5%, 42.4% and 46.2% of GDP, respectively, well above the OECD average of 34.2%. Such high levels of taxation disincentivize risk-taking. Lower levels of risk taking by individuals further prevented the degree of creative destruction necessary for Europe to better use its capital stock. Chart II-13 Third, and linked to the previous point, government spending equals 34.9% of GDP in the U.S., compared to 48.2% and 56.0% in Italy or France, respectively. A large government has historically stifled innovation and favored the status quo. By no means does this implies that the U.S. system is free of imbalances, but it highlights that compared to two of the three largest European economies, the U.S. public sector has had a less deleterious impact on growth conditions and entrepreneurialism. Moreover, Italy and France have been in deep need of structural reforms that have been lacking. On this front, while the outlook is improving in France under Macron’s presidency, Italy remains mired in immobilism. Fourth, the financing structure in the U.S. favors investing in new businesses and industries, especially when compared to the euro area. Equities represent 78% of the capital structure of nonfinancial corporations in the U.S. while they represent only 61% in the euro area. Moreover, within debt-financing, capital markets account for 68% of sourced funds in the U.S. compared to 28% in the euro area. In fact, junk bond market capitalization only accounts for 2.2% of GDP in Europe compared to 6.0% in the U.S. This suggests that financing risky ventures – and entrepreneurialism is inherently risky – is tougher in Europe than in the U.S. In fact, as a share of GDP, the European venture capital business is less than a sixth the size of the U.S.’s (Chart II-14), a gap that has existed for more than 30 years. Chart II-14U.S. Financing Allows For Greater Risk Taking U.S. Financing Allows For Greater Risk Taking U.S. Financing Allows For Greater Risk Taking With all these hurdles, it is unsurprising that Europe has taken more time to make its economy more dynamic in the globalized economy of the 21st century. It also explains why Europe might be suffering more from EM competition than the U.S. Interestingly, this last point may be changing as U.S. voters seem to want to move back toward a larger manufacturing sector. This transition is unlikely to happen without more protectionism. This is a topic for another report. Is Europe Doomed To Japanification… Or Worse? It is easy to see why Europe cannot hope to grow as fast as the U.S., and therefore why the ECB will not be able to lift rates as high as the Fed and why bund yields are likely to lag Treasurys for years to come. Europe has a much more dire demographic profile than the U.S. It needs to purge its capital stock and invigorate its economy through reforms, a smaller public sector, and more diversified financing channels. But can the euro area fare better than Japan has over the past 30 years? On three fronts, the euro area looks better than Japan. First, as Chart II-15 shows, the overall European nonfinancial private sector entered its crisis in 2008 with lower leverage than Japan’s in the early 1990s. Additionally, European stocks were much cheaper in 2007 than the Nikkei was in 1989 (Chart II-16, top panel). Even Spanish real estate was more reasonably valued in 2007 than Japanese real estate in the early 1990s (Chart II-16, bottom panel). This combination means that now that the acute part of the crisis is over, the hole in the European private sector’s balance sheet is much smaller than the one Japan needed to plug 30 years ago. Thus, from a balance-sheet perspective, the need to rebuild savings is lower in Europe than Japan, and we could expect the current period of elevated savings to be shorter in the euro area than it has been in Japan. Chart II-15 Chart II-16...And European Assets Were Not As Expensive As Japanese Ones At The Onset Of The Crisis ...And European Assets Were Not As Expensive As Japanese Ones At The Onset Of The Crisis ...And European Assets Were Not As Expensive As Japanese Ones At The Onset Of The Crisis   Second, despite former ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet’s policy mistake of raising interest rates in 2011, the ECB was much quicker to implement extreme easing policy measures than the Bank of Japan was in its day. It took 10 years for the BoJ to cut rates to zero after the Nikkei peaked in December 1989. It took one year for the ECB to do so after stock prices peaked in 2007. It took nine years for the BoJ to expand its balance sheet aggressively, but it took less than two years for the ECB to do so. One of the key benefits of this greater European proactivity has been to keep European inflation expectations much higher than in Japan, curtailing real interest rates in the process. Third, Europe purged economic excesses much more quickly than Japan. The Japanese unemployment rate increased from 2% to 6% between 1990 and 2010. In peripheral Europe, where the worst pre-crisis excesses existed, unemployment rose from 7.5% in 2008 to 18% in 2013 (Chart II-17, top panel). Meanwhile, real wages never adjusted in Japan, but fell 27.0% at their worst in Spain and 32.5% in Greece (Chart II-17, bottom panel). Moreover, the Rajoy reforms in Spain and the Macron reforms in France show that outside of Italy, European governments have been reforming their economies faster than Japan did after the bubble burst in 1990. Chart II-17Bigger Labor Market Purge In Europe Than Japan Bigger Labor Market Purge In Europe Than Japan Bigger Labor Market Purge In Europe Than Japan However, on three fronts Europe is faring worse than Japan. First, up until the last 10 years, Japan benefited from a robust global economy where trade grew strongly. Europe is entering its second decade of low growth in an environment where global economic activity is much weaker, as potential U.S. GDP growth has slowed and China is not growing at a double-digit pace anymore. Moreover, budding protectionism in the U.S. is creating another hurdle for European economic output. Second, the excess capital stock in the European periphery is in fact greater than was the case in Japan in 1990. This suggests that the periphery needs to curtail investments by a greater margin than Japan did. Consequently, peripheral growth will continue to exert downward pressure on aggregate European activity for an extended period. Third, the European fiscal response will not match Japan’s. Investors often decry Japan’s large government debt of 238.2% of GDP as a sign of profligacy. It is not. It is mainly a mirror image of the private sector’s savings surplus. The Japanese government’s ability to run large deficits has prevented a larger fall in output – one that would have equaled the annual savings of the private sector. Without the government’s dissaving, the Japanese private sector would have found its debt load even more onerous to service, and the need to curtail spending would have been even greater as economy-wide cash flows would have been even smaller. Europe does not have a unified fiscal authority that can run such large-scale deficits. Instead, each nation’s government has a limited capacity to accumulate debt as investors worry that overly-indebted governments may very well redenominate what they have borrowed in much weaker currencies than the euro. This risk is made even greater by the fact that there is no euro-area wide deposit insurance scheme. Since Italian and Spanish banks hold large amounts of BTPs and Bonos, respectively, a so-called doom-loop exists that links the health of banks in those countries to the health of their governments, further limiting the public sector’s ability to act as a spender of last resort. This makes the efforts of the private sector in Italy, France, and Spain to increase its savings and bring down its excess capital stock more difficult, and thus, likely to last longer. Even if 10 years after the crisis first emerged, Europe has done more to purge its economy from its pre-crisis excesses than Japan had after its first lost decade, a lack of unified fiscal lever in Europe nullifies this positive. Thus, so long as the European integration efforts remain on the backburner, euro area growth, inflation, and interest rates will continue to look more like Japan’s have over the past 30 years than the U.S. This is likely to cause a big problem once the next recession emerges. Europe will enter that slowdown without any ammunition to reflate growth. Therefore, the next recession is likely to prove very deflationary and test the recent improvement in support for the euro seen across all euro area nations (Chart II-18). If the euro area survives this crisis, and we suspect it will, the probability of a fiscal union will only grow.2 After all, it has been through various crises that Europe has moved closer together, and the rise of a multipolar geopolitical environment dominated by large countries makes this imperative ever more vital. Chart II-18Support For The Euro Is Resilient Support For The Euro Is Resilient Support For The Euro Is Resilient Bottom Line: We expect European growth and inflation to continue to lag well behind the U.S. for years to come if not a full decade. Ultimately, bringing down the expensive capital stock in the European periphery will be a slow process, especially if governments remain tight fisted. Investment Implications First, core euro area interest rates are likely to remain well below U.S. levels. As long as the European private sector pares back investments in order to normalize its capital stock-to-GDP ratio - a phenomenon that will be most pronounced in the periphery and France - European growth and inflation will lag behind the U.S. This also means that as long as European governments remain shy spenders and do not compensate for the lack of spending from the private sector, in the euro area periphery, European banks will suffer from depressed net interest margins and be structural underperformers. Second, the euro is likely to experience a structural upward drift. The euro is trading at a 10.5% discount to its purchasing power parity. Moreover, high private sector savings not only weigh on inflation, they will also push Europe’s net international investment position higher via an accumulated current account surplus. Both these factors are long-term bullish for the euro. Moreover, the fact that the euro area will soon become a net creditor nation, along with a lack of room to stimulate growth via monetary easing in times of recessions, means that the euro could increasingly become a counter-cyclical currency like the yen. So long as the European integration efforts remain on the backburner, euro area growth, inflation, and interest rates will continue to look more like Japan’s have over the past 30 years than the U.S. Third, European equities are trading at a discount to U.S. equities, but we do not think this guarantees long-term outperformance. European equities are cheap because European growth prospects are poor. If Japan is any guide, European stocks may be set to continue underperforming. This is especially true as financials are over-represented in European equity benchmarks, and banks stand at the epicenter of the European economic malaise. Fourth, European stocks will remain slaves to the global business cycle. Since the crisis, European growth has become hypersensitive to global growth, making European equities very responsive to the global business cycle. The same phenomenon happened in post-1990 Japan. In other words, the beta of European stocks is likely to continue to rise. This phenomenon could be exacerbated if the euro indeed does become a counter-cyclical currency, in which case the euro and European equities would become negatively correlated, like the yen and the Nikkei. Finally, the period from 1999 to 2005 showed how ECB policy targeted at supporting Germany resulted in imbalances that boosted real estate and equity returns in the periphery – in Spain and Ireland in particular. Today, the periphery is the worst offender when it comes to poor bank health and private sector balance sheet rebuilding. This means that the ECB is likely to keep monetary conditions too accommodative for Germany, where balance sheets are more robust and where the capital stock is not as excessive. As a result, financial market plays linked to German real estate are likely to continue outperforming other European domestic plays. They therefore warrant an overweight within European portfolios. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst III. Indicators And Reference Charts The S&P 500 is retesting its all-time high made last fall. While our indicators suggest that U.S. equity have additional upside, the violence of the rally since December argues that a period of digestion may first be needed. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicator for the U.S. and Japan continues to improve, while for the euro area, it is flat-lining after a tentative rebound. The WTP indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. The current readings in major advanced economies thus suggest that investors are still inclined to add to their stock holdings. Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) is not echoing this message. The RPI combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. The pick-up in global growth remains too feeble for the RPI to validate the advance in stocks. This is why we worry that a correction is likely until economic activity around the globe confirms the rally in stocks. According to BCA’s composite valuation indicator, an amalgamation of 11 measures, the U.S. stock market remains slightly overvalued from a long-term perspective. Nonetheless, the S&P 500 is not at nosebleed valuation levels anymore. Hence, we are betting that once global growth picks up, stocks will be able to move even higher and any correction will prove temporary. Moreover, our Monetary Indicator remains into stimulative territory. The Fed has reiterated its dovish message and global central banks have all engaged in dovish talks, thus monetary conditions should stay supportive. As a result, our speculation indicator has also now fully moved out of the “speculative activity” zone. Our Composite Technical indicator for stocks had broken down in December, but it has now moved back above its 9-month moving average. This positive cyclical signal reinforces our confidence that any correction in stocks should prove tactical in nature, and that on a nine- to twelve-month basis equities have upside. According to our model, 10-year Treasurys are slightly expensive. However, we should not read too much into this. Essentially, yields are currently within their neutral range. Moreover, our technical indicator flags a similar picture. That being said, since BCA expects that over the next 24 months, the Fed will lift rates more than the OIS curve anticipates, and since the term premium is incredibly low, once green shoots for global growth fully bloom, bonds could suffer a violent selloff. Since our duration indicator has begun to deteriorate, it is probably a good time to begin moving out of safe-haven bonds. On a PPP basis, the U.S. dollar has only gotten more expensive. Additionally, our Composite Technical Indicator is becoming increasingly overbought. This combination suggests that the greenback could experience further downside this year. However, this downside will only materialize once global growth shows greater signs of strength. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators U.S. Equity Indicators U.S. Equity Indicators Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Willingness To Pay For Risk Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators   Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator Revealed Preference Indicator Revealed Preference Indicator Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation U.S. Stock Market Valuation U.S. Stock Market Valuation Chart III-6U.S. Earnings U.S. Earnings U.S. Earnings Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance   FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations U.S. Treasurys And Valuations U.S. Treasurys And Valuations Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields Selected U.S. Bond Yields Selected U.S. Bond Yields Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components 10-Year Treasury Yield Components Chart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Global Bonds: Developed Markets Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets Global Bonds: Emerging Markets   CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP U.S. Dollar And PPP U.S. Dollar And PPP Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator U.S. Dollar And Indicator U.S. Dollar And Indicator Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals U.S. Dollar Fundamentals U.S. Dollar Fundamentals Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Japanese Yen Technicals Chart III-20Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Euro Technicals Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Euro/Yen Technicals Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals Euro/Pound Technicals   COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Broad Commodity Indicators Chart III-24Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-25Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Commodity Prices Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Commodity Sentiment Chart III-27Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning Speculative Positioning   ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot U.S. Macro Snapshot U.S. Macro Snapshot Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook U.S. Growth Outlook U.S. Growth Outlook Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending U.S. Cyclical Spending U.S. Cyclical Spending Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market U.S. Labor Market U.S. Labor Market Chart III-33U.S. Consumption U.S. Consumption U.S. Consumption Chart III-34U.S. Housing U.S. Housing U.S. Housing Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging U.S. Debt And Deleveraging U.S. Debt And Deleveraging   Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions U.S. Financial Conditions U.S. Financial Conditions Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Global Economic Snapshot: Europe Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China Global Economic Snapshot: China   Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1       Please see Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, “A Sustainable Bottom In Global Bond Yields,” dated April 9, 2019, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2       Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Have SPX Margins Peaked?” dated March 25, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 3       Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, “Mixed Signals,” dated April 22, 2019, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 4       Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report "Euro Area Banks: Value Play Or Value Trap?" dated December 14, 2018, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 5       The European Commission Eurobarometer Surveys show that Europeans overwhelmingly see Europe as a peace project and as a way to maintain a voice in a world dominated by huge players like the U.S., China, or Russia, a world where France, Germany, or Italy individually are marginal players. In 2016, the U.K. population did not share this opinion. Moreover, even after what amounts to a depression, the support for the euro continues to rise in Greece, showing the growing commitment of Europeans to the euro, and the resilience of this commitment to economic shocks. EQUITIES:FIXED INCOME:CURRENCIES:COMMODITIES:ECONOMY:
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Disney’s recent streaming pricing disclosure and a favorable macro backdrop for recreation PCE argue that more gains are in store for the S&P movies & entertainment index. The price of credit, credit quality and credit growth along with equity buybacks all suggest that bank profits will continue to overwhelm. Recent Changes Upgrade the S&P movies & entertainment index to overweight today. Table 1 Mixed Signals Mixed Signals   Feature Equities continued to defy gravity last week as the earnings season warmed up and did not reveal any “skeletons in the closet”. Lower interest rates single-handedly explain the recent stock market exuberance (Treasury yield shown inverted, Chart 1). In more detail, the Fed’s complete pivot has suppressed the 10-year Treasury yield and last year’s forward multiple drubbing – to the tune of a 30% drawdown – has reversed. Chart 1Lower Yield = Higher Multiple Lower Yield = Higher Multiple Lower Yield = Higher Multiple Chart 2 shows that, year-to-date, the forward multiple has done all the heavy lifting in the SPX and then some, as EPS have actually subtracted from the broad market’s return. In theory, a lower discount rate should boost the multiple and vice versa. Nevertheless, there are good odds that the 10-year Treasury yield has troughed, and BCA’s fixed income strategists continue to expect a selloff in the bond market for the rest of the year. The implication is that equities are becoming fully priced and if profits fail to pick up the baton from the multiple expansion phase, the risk/reward tradeoff is to the downside on a tactical horizon. Meanwhile, there are a number of indicators we track that are still firing warning shots for the overall equity market. Margin debt has stalled and remains 13% below the all-time peak hit last year. Historically, this has been a coincident equity market indicator and a lack of confirmation is troublesome for the overall equity market (bottom panel, Chart 3). Chart 2SPX Return Explained SPX Return Explained SPX Return Explained Chart 3M&A Lull... M&A Lull... M&A Lull... M&A activity has taken a step back, with the total number of deals down 25% from the 2018 zenith (top panel, Chart 3). Similar to margin debt uptake, this is a coincident indicator and the latest weak reading is cause for concern, as it signals that animal spirits are low. With regard to frail sentiment, CEO confidence has taken a beating of late on all fronts. The most recent Business Roundtable and Conference Board CEO surveys reveal that chief executives are a worried bunch. Their views on the overall economic outlook, all industries (including services manufacturing, durable and non-durable), capital outlays, employment, and revenues all remain downbeat, and likely explain the recent M&A lull (Chart 4). On the profit front, last year’s once in a lifetime equity retirement will not repeat this year, warning that artificial EPS growth will weigh on overall profit growth in 2019. Beyond this grim reading on “soft data”, select financial market leading indicators are also not corroborating the euphoric equity market. J.P. Morgan’s EM FX index has petered out recently and both EM and Chinese investable stocks (in U.S. dollar terms) remain well below their early-2018 peaks. Similarly, China-levered U.S. semi equipment stocks are a far cry from their cyclical highs set last year and suggest that some caution is still warranted in the broad equity market (Chart 5). Chart 4...Drop In CEO Confidence... ...Drop In CEO Confidence... ...Drop In CEO Confidence... Chart 5...And Financial Indicators Still Flashing Red ...And Financial Indicators Still Flashing Red ...And Financial Indicators Still Flashing Red Finally, on the profit front, last year’s once in a lifetime equity retirement will not repeat this year, warning that artificial EPS growth will weigh on overall profit growth in 2019. In addition, Charts 6A & 6B show that buybacks are already concentrated in a few sectors. Our sense is that this concentration theme will continue this year and likely center around financials as banks will flex their equity retirement muscle. Chart 6 Chart 6   This week we delve deeper into banks and upgrade a communication services subsector. “A Kind Of Magic” Factors have fallen into place to boost the recently rejigged S&P movies & entertainment index to an above benchmark allocation today. DIS and NFLX dominate this index now comprising roughly 97% of the market cap weight and VIAb is merely the third wheel. The dust has settled from the global media industry M&A frenzy of the past two years, but the push to the cloud via online streaming services suggests that it is only a temporary break. We would not rule out another round of inter- and intra-industry M&A, as content is king once again (Chart 7). Chart 7Rejigged Rejigged Rejigged Recent pricing news of Disney’s streaming service, expected later this year, sent reverberations across the media space as Disney priced it at such a low point in order to grab market share and likely pave the way for future price hikes. While streaming services have been mushrooming, there is space for a number of competitors, signaling that Netflix’s global streaming domination will not come crumbling down all of a sudden. While the index’s 12-month forward EPS took a hit with the NFLX addition in October, 2018 and the forward P/E jumped to the historical mean, this niche communication services subgroup is now clearly a growth index and will continue to command a premium valuation to the broad market (bottom panel, Chart 8). From a macro perspective there are also compelling reasons to warm up to the S&P movies & entertainment index. Consumer confidence remains glued to multi-decade highs and there are high odds that the big gulf that has opened up between confidence and relative share prices will narrow via a rise in the latter (top panel, Chart 8). Moreover, a vibrant labor market with payrolls expanding at a healthy clip (top panel, Chart 9), the unemployment rate and unemployment insurance claims at generational lows, all signal that consumers will keep their purse strings loose, especially given rising wages (third panel, Chart 9). Chart 8Positive Macro... Positive Macro... Positive Macro... Chart 9...Drivers... ...Drivers... ...Drivers... Tack on the confidence consumers have in residential real estate with house prices expanding both on a year-over-year and on a shorter-term basis (second panel, Chart 9), and the ingredients are in place for an increase in consumer recreation outlays. Disney’s streaming pricing disclosure, a favorable macro backdrop on recreation PCE and sell-side analyst extreme profit pessimism argue that more gains are in store for the S&P movies & entertainment index. Lift to overweight today. One final macro variable that is also on the side of the S&P movies & entertainment index is the ISM non-manufacturing index. Historically, real outlays on recreation activities has moved in lockstep with the ISM services survey and the current message is positive for PCE on recreation (bottom panel, Chart 9). More dollars spent on recreation is synonymous with a margin expansion in the S&P movies & entertainment index (third panel, Chart 8). This consumer spending backdrop is also conducive to a rise in relative profitability, the opposite of what the sell-side currently expects (middle panel, Chart 10). Chart 10...But Analysts Are Not Buying It ...But Analysts Are Not Buying It ...But Analysts Are Not Buying It Not only are industry EPS slated to trail the SPX by 300bps in the coming year, but also analysts have been vigorously downgrading their EPS estimates weighing on the sector’s net earnings revisions ratio (bottom panel, Chart 10). This is contrarily positive and we would lean against such analyst pessimism. Netting it all out, Disney’s streaming pricing disclosure, a favorable macro backdrop for recreation PCE and sell-side analyst extreme profit pessimism argue that more gains are in store for the S&P movies & entertainment index. Bottom Line: Lift the S&P movies & entertainment index to overweight today. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MOVI – DIS, NFLX, VIAb. Bank Update: Primed For A Re-rating By the end of last week most banks reported profits that exceeded expectations and investors breathed a sigh of relief, despite the early-December yield curve inversion and the more recent broadening of the inversion from the 5/3 all the way out to the 10/fed funds rate slope. What partially explains the sector’s EPS resilience is net interest margins (NIMs) that just entered their fifth straight year of widening. While this may seem counterintuitive given the inverted/flattening yield curve, banks are repressing depositors by not passing on higher interest rates on deposits, thus guaranteeing extremely cheap funding. The bottom panel of Chart 11 shows that the 2-year Treasury yield/1-year CD rate slope is steep and it has historically moved in lockstep with bank NIMs. As a reminder, BCA’s bond strategists expect a selloff in the bond market and remain short duration, signaling that bank NIMs will not suffer a setback for the remainder of the year. Beyond the prospects for a further increase in the price of credit, another key source of bank EPS support is equity retirement. Citi explicitly mentioned it this earnings season, and the S&P financials sector buybacks, largely driven by banks, corroborate this anecdote (Chart 12). Chart 11Deciphering Bank Profit Resilience Deciphering Bank Profit Resilience Deciphering Bank Profit Resilience Chart 12New Buyback Kings New Buyback Kings New Buyback Kings In fact, there is a wide gap between this artificial EPS lift and relative share prices that will likely narrow in the coming months via a catch up phase in the latter, particularly if banks pass the Fed’s stringent stress test anew as we expect later this summer. On the credit quality front, bank NPLs remain anchored near cycle lows and tight labor markets suggest that a flare up in delinquencies is a low probability event in the coming year, especially given BCA’s view of no recession (bottom panel, Chart 13). Chargeoffs and souring loans are almost non-existent in all the categories that the Federal Reserve tracks, with the slight exception of credit card loans that are ticking higher, but from an extremely low base (we provide more details below in the risk section, second & third panels, Chart 13). Finally, loan growth has held up very well despite the stock market collapse in Q4/2018 and the massive tightening in financial conditions. While our overall loans & leases and C&I loan models are decelerating, they remain squarely in expansion mode and should continue to underpin bank profitability (second and bottom panel, Chart 14). Chart 13Pristine Credit Quality Pristine Credit Quality Pristine Credit Quality Chart 14Credit Growth Rests On A Solid Foundation  Credit Growth Rests On A Solid Foundation  Credit Growth Rests On A Solid Foundation  Consumer confidence remains sky-high and house prices are also rising at a healthy pace, signaling that mortgage (top panel, Chart 11) and consumer loan origination will remain upbeat (third panel, Chart 14). The price of credit, credit quality, credit growth along with buybacks all suggest that bank profits will continue to overwhelm. Stay overweight the S&P banks index. All of this positive news is already reflected in banks’ return on equity that vaulted higher recently signaling that a re-rating in still-extremely depressed valuations is looming in the coming quarters (Chart 15). Nevertheless, there are two risks to our sanguine S&P banks view that we are closely monitoring. First, our Economic Impulse Indicator remains near the zero line and, coupled with the still downbeat Citi Economic Surprise Index, warn that demand for loans may start softening at the margin (top panel, Chart 16). Chart 15Follow The ROE Follow The ROE Follow The ROE Chart 16Two Risks To Monitor Two Risks To Monitor Two Risks To Monitor Second, while the top 100 largest commercial banks are not showing a deterioration on the credit card delinquency front, the rest of the banks are waving a red flag as delinquencies are already at recessionary levels. This explains why the overall credit card delinquency rate is ticking higher (bottom panel, Chart 16). Netting it all out, the price of credit, credit quality, credit growth along with buybacks all suggest that bank profits will continue to overwhelm. Bottom Line: Stay overweight the S&P banks index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5BANKX – JPM, BAC, WFC, C, USB, PNC, BBT, STI, MTB, FITB, FRC, KEY, CFG, RF, HBAN, SIVB, CMA, ZION, PBCT.   Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com   Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Highlights Actively managed U.S. equity mutual funds have been hemorrhaging assets under management (AUM), with the lost AUM flowing directly to ETFs and index mutual funds. Chatter about the adverse consequences of too much passive investing is intensifying, and BCA clients are increasingly asking if a bubble is inflating in passive investing or ETFs more generally. We view passive investing as the surest cure for passive investing and do not worry that index tracking is undermining price discovery or distorting equity markets. Temporary distortions are manna from heaven for professional investors and we would like to have more of them. Active mutual fund management may not be all it’s cracked up to be, in any event. The Active Share metric, which measures the portion of a portfolio that differs from its benchmark, has been in steady decline for the last 30 years, indicating that active management practices have undergone a sea change. We have faith in ETFs’ underlying architecture and continue to recommend investing in them. They are an efficient, inexpensive and liquid way to gain market exposure and investors need not worry about getting stuck when the music stops. Feature Dear Client, The market impact of passive investing continues to be a hot topic among investors, sell-side researchers and the financial media. To contribute our view to the discussion, we are sending you a lightly edited update of a review of passive investing’s implications first published under our Global ETF Strategy banner in September 2017. We met with clients in China last week, and will be taking some time off this week, so we will not be publishing on April 29th. We will resume publication on Monday, May 6th. Best regards, Doug Peta   Over the last few years, we have received a thin but steady stream of questions from clients asking about a potential ETF bubble. We note that ETFs do not exhibit any of the characteristics delineated by economic historian Charles Kindleberger in Manias, Panics and Crashes. There is a difference between the increasingly widespread adoption of a useful innovation and a febrile spell of mass exuberance or suspension of disbelief. We have duly expressed the view in one-on-one communications with clients that ETFs shouldn’t inspire any particular worry. The related chatter about a passive investment bubble only seems to intensify, however, and we focus on it in this Special Report. We ultimately fail to see the justification for the most extreme warnings about the dangers of passive investing. Perhaps the emergence and bursting of two bubbles in rapid succession has sparked a mini-bubble in searching for bubbles among academics, investors and reporters. We do not think that the popularity of ETFs is distorting pricing mechanisms, though we would welcome a good distortion to break up the logjam of full-but-not-extreme valuations that portend tepid intermediate- and long-term balanced portfolio returns. The Active Management Exodus The causes and consequences may be a matter of debate, but the facts are clear: actively managed U.S. equity mutual funds have been losing ground to index mutual funds for two-and-a-half decades (Chart 1). Before ETFs began to boom ahead of the crisis, active equity mutual funds still managed to attract annual net inflows despite their share losses, but they have now suffered net outflows in every one of the last 12 years. Index ETF and index mutual fund inflows have amounted to nearly 90% of the active mutual funds’ outflows, with index ETFs drawing more than twice the AUM as their mutual fund counterparts (Chart 2). Chart 1 Chart 2Mirror Image Mirror Image Mirror Image Given the near symmetry of active mutual fund outflows and index fund inflows, it appears that an extended active-to-passive migration is well under way. The move is rational, and has helped investors at the expense of asset managers, as index funds cost considerably less than actively managed funds. (In 2017, the asset-weighted average expense ratio for actively managed and index equity mutual funds was 0.78% and 0.09%, respectively.) If mutual fund managers tend to be wealthier than their clients, the fee savings give the economy a modest boost by shifting wealth to households with a higher marginal propensity to consume. The Spoilsport Chorus What’s not to like about lower fees for the same, or better, returns?1 Plenty, as it turns out. The myriad objections to passive investing’s increasing sway boil down to three major arguments: passive investing undermines price discovery; passive investing undermines capital allocation; and passive investing is potentially anti-competitive. Price insensitivity carries the seeds of its own demise. An index-tracking investor is a price-insensitive investor, and a surfeit of passive investment could undermine equity markets’ price-discovery function. Index-trackers are free riders, living off of the active investors whose trading decisions set prices. Just as a parasite cannot live without a host, naive passive investors need price-setters to keep them safe. The passive investing naysayers’ heads are filled with images of lemmings rushing over the edge of a cliff after active investors are routed, but we are not so sure. It’s important to remember that the price an investor pays for a security2 is the major determinant of his/her long-run return, and a price-insensitive investor is all but certain to underperform a price-aware investor over time, perhaps by a material margin. Thus the cure for passive investment is passive investment; the fewer active investors participating in the markets, the greater the prospective returns accruing to active investment. Greater prospective returns will draw an increasing proportion of assets until active management is no longer likely to outperform. Then the pendulum will swing back to index investing – lather, rinse, repeat – but skilled security analysts will have a field day while their talents are underappreciated. Passive investing’s impact on markets’ capital allocation function is indirect at best. Only primary market transactions channel capital to, or from, ideas and enterprises. Secondary market transactions merely involve exchanges of capital between incumbents and new owners, and index tracking is a secondary-market function. The sell-siders that found passive investing wanting in comparison with central planning would seem to have been trying too hard to be provocative.3 The late John Bogle may have been a bit of a scold, but we’d take him over Karl Marx any day. The notion that high concentrations of ownership among passive holders could be anti-competitive strikes us as especially strained. An article published in The Atlantic a year and a half ago bore the provocative headline, “Are Index Funds Evil?” and sub-header, “A growing chorus of experts argue that they’re strangling the economy – and must be stopped.4” The article highlighted a working paper from a team of newly-minted PhDs that argued that high common ownership in the airline industry has been associated with decreased route competition and increased fares. If the same entities hold significant stakes in all of the companies in a particular industry, those entities may have an incentive to collude to restrain competition within the industry and thereby increase the size of the pie for the industry as a whole. This may be so at the airline-industry level, but as passive owners of the entire market, Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street own considerable stakes in every other industry as well, so increasing the profitability of a single portfolio segment at the expense of other portfolio segments would seem to be self-defeating, not to mention personally risky, given stiff antitrust penalties. What Makes A Bubble? Bubbles differ in their specifics, but they share several common empirical characteristics. Kindleberger homes in on the easy availability of credit and its role in enabling the euphoria that fuels temporarily self-reinforcing, albeit ultimately unsustainable, price gains. The gains generated by the headlong pursuit of short-term capital gains are the key to keeping the bubble going, but the upward price movement is halted in its tracks when credit availability slows, and prices plunge like Wile E. Coyote once it’s cut off. Neither ingredient has been a part of the ETF boom. Index ETFs are the opposite of a get-rich-quick scheme; they’re what investors buy when they decide to stop chasing after buried treasure. The easy and inexpensive availability of credit has surely contributed to elevated equity multiples (Chart 3) and narrow bond spreads (Chart 4). The instruments ETFs hold are somewhat pricey and will be vulnerable when the next recession comes, but they are not discounting euphoric expectations that cannot realistically be met. ETF sponsors do not rely on debt; launching an ETF is such a capital-light process that the field is full to bursting with several funds that amount to unfinished experiments. Without the burden of servicing debt, sponsors are free to throw their ideas up against a wall and see what sticks. Chart 3Equity Multiples Are Elevated... Equity Multiples Are Elevated... Equity Multiples Are Elevated... Chart 4... And Spreads Are Tight ... And Spreads Are Tight ... And Spreads Are Tight ETFs are not being bought on margin in any significant degree; they are not the apple of frenzied gain-chasers’ eyes. Aside from leveraged ETFs that provide a designated multiple of daily returns, pooled investment vehicles that amalgamate the performance of several securities are the antithesis of an ideal speculative instrument. Index ETFs allow an investor to obtain benchmark returns at low cost and with a minimum of fuss, and are a sane alternative to speculation. As Benjamin Graham put it, the dumb money ceases to be dumb when it acknowledges its limitations, and index investing is an explicit acknowledgement of one’s limitations. ETF Flows Are Not Coming Out Of Thin Air To the notion that “so much money is flowing into ETFs that it’s distorting prices across the board,” we say not necessarily. If the money to buy ETFs were materializing out of thin air (as it is in Tokyo and Zurich thanks to the efforts of the BoJ and the SNB), one could argue that ETF inflows are inflating multiples and narrowing spreads. But the money to purchase U.S.-listed ETFs comes almost entirely from sales of actively managed mutual funds. ETF purchases are a reallocation of existing investment capital, not new marginal investment with the potential to move markets. Just How Active Are The “Active” Outflows? Chart 5Indexing Hasn't Hijacked Equity Correlations Indexing Hasn't Hijacked Equity Correlations Indexing Hasn't Hijacked Equity Correlations On the subject of changes at the margin, if the capital to purchase index ETFs comes from mutual funds that are active in name only, they simply shift cash from one passive pocket to another, and don’t amount to any change at all. The professor-investors who created the Active Share metric to measure how much a portfolio deviates from its benchmark5 describe a mutual fund industry that has steadily migrated away from stock picking. By their reckoning, the share of mutual fund assets managed by closet indexers rose from 1% in 1980 to nearly 33% in 2009.6 Using the Active Share calculator at https://activeshare.info/, we find that one-third of AUM in actively-managed U.S. equity mutual funds with AUM of at least $1 billion are held by closet-indexing mutual funds (funds with Active Share of 60% or less). Our large-fund sample suggests that two-thirds of active fund AUM is truly active. The loss of even that amount of actively managed assets does not appear to have been enough to hijack internal market dynamics. If everyone became an index tracker, and all trades were trades of the entire market, correlations at the stock and sector level would go to 1. Despite ETFs’ growing muscle, and their capture of share from stock-picking funds, correlations have not consistently risen over the 2015-17 period that has witnessed a stampede from active to indexed equity funds (Chart 5). Investment Implications We do not believe that the steadily expanding investment in passive vehicles poses a threat to markets or investors. Passive vehicles offer investors the most cost-effective way to obtain market exposure and the actively managed funds they’re exchanging for index trackers have become increasingly less active as benchmark indexes have become more prominent. If the passive trend continues, and a rising share of capital is invested without regard for distinctions between companies, the ex-ante returns to active strategies will increase and investors will return to them in droves. In the meantime, if passive investing’s share reaches the tipping point, wherever it may be, fundamentally-focused investors will feast on excess returns. Active investors will clean up if passive investing ever crosses the tipping point. We do not worry that passive investing will weigh on the economy by hindering the efficient allocation of capital to the ideas with the most merit. Index tracking is confined to the secondary markets and will not consign the U.S. economy to a Soviet fate. We view the suggestion that index tracking may lead to collusion among operating companies as unfounded conjecture. Investors need not worry that ETFs are in a bubble, or that investing in passive strategies will be a drag on economic output.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 In a typical year, a majority of mutual funds underperform their benchmarks. 2 Price is defined as starting real yield for bonds, and cyclically-adjusted P/E for equities. 3 “The Silent Road to Serfdom: Why Passive Investing Is Worse Than Marxism,” August 23, 2016, Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC. 4    Partnoy, Frank, “Are Index Funds Evil?” The Atlantic, September 2017. 5 Cremers, K.J. Martijn and Petajisto, Antti. “How Active Is Your Fund Manager? A New Measure That Predicts Performance,” Review of Financial Studies, September 2009. 6 Petajisto, Antti. “Active Share and Mutual Fund Performance,” Financial Analysts Journal, July/August 2013.