Business Cycles
Executive Summary China's Demand Was Very Weak before Lockdowns The selloff in risk assets is not over. Stay defensive. Stagflation fears will continue gripping financial markets. Global trade volumes are set to contract, but the Fed has little maneuvering room as US core inflation is well above its target. Commodity prices are at an important juncture. The plunge in Chinese material stock prices is a warning sign for global materials because China is by far the largest consumer of raw materials (excluding oil), accounting for about 50-55% of global industrial metal demand. The rally in EM commodity plays like Latin America and South Africa is at risk of a major reversal. Bottom Line: Global equity and credit portfolios should underweight EM equities and credit, respectively. The rally in the US dollar might be the final upleg before a major downtrend sets in. However, this final rally will be considerable, and the greenback will likely overshoot. A buying opportunity in EM local currency bonds will present itself after EM currencies hit a bottom versus the US dollar. Feature Global and EM risk assets will remain under selling pressure. This Charts That Matter report contains charts that will help investors navigate treacherous financial markets by shedding light on the following key issues: How much more downside in stocks? Chart 1 displays EM share prices in USD terms alongside their long-term moving averages. If EM equities break below the current technical support line, the next one implies that there is 20-25% further downside in EM stocks. For the S&P500, the next technical support is at 3650-3750. Our Equity Capitulation Indicators for both the S&P500 and EM stocks remain above their previous (2010-2020) lows (Charts 5 and 6 below). In addition, equity market breadth is deteriorating. Fundamental problems with financial markets are linked to mounting stagflation fears. Global trade volumes are set to contract in H2 due to a decline in US and European household spending on goods ex-autos and a delayed recovery in China as we discussed in last week’s report. In turn, US wage growth is accelerating, which will push up unit labor costs. US core inflation will likely drop due to base effects, but will remain above 3.5-4%, which far exceeds the Fed’s 2-2.25% target. Chart 1EM Share Prices: Their Long-Term Moving Averages Served As A Support In Bear Markets Chart 2 illustrates that stagflation fears have already gripped financial markets. Global defensive equity sectors have recently been outperforming global non-TMT stocks despite rising US and global bond yields (Chart 2). This is a major departure from the historical relationship between the two and likely foreshadows a period of continuous Fed tightening despite slower global growth. Global equity managers should favor defensive stocks as they will continue to outperform under the two most likely scenarios: (1) either these stagflation dynamics continue; or (2) a growth scare will dominate, during which US bond yields could drop. Chart 2Does This Divergence From A Historic Correlation Signify Stagflation? The US dollar continues to climb, and its strength has recently become very broad-based – extending to commodity currencies and Asian currencies. As we show in Charts 46-48 below, the US dollar has more upside. Commodity prices are at an important juncture. On the one hand, supply shortages and risks to further supply disruptions could continue to support resource prices. On the other hand, demand will disappoint. Shrinking US and European consumer spending on goods ex-autos, contracting Chinese commodity intake and weakness in EM ex-China demand all suggest that global commodity consumption will decline in the months ahead. In our March 10 report, we noted that commodity prices would be volatile and this view has been validated: commodity prices swings have been extreme over the past two months. More recent evidence points to lower resource prices. Chart 3 shows that over the past 200 years raw material prices in real US dollar terms (deflated by US headline CPI) have oscillated around a well-defined downtrend. The pandemic surge in commodity prices has pushed them to two standard deviations above their time-trend. Historically, commodity rallies (and even their secular bull markets) ended when prices reached this threshold. Hence, odds are that industrial commodities might hit a soft spot. Energy prices remain a wild card due to geopolitics. It is critical to note that the raw materials price index shown in Chart 3 does not include energy, gold and semi-precious metals (the footnote of Chart 3 lists commodities included in this aggregate). Chart 3Raw Material Prices (In Real Terms) Are At The Upper End Of A 200-Year Downtrend Finally, Chart 4 demonstrates that Chinese materials stocks have plunged. We read this as a warning sign for global materials because China is by far the largest consumer of raw materials (excluding oil), accounting for about 50-55% of global industrial metal demand. Chart 4Chinese Material Stocks Are Signaling Trouble For Global Materials Investment Recommendations Stay defensive. Global equity and credit portfolios should underweight EM equities and credit, respectively. The rally in the US dollar might be the final upleg before a major downtrend sets in. However, this final rally will likely be considerable, i.e., the greenback will likely overshoot. The CNY has broken down versus the US dollar and our target is 6.70-6.75 for now. A depreciating yuan is bearish for Asian and EM currencies. We continue to recommend short positions in the following EM currencies versus the US dollar: ZAR, COP, PEN, HUF, IDR, PHP and PLN. A buying opportunity in EM local currency bonds will present itself when EM currencies hit a bottom versus the US dollar. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com US And EM Equity Capitulation Indicators These indicators have not reached their lows of 2010, 2011, 2018 and 2020. The magnitude of the S&P500 selloffs in 2011 and 2018, were 19.5% and 19.8%, respectively. Hence, our best guess for the size of a S&P500 drawdown in this selloff is about 20%. This puts the potential S&P500 low at 3800-3850. The latter is consistent with the technical support (3-year moving average) that held up in 2011, 2016 and 2018 (Chart 5, top panel). Chart 5 Chart 6 Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Not all components of our US Equity Capitulation Indicator have reached their previous lows. Odds are that US share prices will drop further. US equity valuations are still expensive, geopolitical risks are elevated, and inflation and inflation expectations are extremely high, which will limit the Fed’s maneuvering room. Chart 7 Chart 8 Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Similarly, the components of our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator have not reached their previous lows. The share of industry groups above their 200-day moving average, analysts’ net EPS revisions as well as the momentum and equity sentiment indicators remain above prior troughs. Further downside in EM share prices is likely. Chart 9 Chart 10 S&P500 Overlays With Previous Geopolitical Crises The most recent examples of geopolitical shocks include the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, the oil embargo of 1973 in response to the Yom Kippur War and the Gulf War of 1990. The magnitude of the S&P 500 selloff was 28% in 1962, 23% in 1973 and 20% in 1990. Today, the S&P 500 is down only 12.8% from its peak. Based on the above three profiles, the current selloff in US stocks has further to go. This also means that non-US equities, including EM, will continue to suffer. Chart 11 Chart 12 Chart 13 Table 1 Various EM Equity Indexes: Deteriorating Breadth Various EM equity indexes have been in a bear market. The deterioration has been broadening as recent leaders such as commodity producers and Taiwanese stocks have been gapping down. Yet, not all bourses are very oversold. We published a Special Report on semiconductors on April 14 arguing that semi stocks face more downside. Share prices of commodity producers have recently corrected, and, as we argue above, odds of a further drop are non-trivial. What are the odds that the overall EM equity index undershoots? See the next section. Chart 14 Chart 15 Chart 16 Chart 17 EM Undershoot Is Likely Sentiment towards EM equities has fallen significantly, but it is not yet at previous lows. Similarly, there is still room for EM net EPS revisions by bottom-up analysts to fall further. Finally, platinum prices point to more downside in EM non-TMT share prices. Chart 18 Chart 19 Chart 20 EM Bond Yields And Share Prices Historically, rising EM corporate USD bond yields and EM local currency bond yields led to a selloff in EM share prices. Unless EM USD and local currency bond yields start falling on a sustainable basis, EM equities will continue to struggle. Chart 21 Chart 22 Rising US Corporate Bond Yields Are Bearish For US Stocks Rising US corporate borrowing costs point to lower US share prices. Corporate bond yields could increase because of either rising US Treasury yields or widening credit spreads. Furthermore, bearish US equity market technicals are presently reinforcing this downbeat outlook for US stocks. Chart 23 Chart 24 Chart 25 The S&P500 EPS Can Contract Outside Of A Recession Let’s recall what happened in 2000-2001 in the US. Real GDP contracted only slightly, household spending in real terms did not contract at all, and the housing market was booming. Yet, the S&P 500 operating EPS plunged by 30% and the stock index was down by 50%. In 1966, even though real and nominal GDP did not contract, the S&P500 operating EPS shrank by about 5% and share prices fell by 22%. This episode is the best analogy for US economic and financial market dynamics over the near term. Chart 26 Chart 27 US Stagflation Scare US wage growth is accelerating, and unit labor costs are surging. The latter will make inflation sticky and hurt corporate profit margins. Besides, US consumer demand for goods ex-autos will shrink following a two-year period of overspending. This combination will produce a stagflation scare – a period when corporate profits are weak, but the Fed has little maneuvering room as core inflation is well above its target. Chart 28 Chart 29 Chart 30 Chart 31 Global Trade Volumes Will Shrink Taiwanese shipments to China – which lead global exports – have started to contract. Korea’s business survey of exporting companies reveals that business conditions deteriorated substantially in April. Global cyclicals have been underperforming global defensives. Finally, early cyclical stocks in the US have sold off and have substantially underperformed domestic defensives. This also points to a slowdown in US growth. Chart 32 Chart 33 Chart 34 Chart 35 China’s Economy Requires Much More Aggressive Stimulus In China, monetary and fiscal stimulus have so far been insufficient to produce a major economic recovery given the headwinds from the property sector and the harsh lockdowns. The enacted fiscal stimulus has mainly been for infrastructure spending, and it does not include direct fiscal transfers to households who are losing income due to the lockdown. On the monetary front, the credit impulse – excluding local government bond issuance (which is counted in our fiscal spending impulse) – has barely bottomed. Chart 36 Chart 37 Chart 38 Chart 39 China Has Been A Drag On Global Trade Chinese domestic demand was extremely weak even prior to the recent lockdowns in Shanghai. Chinese import volumes of various commodities, machinery, industrials goods and semiconductors were contracting as of March. Lockdowns and associated income/profit losses will further depress domestic demand. Chart 40 Chart 41 Chinese Property Woes Are Worsening Housing floor space sold in April is down by 50% from a year ago. Households are reluctant to borrow and buy, and property developers’ financing has dried up. All these point to shrinking construction activity. Chart 42 Chart 43 Chart 44 Chart 45 The US Dollar Has More Upside Our view on the greenback has played out well, and more upside is likely. The CNY has broken down against the dollar and it will reach at least 6.70-6.75. One exception to a strong US dollar might be the yen, as the trade-weighted yen has fallen to its previous lows. However, a rebound in the yen from current levels requires a stabilization of US bond yields. Chart 46 Chart 47 Chart 48 Chart 49 EM Currencies: Do Not Catch A Falling Knife EM currencies remain at risk. They are not cheap, and the recent rebound has faltered with many EM exchange rates unable to break above their technical resistance vis-à-vis the USD. However, we expect the US dollar to top and EM currencies to bottom later this year. Stay tuned. Chart 50 Chart 51 EM Credit Markets: More Spread Widening Ahead EM and US credit spreads are not particularly wide and will likely widen further. China’s corporate USD bonds remain in a bear market. The two key drivers of EM credit spreads are the business cycle and exchange rates. EM growth will continue to disappoint, and EM currencies will relapse versus the US dollar. Hence, investors should be patient before buying/overweighting EM credit. Chart 52 Chart 53 Chart 54 Chart 55 EM Domestic Bonds: A Buying Opportunity Down The Road The EM GBI domestic bonds total return index in USD terms has broken down and near-term weakness is likely. Meanwhile, EM local currency bond yields have risen significantly, and they offer good value. That said, a buying opportunity in local currency bonds will transpire only after their currencies bottom. Chart 56 Chart 57 Footnotes
Executive Summary Using the real yield on inflation protected bonds as a gauge of the long-term real interest rate is possibly the biggest mistake in finance. The ultra-low real yield on inflation protected bonds captures nothing more than a stampede for inflation protection overwhelming a tiny supply of inflation protected bonds. The long-term real interest rate embedded in the US bond and US stock markets is likely to be significantly higher than the -0.2 percent real yield on US inflation protected bonds. Long-term investors should overweight conventional bonds and stocks versus inflation protected bonds. On a 6-12 month horizon, overweight both US bonds and US stocks. With core inflation on the cusp of rolling over and global growth decelerating, the end is in sight for the sell-offs both in long duration bonds and in the stock market. Fractal trading watchlist: High dividend stocks, and MSCI Hong Kong versus MSCI China. The Low ‘Real Bond Yield’ Just Reflects A Massive Demand For Inflation Protection Bottom Line: The end is in sight for the sell-offs both in long duration bonds and in the stock market. Feature “It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so” One of my favourite quotes, ostensibly attributed to Mark Twain, warns us that trouble doesn’t come from what you don’t know. Rather, trouble comes from what you think you know for certain but turns out to be wrong. In economics and finance the “what you know for sure that just ain’t so” is the long-term real interest rate. In economics and finance the “what you know for sure that just ain’t so” is the long-term real interest rate. The long-term real interest rate is arguably the most fundamental concept in economics and finance. It encapsulates the risk-free real return on savings, and it is embedded in the returns offered by all assets such as bonds and equities. The trouble is, the way that most people quantify the long-term real interest rate turns out to be wrong. Specifically, most people define the long-term real interest rate as the real yield on (10-year) inflation protected bonds, which now stands at -0.2 percent in the US and -2.3 percent in the UK. US and UK inflation protected bonds will of course deliver the negative long-term real returns that their yields offer. So, most people believe that the long-term real interest rate is still depressed, permitting many rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and Bank of England before monetary policy becomes ‘restrictive’, and providing a massive cushion to asset valuations before they become expensive.This commonly held belief is arguably the biggest mistake in finance. The Long-Term Real Interest Rate Is Not What You Think The biggest mistake in finance stems from the confluence of two factors: first, the inflation protected bond market is the only true hedge against inflation; and second, it is tiny. Compared with the $45 trillion US equity market and the $25 trillion T-bond market, the Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) market is worth just $1.5 trillion. Many other economies do not even have an inflation protected bond market! The ultra-low real yield on inflation protected bonds captures nothing more than the massive imbalance between huge demand for inflation hedges and tiny supply. When the price level surges, as it has recently, stock and bond investors have a fiduciary duty to seek an inflation hedge, even if they are shutting the stable door after the horse has bolted (Chart I-1). With at least $70 trillion worth of investors all wanting a piece of the $1.5 trillion TIPS market, the demand for TIPS surges, meaning that their real yield collapses. Therefore, the ultra-low real yield on inflation protected bonds captures nothing more than the massive imbalance between huge demand for inflation hedges and tiny supply. Chart I-1When The Price Level Surges, Investors Flood Into Inflation Protected Bonds The proof comes from the perfect positive correlation between the oil price and so-called ‘inflation expectations.’ As a surging oil price drives down the 10-year TIPS yield relative to the 10-year T-bond yield, this difference in yields – which is the commonly accepted definition of expected inflation through 2022-32 – also surges (Chart I-2and Chart I-3). This perfect positive correlation also applies to the so-called ‘5-year, 5-year forward’ inflation rate, the expected inflation rate through 2027-32 (Chart I-4). Chart I-2Inflation Expectations Just Track The Oil Price Chart I-3Inflation Expectations Are Just A Mathematical Function Of The Oil Price Chart I-4Even The ‘5-Year, 5-Year Forward’ Inflation Expectation Just Tracks The Oil Price Yet this observed positive correlation between the oil price and inflation expectations is nonsensical, because the reality is the exact opposite! The higher the price level at a given moment, the lower will be the subsequent inflation rate. This is just basic maths. The subsequent inflation rate is the future price divided by the current price, so dividing by a higher price results in a lower number. The empirical evidence over the last 50 years confirms this. The higher the oil price, the lower the subsequent inflation rate (Chart I-5). Chart I-5But A Higher Oil Price Means Lower Subsequent Inflation As the price level surges, subsequent inflation declines, both in theory and in practice. Hence, we should subtract a smaller number from the nominal bond yield to get a higher long-term real interest rate. In other words, all else being equal, the impact of a higher price level is to lift the long-term real interest rate. To repeat, the very low real yield on inflation protected bonds just captures the stampede of inflation hedging demand overwhelming a tiny supply (Chart I-6). Given this distortion, the real yield on inflation protected bonds is likely not the long-term real interest rate embedded in the much larger bond and stock markets. Right now, the long-term real interest rate embedded in the bond and stock markets is likely to be significantly higher than the -0.2 percent real yield on TIPS. Chart I-6The Low ‘Real Bond Yield’ Just Reflects A Massive Demand For Inflation Protection To which the obvious rejoinder is: if the real yield embedded in conventional bonds and stocks is much higher than in inflation protected bonds, why does the market not arbitrage it away? The simple answer is that the market will arbitrage it away, but in slow motion. This is because the mispricing between expected and realised inflation will crystallise in real time, and not ahead of it. Nevertheless, this slow motion arbitrage provides a compelling opportunity for patient long-term investors. Overweight conventional bonds and stocks versus inflation protected bonds. The Best Way To Value The Stock Market Given that we cannot use the yield on inflation protected bonds as a reliable measure of the long-term real interest rate embedded in stock prices, it is also a big mistake to value equities versus the real bond yield. In The Case Against A ‘Super Bubble’ (And The Case For) we explained the much better way to value equities. The basic idea is that the cashflows of any investment can be condensed into one future ‘lump sum payment’. So, we just need to know the size of this lump sum payment, and then to calculate its present value. The US stock market tracks (the 30-year T-bond price) multiplied by (profits expected in the year ahead). For a stock market, the size of the payment just tracks current profits multiplied by ‘a structural growth constant’, and the present value just tracks the value of an equal duration bond. For example, the duration of the US stock market is the same as that of the 30-year T-bond, at around 25 years.1 It follows that the US stock market price should track: (The 30-year T-bond price) multiplied by (profits expected in the year ahead) multiplied by (a structural growth constant) To the extent that the structural growth outlook for profits does not change, we can simplify the expression to: (The 30-year T-bond price) multiplied by (profits expected in the year ahead) This approach might seem simplistic, yet it perfectly explains the US stock market’s evolution both over the past 40 years (Chart I-7) and over the past year (Chart I-8). Specifically, in 2022 to date, the major drag on the US stock market has been the sell-off in the 30-year T-bond. Chart I-7The US Stock Market = The 30-Year T-Bond Price Times Profits (40 Year Chart) Chart I-8The US Stock Market = The 30-Year T-Bond Price Times Profits (1 Year Chart) For the foreseeable future, we expect profit growth to be lacklustre, keeping the 30-year T-bond price as the dominant driver of the US stock market. With core inflation on the cusp of rolling over and global growth decelerating, the end is in sight for the sell-off in long duration bonds and therefore for the sell-off in the stock market. On a 6-12 month horizon, overweight both US bonds and US stocks. Fractal Trading Watchlist This week, we note that the MSCI index outperformance of Hong Kong versus Chinese has reached a point of fragility on its 260-day fractal structure that has signalled previous major turning points in 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, and 2020. Therefore, we have added this to our watchlist of investments that are at or approaching turning points, which is available in full on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com We also highlight that the strong rally in high dividend stocks (the ETF is HDV) is vulnerable to correction if, as we expect, bond yields stabilise or reverse (Chart I-9). Accordingly, the recommended trade is to short high dividend stocks (HDV) versus the 10-year T-bond, setting the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 6 percent. Chart I-9The Outperformance Of High Dividend Stocks Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart 2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart 3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 4Canada Versus Japan Is Reversing Chart 5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart 6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal Chart 7Bitcoin's 65-Day Fractal Support Is Holding For Now Chart 8A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart 9Biotech Is A Major Buy Chart 10CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart 11Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Chart 12Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart 13Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Chart 14BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart 15The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 16The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Has Started To Reverse Chart 17Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 18US Homebuilders' Underperformance Has Reached A Potential Turning Point Chart 19Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Has Started To End Chart 20The Rally In USD/EUR Could End Chart 21The Outperformance Of MSCI Hong Kong Versus China Is Vulnerable To Reversal Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The duration of any investment quantifies how far into the future its cashflows lie, by averaging those cashflows into one theoretical future ‘lump sum’. Defined mathematically, it is the weighted average of the times of its cashflows, in which the weights are the present values of the cashflows. For a bond, the duration also equals the percentage change in the bond price for every 1 percent change in its yield. Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Executive Summary A housing slowdown has begun and it will proceed in three stages. First, rising mortgage rates will lead to slowing demand. Second, weak demand will push inventories higher and cause home prices to decelerate. Finally, construction activity will trend down signaling a peak in the fed funds rate. We are at least one year away from housing signaling a peak in interest rates. Agency MBS returns will improve going forward, but the sector is still not sufficiently attractive to increase exposure. Housing Starts Are A Useful Fed Indicator Bottom Line: Maintain an underweight allocation to agency MBS within US bond portfolios and favor low coupons (1.5%-2.5%) over high coupons (3%-4.5%). Feature Chart 1The Highest Mortgage Rate Since 2011 The biggest question for investors continues to be how the economy and financial markets will react to the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot, a pivot that has led to sharply higher bond yields and a much flatter yield curve. However, it’s not just this re-shaping of the Treasury curve that has changed the economic landscape. The Fed’s hawkish pivot has also sent the mortgage rate back above 5% for the first time since 2011 (Chart 1). This week’s report considers what an elevated mortgage rate means for the future path of Fed rate hikes. It also updates our view on Agency MBS. Housing Is Critical For Fed Policy Housing is probably the most important channel through which monetary policy impacts the economy. This is simply the result of the fact that monetary policy directly influences mortgage rates and mortgage rates are a major determinant of housing demand. Not only that, but empirical research has shown residential investment to be an excellent leading indicator of recession.1 Related Report Global Fixed Income StrategyGlobal Bond Yields Take A Breather From these facts we can draw two conclusions. First, monetary policy works in large part through its influence on housing activity. Second, trends in housing activity can send important signals about the stance of monetary policy. For example, we observe that periods of Fed tightening tend to occur when the 12-month moving average of housing starts is above the 24-month moving average. Meanwhile, periods of Fed rate cuts tend to occur when the 12-month moving average of housing starts is below the 24-month moving average (Chart 2). This is a fairly reliable relationship going back to the early 1970s, the sole exception being the late-1980s when the Fed delivered a series of rate hikes as housing activity trended down. Chart 2Housing Starts Are A Useful Fed Indicator Chart 2 shows us that housing starts are currently trending higher, consistent with a period of Fed tightening. However, it also tells us that we should start to anticipate the end of the tightening cycle when the 12-month moving average of housing starts falls below the 24-month moving average. While the elevated mortgage rate will certainly slow housing activity going forward, we expect that we are still at least one year away from receiving that signal from the housing starts data. A Housing Slowdown In Three Steps We see the coming housing slowdown proceeding in three steps. First, higher mortgage rates will crimp demand. This is already starting to occur. New and existing home sales have both dipped in recent months, and mortgage purchase applications are down off their highs (Chart 3). Chart 3Phase 1: Weaker Demand Demand weakness will continue until the housing slowdown reaches its second phase. The second phase will be characterized by rising home inventories and decelerating home prices. This has still not occurred. The total inventory of new and existing homes is near its all-time low and home prices were up 18% during the 12-month period ending in January (Chart 4). The second phase of the housing slowdown is critical because builders will be incentivized to add supply as long as inventories remain low and prices remain elevated. That is, the housing slowdown will not reach its third phase – declining housing starts – until weak demand pushes inventories up and prices down, making new construction less attractive. Presently, while homebuilder equities have sold off as mortgage rates have risen, homebuilder confidence is still extremely high (Chart 5). This tells us that we are still quite far away from seeing a trend reversal in housing starts. Chart 4Phase 2: Falling Prices Chart 5Phase 3: Less Construction Bottom Line: A trend reversal in housing starts, as indicated by the 12-month moving average dipping below the 24-month moving average, will send a strong signal that the Fed is near the peak of its tightening cycle. Given that the housing slowdown is still in its early stages, we view this development as at least one year away. Agency MBS: The Rout Is Over, But It’s Still Too Soon To Buy Chart 6Poor MBS Performance Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) have performed terribly during the past year (Chart 6). Not only have the securities drastically underperformed duration-matched Treasuries, but they have also performed worse than investment grade corporate bonds and Agency-backed Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities. The chief reason for the poor performance has been the surge in bond yields and the resulting increase in Agency MBS duration. It became less attractive for homeowners to prepay their mortgages as mortgage rates rose. This caused MBS duration to extend, meaning that every further increase in yields led to a more severe drop in price. Chart 7 shows that the average duration of the conventional 30-year Agency MBS index was around 3.0 at the beginning of 2021. It is now above 6.0! The good news is that this is probably about as high as the index duration will get. The refi option on most mortgages is already out-of-the-money. That is, close to 0% of the amount outstanding of the conventional 30-year MBS index can profitably refinance with the mortgage rate at its current level (Chart 7, panel 2). We also observe that the average price of the index has fallen to well below par (Chart 7, panel 3) and the average convexity of the index is close to zero (Chart 7, bottom panel). The key point is that there is now very little convexity risk in the MBS index, so further movements in bond yields will lead to much smaller changes in index duration. Low convexity risk means that the worst of the MBS duration extension has already passed. MBS returns should be somewhat better going forward, though we still don’t recommend increasing exposure to the sector. At this juncture, the main reason to stay defensive on Agency MBS is that spreads simply don’t offer sufficient value. The average index spread versus Treasuries is close to its lowest level since 2000 (Chart 8). Interestingly, dramatic MBS underperformance didn’t lead to spread widening during the past year because MBS yields kept getting compared to longer and longer duration Treasuries as the MBS index duration extended. Chart 7The Extension Trade Is Over Chart 8MBS Spreads Are Too Tight MBS value is also relatively poor compared to investment grade rated corporate bonds. The option-adjusted spread differential between Agency MBS and investment grade corporates is close to its median since 2000 (Chart 8, panel 2). MBS value looks slightly more expensive if we adjust for index duration by using the 12-month breakeven spread (Chart 8, bottom panel). With value relative to investment grade corporates either at its historical median or slightly more expensive, we don’t see a compelling case for favoring Agency MBS over investment grade corporates. Bottom Line: MBS index duration extension has likely run its course. We therefore expect MBS returns to improve somewhat during the next 6-12 months. That said, we continue to recommend an underweight allocation to the sector as current spreads don’t justify favoring MBS over Treasuries or investment grade corporates. Take A Look At Low Coupons We think investors should consider favoring low coupons (1.5%-2.5%) within an overall underweight allocation to agency MBS. We view this recommendation as a way to position for a drop in Treasury yields between now and the end of the year. In prior reports we noted that long-dated forward Treasury yields are elevated relative to survey estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate, and also that we expect inflation to trend down in the coming months.2 While we continue to recommend keeping portfolio duration close to benchmark on a 6-12 month horizon, a low-coupon bias within Agency MBS is a good way to position for the possibility that falling inflation will push bond yields down. To see why, we need to simply consider that low coupon mortgages are the least likely to refinance and thus low-coupon MBS have the highest durations (Chart 9). With convexity currently close to zero for the entire coupon stack (Chart 10), MBS relative coupon positioning can really be boiled down to a play on rates and duration risk. Chart 9Agency MBS 30-Year Conventional Coupon Stack: OAS vs. Duration Chart 10Agency MBS 30-Year Conventional Coupon Stack: OAS vs. Convexity A further rise in bond yields will cause higher coupon MBS (3%-4.5%) to outperform lower coupon MBS (1.5%-2.5%), while a drop in bond yields will lead to low-coupon outperformance. Given our current macro outlook, we think it makes sense to bet on the latter. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.nber.org/papers/w13428 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Peak Inflation”, dated April 19, 2022. Recommended Portfolio Specification Other Recommendations Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns
Executive Summary After having overspent on goods ex-autos over the past two years and experiencing contracting incomes in real terms, US and European households will reduce their purchases of goods ex-autos. Risks to global growth stemming from China remain to the downside. Leading indicators from Asia and global financial markets are signaling a contraction in global trade. Yet, US core inflation will not drop below 4% for the rest of this year. Consequently, the Fed will likely end up hiking rates and sounding hawkish amidst a major global trade slump. This will give rise to stagflation anxiety among investors and will be negative for global risk assets in general and EM equities, currencies and credit markets in particular. The yuan is breaking down versus the US dollar. A weaker RMB will pull down Emerging Asian as well as other EM currencies. Does This Divergence From A Historic Correlation Signify Stagflation? Bottom Line: Global equity and credit portfolios should remain defensive and continue underweighting EM. Currency investors should be positioned for another upleg in the US dollar and a downleg in EM currencies. Feature The volume of global trade is about to contract. Meantime, US inflation will remain well above the Fed’s target. This combination will produce stagflation anxiety among investors. It is impossible to know whether stagflation will be a long-lasting phenomenon in the real economy. In our view, the stagflation narrative will dominate global financial markets in the coming months. This heralds a cautious stance on global and EM risk assets. The slowdown in global manufacturing and trade will be pervasive and broad-based but will exclude auto production. The latter will in fact recover as chip/input shortages ease. The main drivers of the slowdown are (1) a mean reversion in US and European demand for goods ex-autos; (2) China’s economic woes and (3) moribund domestic demand in mainstream EM. Shrinking DM Household Demand For Goods ex-Autos Chart 1DM Household Demand For Goods ex-Autos Will Experience Mean Reversion After having overspent on goods ex-autos over the past two years and experiencing contracting income in real terms (after adjusting for inflation), US and European households will reduce their purchases of goods ex-autos. US and European consumption of goods ex-autos exploded at the onset of the pandemic two years ago and has stayed robust until now. Chart 1 illustrates that since mid-2020, the consumption of goods ex-autos was running well above its trend, which signifies excessive demand over the past two years. Such excessive demand has led to bottlenecks and shortages, giving producers an opportunity to hike prices. In a nutshell, inflation in tradable goods in the past 18 months was primarily driven by demand, not supply constraints. A portion of future goods consumption has been pulled forward, which implies that household demand for these goods has become saturated. Moreover, as the pandemic subsides, consumers are shifting their spending from goods to services. These dynamics could create an air pocket in the demand for certain goods. Chart 2DM Household Real Incomes Are Contracting Critically, US and European household income is contracting in real terms (Chart 2). Wage growth has not kept up with the surge in inflation. Due to shrinking disposable real income, consumers in advanced economies will curtail their consumption of discretionary items, primarily goods ex autos on which they have overspent during the past two years. Bottom Line: Demand for goods ex-autos will shrink in advanced economies in the next 6-12 months. This will weigh on global merchandise trade. China’s Trilemma Chinese authorities are facing an “impossible trinity” in their attempts to simultaneously achieve three objectives: (1) pursuing the dynamic zero-Covid policy, (2) delivering decent economic growth, and (3) not resorting to “irrigation-style” massive stimulus. We do not think all three objectives can be achieved. China’s economy was struggling prior to the recent lockdowns. The COVID-related restrictions have only made matters worse and have weighed heavily on economic activities and household income. Domestic orders for industrial enterprises plunged below 50, i.e., they are in contraction territory (Chart 3). These surveys, released on March 30-31, were not affected by the Shanghai lockdowns, which have proliferated since March 28. Exports orders are also contracting (Chart 4). Chart 3China: Domestic Orders Were Plunging Prior To Lockdowns Chart 4China: Exports Are Set To Contract Further, China’s import and export volumes were contracting in January – prior to the Ukraine war and the recent lockdowns. Notably, Chart 5 highlights that prior to the recent lockdowns, import weakness was broad-based, including commodities, machinery and semiconductors. In particular, total imports in USD are flat in March compared to a year ago. With commodity prices up significantly, it is clear that import volumes in March have shrunken substantially. National disposable income per capita was growing at about 6% in nominal terms before the lockdowns (Chart 6, top panel). Household mortgage growth had decelerated considerably before lockdowns became widespread (Chart 6, bottom panel). Chart 5Chinese Imports Were Shrinking Before Lockdowns Chart 6China: Household Income And Mortgage Borrowing As the lockdowns wreak havoc on the economy and household income, and with the government not providing direct transfers to the population, household consumption will be severely affected in the months ahead. The property market remains in the doldrums and is unlikely to recover soon. As we have highlighted in previous reports, structural headwinds, continue to weigh down on the property market. Since 2009, there has been no business cycle recovery in China without the real estate market playing the leading role. Residential floor space sold was down by 20% in Q1 from a year ago (Chart 7, top panel). House prices have begun deflating in tier-3 cities. Deflation will likely spread to tier-1 and -2 cities due to a pandemic-driven decline in income and confidence. Critically, the plunge in property developers’ financing entails shrinkage in housing completion (construction work) (Chart 7, bottom panel). The latter has so far held up as authorities have been forcing developers to use their limited financing to complete projects that they had already started. The massive issuance of local government bonds will spur an acceleration in infrastructure spending. China’s government gave the green light already this year to infrastructure projects worth nearly 70% of what was allowed for the whole of last year. Yet, this might be insufficient to produce a rapid business cycle recovery in an environment of rolling lockdowns and with other segments of the economy facing challenges. Related Report Emerging Markets StrategyGlobal Semi Stocks: More Downside Given these negative forces, the Chinese economy requires massive government stimulus in the form of direct transfers to households and SMEs – as the US offered in the spring of 2020. Yet, it does not seem that the government is rushing to provide such direct and significant stimulus. In our opinion, the policy stimulus measures announced so far by the government fall short of what is required to lift the economy. Policymakers are neither ready to abandon the dynamic zero-Covid policy nor provide “irrigation-type” stimulus, especially for households and the property market. With these two constraints, economic growth in China is set to underwhelm. Bottom Line: Risks to global growth stemming from China remain to the downside. In EM ex-China, ongoing fiscal tightening, monetary tightening in LATAM and feeble household income growth in India and ASEAN will all cap consumer spending and business investment (Chart 8). Chart 7China: Property Construction Is Set To Shrink Chart 8EM ex-China: Domestic Demand Will Remain Sluggish Signs Of A Global Trade Contraction There is already evidence to suggest that a major relapse in global manufacturing and trade is beginning: Taiwanese shipments to China are dipping into negative territory, and they lead global exports (Chart 9). Taiwanese exports to China are a good leading indicator of global trade dynamics because mainland producers order inputs from Taiwan first before they produce final goods for export. When producers located in China order less inputs, they evidently expect less in the way of production and shipments. Korea’s business survey of exporting companies indicates a substantial deterioration in their business conditions in April (Chart 10). This points to a major slump in the nation’s exports and, hence, global trade. Chart 9Global Trade Is Set To Contract Chart 10Korean Exporters Are Downgrading Their Expectations Korean and Japanese non-financial share prices have plunged despite considerable currency depreciation, which is typically positive for their competitiveness. As many of these non-financial companies are major exporters, this development points to a major downtrend in global trade. Global cyclicals have been underperforming global defensives. This dynamic has historically been a good leading indicator for the global industrial downturn (Chart 11). Finally, early cyclical stocks in the US have sold off and have substantially underperformed domestic defensives (Chart 12). This also points to a slowdown in US growth. Chart 11Global Equity Sector Performance Points To A Relapse In Global Manufacturing Chart 12Beware Of A Relapse in US Early Cyclical Stocks Bottom Line: Leading indicators from Asian economies and global financial markets are signaling that global trade will experience a contraction and global growth will slow. Inflation Amid A Global Trade Contraction? Chart 13US Wages Are Surging in Nominal Terms Yet Shrinking In Real Terms A natural question is why worry about inflation when global trade volumes will be contracting? The primary source of anxiety in this context is US inflation and the Fed’s tightening. A decline in global trade will not be enough to bring down US core inflation substantially. By contrast, China and Asia do not face an inflation problem. US inflation worries will persist, and the Fed will likely continue to hike rates and sound hawkish for the following reasons: First, US capital expenditures by companies and household spending on services will remain robust. US services make up a larger share of the American economy and employment than do goods-producing sectors. Hence, we do not expect a broad-based recession in the US this year. Second, as we have previously noted, the US has a genuine inflation problem. American wages are accelerating, and a tight labor market will push up wage growth above 5-6% (Chart 13, top panel). Importantly, real wages in the US have contracted (Chart 13, bottom panel). Faced with a decline in purchasing power, employees will demand higher wages. The tight labor market raises the odds that companies will likely accommodate higher wages. Chart 14Unit Labor Costs Are The Key To Core Inflation Given that US productivity growth is no more than 1.5-2%, wage growth over 5-6% means that unit labor costs will be rising by more than 3-4%. This will prevent core inflation from falling a lot. Unit labor costs have historically been the main driver of core inflation in the US (Chart 14). Finally, inflation is a lagging and inert phenomenon. It takes a long time (more than six to nine months) of sub-par growth for inflation to subside. Odds are that even though global trade volumes will be contracting, the Fed will continue hiking rates and sounding hawkish because US inflationary pressures will remain acute. Bottom Line: Annual core CPI inflation will drop in the US due to the base effect and a drop in some goods prices. Yet, we expect core CPI and PCE to remain above 4% for the rest of this year. Underlying inflationary pressures have spilled over into the labor market, and the wage-price spiral has probably unraveled. Therefore, inflation cannot be reduced meaningfully without bringing economic growth down below potential growth and weakening the labor market for a few quarters. Investment Implications Shrinking global trade volumes and a hawkish Fed are bearish for global risk assets in general and EM equities, currencies and credit markets in particular. Contracting exports and a hawkish Fed are negative for the Chinese yuan and other Asian currencies. The CNY/USD exchange rate has broken below its 200-day moving average and odds are that it will depreciate further (Chart 15). Our target for CNY/USD is 6.7. The broad trade-weighted US dollar has more upside and EM currencies will depreciate. Chart 16 illustrates that investors’ net long positions in ZAR, BRL and MXN are high. Chart 15The RMB Is Breaking Down Chart 16Investors Are Long EM Commodity Currencies Our recommended currency shorts for now are ZAR, PHP, IDR, COP, HUF, PEN and PLN. Global equity and credit portfolios should continue underweighting EM. Notably, global defensive equity sectors have been outperforming non-TMT stocks despite rising US/global bond yields (Chart 17). This is a major departure from the historical relationship and likely signifies a period of slower global growth ahead but continuous Fed tightening. Global equity managers should favor defensive stocks. Chart 17Does This Divergence From A Historic Correlation Signify Stagflation? For EM equity managers, we also recommend favoring defensive sectors like consumer staples. Presently, our country overweights are Korea, Singapore, Chinese A-shares, Mexico and Brazil. Our underweights are India, Central Europe, Indonesia, Turkey, South Africa, Colombia and Peru. In local rates, we continue recommending receiving Chinese and Malaysian 10-year swap rates, a long position in Brazilian 10-year bonds, betting on yield curve flattening in Mexico and paying Polish 10-year swap rates while receiving Czech 10-year swap rates. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com
Executive Summary In this first of a regular series of ‘no holds barred’ conversations with a concerned client we tackle the hot topic of inflation. Month-on-month US core inflation has already peaked, 12-month US core inflation is about to peak, and demand destruction will ultimately pull down headline inflation too. Given modest and slowing growth in unit labour costs, there is no imminent risk of a wage-price spiral. Surging inflation expectations are just capturing the frothiness in inflation protected bond prices that massive hedging demand is creating. This recent massive demand for inflation hedges such as inflation protected bonds and commodities will recede and take the frothiness out of their prices. On a 6-12 month horizon, underweight inflation protected bonds and commodities… …overweight conventional bonds and stocks… …and tilt towards healthcare and biotech. The Performance Of Inflation Protected Bonds Versus Conventional Bonds Just Tracks The Oil Price Bottom Line: US core inflation is about to peak, demand destruction will ultimately pull down headline inflation, and there is no imminent risk of a wage-price spiral. On a 6-12 horizon, overweight stocks and conventional bonds versus commodities and inflation protected bonds. Feature Welcome to the first of a regular series of Counterpoint reports that takes the form of a ‘no holds barred’ conversation with a concerned client. Roughly once a month, our open and counterpoint conversations will address a major question or concern for investors. This inaugural conversation tackles the hot topic of inflation. On Peak Inflation Client: Thank you for addressing my worries. Like many people right now, I am concerned about inflation. My first question is, when is inflation going to peak? CPT: The good news is that, in an important sense, inflation has already peaked. Month-on-month core inflation in the US reached a high of 0.9 percent through April-June last year. In the more recent pickup through October-January it reached a ‘lower peak’ of 0.6 percent. And in March it dropped to 0.3 percent. Client: Ok, but inflation usually refers to the 12-month inflation rate – when will that peak? CPT: The 12-month inflation rate is just the sum of the last twelve month-on-month rates. So, when the big numbers of April-June of last year drop off to be replaced by the smaller numbers of April-June of this year, the 12-month inflation rate will fall sharply (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Month-On-Month Core Inflation Has Already Peaked, And 12-Month Core Inflation Is About To Peak Client: Even if the 12-month inflation rate does peak soon, it will still be far too high. When will it return to the 2 percent target? CPT: In the pandemic era, monthly core inflation has been non-linear. Meaning it has been either ‘high-phase’ of 0.5 percent and above, or ‘low-phase’ of 0.3 percent and below. In March it returned to low-phase. If it stays in low-phase, then as an arithmetic identity, the 12-month core inflation rate will be close to its target twelve months from now. Client: So far, you have just talked about core inflation which excludes energy and food prices. What about headline inflation? Specifically, isn’t the Ukraine crisis a massive supply shock for Russian and Ukrainian sourced energy and food? Demand destruction will ultimately pull down headline inflation too. CPT: Yes, headline inflation may take longer to come down than core inflation. But supply shocks ultimately resolve themselves through demand destruction. Client: Could you elaborate on that? CPT: Sure. With fuel and food prices surging, many people are asking: do I really need to make that journey? Do I really need to keep the heating on? Can I buy a cheaper loaf of bread? So, they will cut back, and to the extent that they can’t cut back on energy and food, demand for other more discretionary items will come down, and eventually weigh on prices. Client: At the same time, the pandemic is still raging – look at what’s happening in Shanghai right now. Won’t further disruptions to supply chains just add further fuel to inflation? CPT: Yes, but to repeat, inflation that is entirely due to a supply shock ultimately resolves itself through demand destruction. On The Source Of The Inflation Crisis Client: I am puzzled. If supply shock generated inflation resolves itself, then what has caused the post-pandemic inflation to be anything but ‘transitory’? CPT: The simple answer is the pandemic’s draconian lockdowns combined with massive handouts of government cash unleashed a massive demand shock. But it wasn’t a shock in the magnitude of demand, it was a shock in the distribution of demand (Chart I-2). Chart I-2The Pandemic's Draconian Lockdowns Combined With Massive Government Stimulus Unleashed A Massive Shock In The Distribution Of Demand Client: Could you explain that? CPT: Well, we were all locked at home and flush with government supplied cash, and we couldn’t spend the cash on services. So, we spent it on what we could spend it on – namely, durable goods. This created a massive shock in the distribution of demand, out of services whose supply could easily adjust downwards, and into goods whose supply could not easily adjust upwards. Client: Can you give me some specific examples? CPT: Sure. Airlines could cut back their flights, but auto manufacturers couldn’t make more cars. So, airfares didn’t collapse but used car prices went vertical! The result being the surge in inflation. Client: Do you have any more evidence? Inflation is highest in those economies where the cash handouts and furlough schemes were the most generous, like the US and the UK. CPT: Yes, the three separate surges in month-on-month core inflation all occurred after surges in durable goods demand (Chart I-3). Additionally, inflation is highest in those economies where the cash handouts and furlough schemes were the most generous – like the US and the UK. Chart I-3The Three Surges In Month-On-Month Core Inflation All Occurred After Surges In Durable Goods Demand Client: If we get more waves of Covid, what’s to stop all this happening again? CPT: Nothing, so we should be vigilant. That said, we now have coping strategies for Covid that do not necessitate massive handouts of government cash. Also, we have already binged on durable goods, making it much harder to repeat that trick. On Wages And Inflation Expectations Client: I am still worried that if workers can negotiate much higher wages in response to higher prices, then it would threaten a wage-price spiral. CPT: Agreed, but it is technically incorrect to focus on wage inflation. The correct metric to focus on is unit labour cost inflation – which is wage growth in excess of productivity growth. In the US, this was 3.5 percent through 2021, slowing to just a 0.9 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter. So, it is not flashing danger, at least yet. Client: Ok, but what about the surge in inflation expectations. Isn’t that flashing danger? CPT: We should treat inflation expectations with a huge dose of salt, as they simply track the oil price, and therefore provide a nonsensical prediction of future inflation! (Chart I-4) Chart I-4The Tight Relationship Between The Oil Price And Inflation Expectations Is Intuitive, Appealing... And Nonsense Client: What can explain this nonsense? CPT: Simply that when the oil price is high, investors flood into inflation hedges such as inflation protected bonds. So, the surge in inflation expectations is just capturing the frothiness in inflation protected bond prices that this massive hedging demand is creating. We can see similar frothiness in some commodity prices. The recent massive demand for inflation hedges such as inflation protected bonds and commodities will recede and take the frothiness out of their prices. Client: How so? CPT: Well to the extent that commodity prices drive headline inflation, the apples-for-apples relationship should be between commodity price inflation and headline inflation, and this is what we generally see (Chart I-5). But recently, this relationship has broken down and instead we see a tighter relationship between headline inflation and commodity price levels (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). The likely causality here is that, just as for inflation protected bonds, massive inflation hedging demand has created frothiness in some commodity prices. Chart I-5Commodity Price Inflation Usually Drives Headline Inflation, But Recently The Relationship Broke Down Chart I-6Recently, We See A Weak Relationship Between Commodity Price Inflation And Headline Inflation... Chart I-7...But A Tight Relationship Between Headline Inflation And Commodity Price Levels On The Investment Implications Client: To sum up your view then, month-on-month US core inflation has already peaked, 12-month US core inflation is about to peak, and demand destruction will ultimately pull down headline inflation. Given modest and slowing growth in unit labour costs, there is no imminent risk of a wage-price spiral, and surging inflation expectations are just capturing the frothiness in inflation protected bond prices that massive hedging demand is creating. What does this view mean for investment strategy? On a 6-12 horizon, overweight stocks and conventional bonds versus commodities and inflation protected bonds. CPT: Well given that inflation is peaking, one obvious implication is that the massive demand for inflation hedges will recede and take the frothiness out of their prices. On a 6-12 month horizon this means underweighting inflation protected bonds and commodities (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Performance Of Inflation Protected Bonds Versus Conventional Bonds Just Tracks The Oil Price Client: What about the surge in bond yields – when will that reverse? CPT: Empirically, we have seen that bond yields turn just ahead of the turn in the 12-month core inflation rate. Hence, on a 6-12 month horizon this means overweighting bonds. Client: Finally, what does all this mean for stock markets? CPT: The weakness of stock markets this year has been entirely due to falling valuations, rather than falling profits. If the headwind to valuations from rising bond yields turns into a tailwind from falling bond yields, it will boost stocks – especially long-duration stocks with relatively defensive profits. On a 6-12 month horizon this means overweighting stocks, and our favourite sectors are healthcare and biotech. Client: Thank you very much for this open and counterpoint conversation. Fractal Trading Watchlist Due to the Easter holidays, there are no new trades this week. However, the full updated watchlist of 20 investments that are experiencing or approaching turning points is available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Chart 1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart 2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart 3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 4Canada Versus Japan Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart 6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal Chart 7Bitcoin's 65-Day Fractal Support Is Holding For Now Chart 8A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart 9Biotech Is A Major Buy Chart 10CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart 11Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Chart 12Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart 13Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Chart 14BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart 15The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 16The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 17Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 18US Homebuilders' Underperformance Is At A Potential Turning Point Chart 19Fractal Trading Watch List Chart 20Fractal Trading Watch List Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Executive Summary A Good Time For A Pause In The Bond Bear Market The global government bond selloff looks stretched from a technical perspective, and a consolidation phase is likely over the next few months as global growth and inflation momentum both roll over. Central banks are starting to turn more aggressive on the pace of rate hikes in the face of elevated inflation expectations, as evidenced by the 50bp rate hikes in Canada and New Zealand last week (and the likely similar move the Fed next month). However, forward pricing of policy rates over the next 12-18 months is already at or above policymaker estimates of neutral in most developed countries. Global bond yields will be capped until central banks and markets revise higher their estimates of neutral policy rates. This is more a 2023/24 story than a 2022 story. Interest rate expectations are too high in Canada. High household debt will limit the ability for the Bank of Canada to match the Fed’s rate hikes during the current tightening cycle without bursting the Canadian housing bubble. Bottom Line: Maintain a neutral stance on overall global duration exposure. Upgrade Canadian government bonds to neutral (3 out of 5) in global bond portfolios, ideally funded out of US Treasury allocations. How To Interpret Rising Real Bond Yields Chart 1Bonds Under Pressure From Both Inflation & Real Yields The sharp rise in global government bond yields seen so far in 2022 has been driven by both rising inflation expectations and higher real yields (Chart 1). The former is a function of the war-fueled surge in oil prices at a time of high realized inflation, while the latter is a consequence of expectations for tighter monetary policy to fight that inflation. The magnitude of the yield increases seen year-to-date is surprising given the downgrades to global growth expectations. Just this week, the IMF downgraded its growth forecasts for the second time this year. It now expects global growth to reach 3.6% in both 2022 and 2023, shaving 0.8 and 0.2 percentage points, respectively, from the last set of yearly forecasts made back in January. The World Bank similarly chopped its growth forecast for 2022 to 3.2% from 4.1%. Spillovers from the Russia/Ukraine war were the main factor behind the downgrades, including more aggressive monetary tightening by global central banks in response to commodity-fueled inflation. We’re already seeing a faster pace of rate hikes from developed market central banks. The Bank of Canada (BoC) and Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) lifted policy rates by 50bps last week and the Fed is signaling a similar move in May. Not all policymakers are sending hawkish signals, however. The ECB last week opted to not commit to the timing and pace of any future moves on rates, while the Bank of Japan has pledged to maintain monetary stimulus measures even in the face of a collapsing yen. Related Report Global Fixed Income StrategyPolicymakers Face The No-Win Scenario While government bond yields have risen across the developed world so far in 2022, the drivers of the yield increase have not been the same in all countries when looking at moves in benchmark 10-year nominal and inflation-linked bonds (Chart 2). About three-quarters of the nominal yield moves seen year-to-date in the US (+134bps), Canada (+136bps) and Australia (+130bps) have come from higher real yields, while the increase in the Gilt yield (+92bps) was more of an equal split between real yields and inflation breakevens. In Germany (+102bps) and Japan (+17bps), the upward move in 10-year yields this year has all been from higher breakevens, as real yields have fallen in both countries. Chart 2Real Yields (ex-Europe/Japan) Driving Nominal Yields Higher In 2022 In the US, Canada and UK – three countries where central banks have delivered rate hikes this year and are promising to do more – real yields have been highly correlated to rising interest rate expectations for the next two years taken from overnight index swap (OIS) curves (Chart 3). Meanwhile, in Germany, Japan and Australia - where central banks have kept rates steady and not sending strong messages on when that will change – the correlation between real yields and OIS-derived interest rate expectations has not been as strong (Chart 4). Chart 3Rising Real Yields Where Central Banks Have Been Hiking Chart 4More Stable Real Yields Where CBs Are More Dovish Chart 5Real Rate Expectations Have Risen Much Faster In The US The link between interest rate expectations and real yields is intuitive after factoring in inflation expectations. In Chart 5, we show actual real interest rates (policy rates minus headline CPI inflation) in the US, euro area and UK, as well as a “market-based” measure of real interest rate expectations derived as the difference between forward rates from the nominal OIS and CPI swap curves (the dotted lines). The current path for real rates is the black dotted line, while the path as of the start of 2022 is the green dotted line. In all three countries, the market-derived path for real rates over the next decade has shifted upward since the start of the year, which is consistent with a rising path for real bond yields. Yet the largest move has been in the US where real rates are expected to average around zero over the next ten years. This lines up logically with the more hawkish messaging on rates from the Fed, leading to a repricing of the 10-year TIPS yield from -1% at the start of the year to a mere -0.04% today. By contrast, real rate expectations and real yields remain negative in the euro area and UK, as both the ECB and Bank of England have been much less hawkish compared to the Fed in terms of signaling the timing and magnitude of future rate hikes. We have long flagged deeply negative real bond yields, especially in the US, as the greatest source of vulnerability for global bond markets. Such yield levels can only be sustained in a rising inflation environment if central banks deliberately keep policy rates below inflation for a long time. The Fed was not going to allow that to happen with inflation reaching levels not seen since the early 1980s, leaving US Treasuries vulnerable to a sharp repricing of fed funds rate expectations that would drive real bond yields higher. Looking ahead, we do not expect to see much additional bearish repricing of global rate expectations and real yields over the rest of 2022, for the following reasons: Global growth momentum is slowing The combined shock of geopolitical uncertainty from the Ukraine war, high oil prices and tightening global monetary policy – in addition to the expected slump in Chinese growth due to the latest wave of COVID lockdowns – has damaged economic confidence. The April reading from global ZEW survey of professional forecasters and investors showed another modest decline in US and euro area growth expectations after the huge drop in March (Chart 6). Interestingly, the ZEW survey also showed a big decline in the net number of respondents expecting higher inflation and a small dip in the number of respondents expecting higher bond yields – both potential signals that the increase in global bond yields is ready to pause. Medium-term US inflation expectations have remained relatively contained The sharp run-up in US inflation has boosted survey-based measures of inflation expectations, although the increase has been much higher for shorter-term expectations (Chart 7). One-year-ahead inflation expectations from the University of Michigan and New York Fed consumer surveys have doubled over the past year and now sit at 6.6% and 5.4%, respectively. Yet the 5-10 year ahead inflation expectation from the Michigan survey has seen a much smaller increase and is holding stable around 3%. The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven is at even less worrisome levels and now sits at a trendline resistance level of 2.4% (bottom panel). Chart 6ZEW Survey Shows Weaker Growth & Inflation Expectations Chart 7Medium-Term US Inflation Expectations Have Not Broken Out US inflation is showing early signs of peaking Year-over-year headline US CPI inflation reached another cyclical high of 8.6% in March. However, core CPI inflation rose by a less-than-expected +0.3% on the month and the year-over-year rate of 6.5% was essentially unchanged versus the February level (Chart 8). Used car prices, a huge driver of the surge in US goods inflation in 2021, fell by a sizeable -3.8% in March, the second consecutive monthly decrease. Chart 8A Peak In US Core Inflation? Chart 9Housing Cost Inflation Is A Global Problem We expect US consumer spending to shift more towards services from goods over the next 6-12 months, which should lead to overall US inflation rates converging more towards lower services inflation. Services inflation is still well above the Fed’s inflation target, however, particularly with shelter inflation – one-third of the overall US CPI index – now at 5.0% and showing no signs of slowing. Chart 10A Good Time For A Pause In The Bond Bear Market Rising housing costs are not only a problem in the US, and house prices and valuations have soared across the developed world (Chart 9). This suggests that housing and rental costs will remain an important driver of underlying inflation in many countries, not just the US. Summing it all up, we continue to see conditions conducive to a period of relative global bond market stability, with government bond yields remaining rangebound over the next several months. The stimulus for higher yields – from even more hawkish repricing of central bank expectations, even higher real bond yields or additional increases in inflation expectations – is not evident. Bond yields look stretched from a technical perspective, and our Global Duration Indicator continues to signal that global yield momentum should soon peak (Chart 10). Bottom Line: Maintain a neutral stance on overall global bond portfolio duration. Upgrade Canadian Government Bonds To Neutral The Bank of Canada (BoC) hiked its policy interest rate by 50bps last week to 1%, the first rate increase of that size since 2000. The BoC also announced that it will begin quantitative tightening of its balance sheet at the end of April when it stops buying Canadian government bonds to replace maturing debt it currently owns. In the press conference explaining the move, BoC Governor Tiff Macklem noted that the central bank now saw the Canadian economy in a state of “excess demand” with inflation that was “expected to be elevated for longer than we previously thought” and that “the economy could handle higher interest rates, and they are needed.” Chart 11Canadian Growth Momentum Peaking? This is a very clear hawkish message from Macklem, who hinted that the BoC may have to lift rates above neutral for a period to bring Canadian inflation back down to the central bank’s target. We have our doubts that the BoC will be able to raise rates that far, and keep them there for long, before inflation pressures ease. The BoC Business Outlook Survey plays an important role in the central bank’s policy decisions. The survey for Q1/2022 showed dips in the overall survey, and the individual components related to sales growth expectations, investment intentions and hiring plans (Chart 11). There were even small drops in the net number of survey respondents seeing intense labor shortages and expecting faster wage growth (bottom panel). The moves in these survey components were modest, but they are important coming after the relentless upward rise since the trough in mid-2020. Importantly, this survey was conducted before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which likely provided an additional drag on business confidence. The components of the Business Outlook Survey related to prices and costs continued to show that Canadian firms are facing lingering capacity constraints and intense cost pressures from both labor and supply chain disruption. A net 80% of respondents – a survey record – report they would have some or significant difficulty meeting an unexpected increase in demand. A net 35% of respondents in the Q1/2022 survey cited “labor cost pass through” as a source of upward pressure on their output prices, a huge jump from the Q4/2022 reading of 19% (Chart 12). Also, a net 33% of respondents noted “non labor cost pass through”, i.e. higher prices due to supply chain disruption, as a source of pressure on output prices. Only a net 12% of respondents cited strong demand as a source of pressure on prices, and the net balance of respondents noting that the competitive environment was inflationary was effectively zero. Chart 12Canadian Businesses See More Cost-Push Inflation Pressures The two main messages from the Business Outlook Survey are: a) Canadian growth momentum likely cooled in Q1, and b) Canadian inflation pressures remain significant, but are more supply driven than demand driven. Overall Canadian inflation is still accelerating rapidly, with headline CPI hitting an 31-year high of 5.7% in February. Underlying measures of inflation are more subdued, but still elevated: the BoC’s CPI-trim and CPI-median measures are at 4.3% and 3.5%, respectively, both above the BoC’s 1-3% target band (Chart 13). Chart 13Mixed Messages On Canadian Inflation Expectations There are more mixed messages coming out of Canadian inflation surveys. The 1-year-ahead inflation expectation from the BoC’s Survey of Consumer Expectations climbed to 5.1% in Q1/2022 from 4.9% in Q4, while the 5-year-ahead expectation dropped to 3.2% from 3.5%. The 10-year breakeven inflation rate on Canadian inflation linked bonds is even lower, now sitting near at 2.2%. There are also very mixed signals on wage expectations, even with the Canadian unemployment rate dropping to a record low of 5.3% in March. Canadian consumers expect wage growth to reach 2.2% over the next year, below the latest reading on actual wage growth of 2.5% and far below the 5.2% growth expected by Canadian businesses (bottom panel). If medium-term consumer inflation expectations are not rising in the current high inflation environment, and consumer wage expectations are not increasing with a record-low unemployment rate, then the BoC can potentially move slower than markets expect on rate hikes over the next year if realized inflation peaks. On that front there are tentative signs of optimism. When breaking down Canadian inflation into goods and services components, both are still accelerating rapidly (Chart 14). Goods inflation reached 7.6% in February, while services inflation hit 3.8%. However, the pace of year-over-year inflation for some key durable goods components like new cars, household appliances and furniture – items that saw demand and prices increase during the worst of the pandemic – appears to have peaked (middle panel). This may be a sign that overall goods inflation is set to roll over, similarly to what we expect in the US in the coming months. Also like the US, services inflation is less likely to decelerate, as rent inflation is accelerating and the housing cost component of Canadian inflation (home replacement costs) is still expanding at a 13.2% annual rate. On that note, housing remains the key component to watch to determine the BoC’s next move, given highly levered household balance sheets exposed to house prices and higher mortgage rates. The robust strength of the Canadian housing market has driven house prices to some of the most overvalued levels among the developed economies. There is a speculative aspect to the housing boom, with Canadian households expecting house prices to appreciate by 7.1% over the next year according to the BoC consumer survey (Chart 15). Canadian housing demand has also become more sensitive to rate increases by the choice of mortgages. 30% of outstanding mortgages are now variable rate, up from 18% at the start of the pandemic in 2020 after the BoC cut rates to near-0%. Chart 14The Goods-Driven Canadian Inflation Surge May Be Peaking Chart 15BoC Rate Hikes Will Cool Off Canadian Housing During the BoC’s last rate hiking cycle in 2017-19, national house price inflation slowed from 15% to 0%. Policy rates had to only reach 1.75% to engineer that outcome. With household balance sheets even more levered today, and with greater exposure to variable rate mortgages, it is unlikely that a policy rate higher than the previous cycle peak will be needed to cool off house price growth – an outcome that should also dampen Canadian services inflation with its large housing related component. In addition to the rate hike at last week’s policy meeting, the BoC also announced the results of its annual revision to its estimated range for the neutral policy rate. The range is now 2-3%, up slightly from 1.75%-2.75%. The current pricing of interest rate expectations from the Canadian OIS curve has the BoC lifting rates to the high-end of that new neutral range by the first quarter of 2023, then keeping rates near those levels over at least the next five years (Chart 16). Chart 16Markets Expect The BoC To Keep Rates Elevated For Longer Chart 17Upgrade Canadian Government Bonds To Neutral We doubt the BoC will be able to raise rates all the way to 3% without inducing instability in the housing market. More importantly, the current surge in inflation is not becoming embedded in medium-term inflation and wage expectations – outcomes that would require the BoC to keep policy rates at the high end of its neutral range or even move them into restrictive territory. Turning to bond strategy, we have had Canada on “upgrade watch” in recent weeks, with rate hike expectations looking a bit too aggressive. We now see it as a good time to pull the trigger on that upgrade. Thus, this week, we are moving our recommended exposure to Canadian government bonds to neutral (3 out of 5) from underweight (Chart 17). We are “funding” that move in our model bond portfolio by reducing exposure to US Treasuries (see the tables on pages 15-16), as we see the Fed as being more likely than the BoC to deliver on the rate hike expectations discounted in OIS curves. A move to an outright overweight stance, versus all countries and not just the US, will be appropriate once Canadian inflation clearly peaks and interest rate expectations begin to decline. It is too soon to make that move now, but we will revisit that call later this year. Bottom Line: Interest rate expectations are too high in Canada with medium-term inflation expectations relatively subdued. High household debt in Canada will limit the ability for the Bank of Canada to match the Fed’s rate hikes during the current tightening cycle without bursting the Canadian housing bubble. Upgrade Canadian government bonds to neutral (3 out of 5) in global bond portfolios, ideally funded out of US Treasury allocations. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com GFIS Model Bond Portfolio Recommended Positioning Active Duration Contribution: GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. Custom Performance Benchmark The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Global Fixed Income - Strategic Recommendations* Cyclical Recommendations (6-18 Months) Tactical Overlay Trades
Executive Summary The unemployment rate in the US stands at 3.6%, 0.4 percentage points below the FOMC’s estimate of full employment. Historically, the Fed’s efforts to nudge up the unemployment rate have failed: The US has never averted a recession when the 3-month average of the unemployment rate has increased by more than a third of a percentage point. Despite this somber fact, there are reasons to think it will take longer for a recession to arrive than widely believed. Unlike in the lead-up to many past recessions, the US private sector is currently running a financial surplus. If anything, there are indications that both households and businesses are set to expand – rather than retrench – spending over the coming quarters. Investors should pay close attention to the housing market. As the most interest-rate sensitive sector of the economy, it will dictate the degree to which the Fed can raise rates. The US housing market has cooled, but remains in reasonably good shape, supported by rising incomes and low home inventories. Stocks will likely rise modestly over the next 12 months as inflation temporarily dips and the pandemic recedes from view. However, equities will falter towards the end of 2023. Stocks Tend To Fare Well When There Is No Recession On The Horizon Bottom Line: The US may not be able to avoid a recession, but an economic downturn is unlikely until 2024. Stay modestly overweight stocks over a 12-month horizon. Jobs Aplenty The US unemployment rate fell from 3.8% in February to 3.6% in March, bringing it close to its pre-pandemic low of 3.5%. Adding job openings to employment and comparing the resulting sum with the size of the labor force, the excess of labor demand over labor supply is now the highest since July 1969 (Chart 1). Chart 1Labor Demand Is Outstripping Labor Supply By The Largest Margin Since 1969 Granted, the labor force participation rate is still one full percentage point below where it was prior to the pandemic. If the participation rate were to rise, the gap between labor demand and supply would shrink. Some of the decline in the participation rate is permanent in nature, reflecting ongoing population aging, which has been compounded by an increase in early retirements during the pandemic (Chart 2). Some workers who dropped out will probably re-enter the workforce. Chart 3 shows that employment among low-wage workers has been slower to recover than for other groups. With expanded unemployment benefits no longer available, the motivation to find gainful employment will escalate. Chart 2Not All Of The Decline In Labor Participation During The Pandemic Was Due To Increased Early Retirements Chart 3Low-Wage Workers Have Not Returned In Full Force Nevertheless, it is doubtful that the entry of low-wage workers into the labor force will do much to reduce the gap between labor demand and supply. Low-wage workers tend to spend all of their incomes (Chart 4). Thus, while an increase in the number of low-wage workers will allow the supply of goods and services to rise, this will be counterbalanced by an increase in the demand for goods and services. Chart 4Richer Households Tend To Save More Than Poorer Ones To cool the labor market, the Fed will need to curb spending, and that can only be achieved by raising interest rates. Trying to achieve a soft landing in this manner is always easier said than done. The US has never averted a recession when the 3-month average of the unemployment rate has increased by more than a third of a percentage point. Rising unemployment tends to produce a negative feedback loop: A weaker labor market depresses spending. This, in turn, leads to less hiring and more firing, resulting in even higher unemployment. Where is the Choke Point? How high will interest rates need to rise to trigger such a feedback loop? Markets currently expect the Fed to raise rates to 3% by mid-2023 but then cut rates by at least 25 basis points over the subsequent months (Chart 5). So, the market thinks the neutral rate of interest – the interest rate consistent with a stable unemployment rate – is around 2.5%. The Fed broadly shares the market’s view. The median dot for the terminal Fed funds rate stood at 2.4% in the March Summary of Economic Projections (Chart 6). When the Fed first started publishing its dot plot in 2012, it thought the terminal rate was 4.25%. Chart 5The Markets See The Fed Funds Rate Reaching 3% Next Year Chart 6The Fed's Estimate Of The Terminal Rate Has Fallen Over The Years Low Imbalances Imply a Higher Neutral Rate We have discussed the concept of the neutral rate extensively in the past, so we will not regurgitate the issues here (interested readers should consult the Feature Section of our latest Strategy Outlook). Instead, it would be worthwhile to dwell on the relationship between the neutral rate and economic imbalances. Simply put, when an economy is suffering from major imbalances, it does not take much monetary tightening to push it over the edge. The private-sector financial balance measures the difference between what households and firms earn and spend. A recession is more likely to occur when the private-sector financial balance is negative — that is, when spending exceeds income — since households and firms are more prone to cut spending when they are living beyond their means. In the lead-up to the Great Recession, the private-sector financial balance hit a deficit of 3.9% of GDP in the US. Leading up to the 2001 recession, it reached a deficit of 5.4% of GDP. Today, the US private-sector financial balance, while down from its peak during the pandemic, still stands at a comfortable surplus of 3% of GDP. Rather than looking to retrench, households and businesses are poised to increase spending over the coming quarters (Chart 7). Private-sector financial balances are also positive in Japan, China, and most of Europe (Chart 8). Chart 7Consumers And Businesses Are Set To Spend More Chart 8Private-Sector Financial Balances Are Positive In Most Major Economies Watch Housing Chart 9Rising Interest Rates In The Early 1980s Had Much More Of A Negative Effect On Housing Than Business Investment At the 2007 Jackson Hole conference, Ed Leamer presented what turned out to be a very prescient paper. Titled “Housing is the Business Cycle,” Leamer concluded that “Of the components of GDP, residential investment offers by far the best early warning sign of an oncoming recession.” Housing is a long-lived asset, and one that is usually financed with debt. To a much greater extent than nonresidential investment, the housing sector is very sensitive to changes in interest rates. When the Fed hiked rates in the early 1980s, residential investment collapsed but business investment barely contracted (Chart 9). The jump in mortgage yields has started to weigh on housing (Chart 10). Mortgage applications for home purchases have fallen by 25% from their highs. Pending home sales have dropped. Homebuilder confidence has dipped. Homebuilder stocks are down 29% year-to-date. Housing is likely to slow further in the months ahead, even if mortgage yields stabilize. Chart 11 shows that changes in mortgage yields lead home sales and housing starts by about six months. Chart 10The Jump In Mortgage Rates Has Weighed On The Housing Market Chart 11Swings In Mortgage Rates Explain Short-Term Fluctuations In Housing Activity The key question for investors is whether the housing market will enter a deep freeze or merely cool down. We think the latter is more likely. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate has increased nearly two percentage points since last August, but at around 5%, it is still below the average of 6% that prevailed during the 2000-2006 housing boom (Chart 12). Moreover, unlike during the housing boom, when homebuilders flooded the market with houses, the supply of new homes remains contained. The nationwide homeowner vacancy rate stands at record lows. Building permits are near cycle highs (Chart 13). Granted, real home prices are close to record highs. However, relative to incomes, US home prices have not broken out of their historic range (Chart 14). Chart 13The Homeowner Vacancy Rate Is Near Record Lows Chart 14Homes In The US Are Relatively Cheap Home affordability is much more stretched outside of the United States. The Bank of Canada, for example, has less scope to raise rates than the Fed. Chart 15Some Signs Of Easing In Supply-Side Pressures Investment Conclusions As investors, we need to be forward looking. The widespread availability of Paxlovid later this year — which, in contrast to the vaccines, is effective against all Covid strains — will help boost global growth while relieving supply-chain bottlenecks. Shipping costs, used car prices, and ISM supplier delivery times have already come down from their highs (Chart 15). Central banks have either started to raise rates or are gearing up to do so. However, monetary policy is unlikely to turn restrictive in any major economy over the next 12 months. Stocks usually go up outside of recessionary environments (Chart 16). Global equities are trading at 17-times forward earnings. The corresponding earnings yield is about 630 basis points higher than the real global bond yield – a very wide gap by historic standards (Chart 17). Chart 16Stocks Tend To Fare Well When There Is No Recession On The Horizon Chart 17AThe Equity Risk Premium Remains Elevated (I) Chart 17BThe Equity Risk Premium Remains Elevated (II) Investors should remain modestly overweight equities over a 12-month horizon and look to increase exposure to non-US stock markets, small caps, and value stocks over the coming months. Government bond yields are unlikely to rise much over the next 12 months but will increase further over the long haul. The dollar should peak during this summer, and then weaken over the subsequent 12 months. A complete discussion of our market views is contained in our recently published Second Quarter Strategy Outlook. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Executive Summary The structural downtrend in Chinese bond yields has a lot further to go, because it is helping to let the air out gently of stratospheric valuations in the real estate sector, and thereby preventing a hard landing for the Chinese economy. In the US, flagging mortgage and housing market activity is weighing on an already slowing economy. Buy US T-bonds. The long T-bond yield is close to a peak. Switch equity exposure into long-duration sectors such as healthcare and biotech. Go overweight US homebuilders versus US insurers. The peak in bond yields will also take pressure off US homebuilder shares whose recent collapse has been the mirror-image of the surge in the 30-year mortgage rate. Fractal trading watchlist: Basic resources; Switzerland versus Germany; and USD/EUR. The Collapse In US Homebuilder Shares Is The Mirror-Image Of The Surge In The Mortgage Rate Bottom Line: The global bond yield cannot rise much further before it destabilises the $350 trillion global real estate market and thereby destabilises the global economy. Feature Quietly and largely unnoticed, Chinese long-dated bond yields have been drifting lower (Chart I-1 and Chart I-2). At a time that surging bond yields elsewhere in the world have grabbed all the attention, the largely unnoticed contrarian move in Chinese bond yields through the past year is significant because of something else that has gone largely unnoticed: Chinese real estate has become by far the largest asset-class in the world, worth $100 trillion.1 Chart I-1The Contrarian Downdrift In The Chinese 30-Year Bond Yield Chart I-2The Contrarian Downdrift In The Chinese 10-Year Bond Yield Chinese Real Estate Is Trading On A Stratospheric Valuation The $100 trillion valuation of Chinese real estate market is greater than the $90 trillion global economy, is more than twice the size of the $45 trillion US real estate market and the $45 trillion US stock market, and dwarfs the $18 trillion Chinese economy. Suffice to say, Chinese real estate’s pre-eminence as the world’s largest asset-class is mostly due to its stratospheric valuation. Prime residential rental yields in Guangzhou, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Shenzhen and Beijing have collapsed to 1.5 percent, the lowest rental yields in the world and less than half the global average of 3 percent. Versus rents therefore, Chinese real estate is now twice as expensive as in the rest of the world (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Versus Rents, Chinese Real Estate Is The Most Expensive In The World To corroborate this point, while the US real asset market is worth around two times US annual GDP, the Chinese real estate market is worth more than five times China’s annual GDP! The structural downtrend in Chinese bond yields has a lot further to go. Crucially, the downward drift in Chinese bond yields is alleviating some of the pressure on the extremely highly valued Chinese real estate market – as it helps to let the air out gently of the stratospheric valuations, and thereby avoid a hard landing for the Chinese economy. Hence, the structural downtrend in Chinese bond yields has a lot further to go. The Surge In US Mortgage Rates Is Taking Its Toll Meanwhile, in the rest of the world, the surge in bond yields poses a major threat to the decade long housing boom. Versus rents, US house prices are the most expensive ever – more expensive even than during the early 2000s so-called ‘housing bubble’. For the first time since 2008, the US 30-year mortgage rate is higher than the prime residential rental yield. Until recently, the historically low rental yield on US real estate was justified by an extremely low bond yield. But the recent surge in the bond yield has changed all that. For the first time since 2008, the US 30-year mortgage rate is higher than the prime residential rental yield2 (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The US 30-Year Mortgage Rate Is Now Higher Than The Prime Residential Rental Yield The surge in US mortgage rates is taking its toll. Since the end of January, US mortgage applications for home purchase have fallen by almost a fifth (Chart I-5), and the lower demand for home purchase mortgages is starting to weigh on home construction (Chart I-6). Building permits for new private housing units were already falling in February, but a more up-to-date sign of the pain is the 35 percent collapse in US homebuilder shares. Chart I-5US Mortgage Applications For Home Purchase Have Fallen By Almost A Fifth Chart I-6The Lower Demand For Home Purchase Mortgages Is Starting To Weigh On Home Construction $350 Trillion Of Global Real Estate Can’t Swallow Higher Bond Yields Mortgage rates drive real estate rental yields because of the arbitrage between buying versus renting a similar home. Given a fixed annual budget for housing, I must choose between how much home I can buy – which depends on the mortgage rate, versus how much home I can rent – which depends on the rental yield. The arbitrage should make me indifferent between the two options. As a simple example of this arbitrage, let’s assume my annual budget for housing is $10k, and both the mortgage rate and rental yield are 4 percent. I will be indifferent between spending the $10k on interest on a $250k mortgage loan to buy the home, or spending the $10k to rent a similar $250k home. If the mortgage rate rises to 5 percent, then the maximum loan that my $10k of interest payment will afford me falls to $200k, reducing my maximum bid to buy the home. If I am the marginal bidder, then the home price will fall to $200k, so that the $10k rent on the similar valued home will also equate to a higher rental yield of 5 percent. In practice, the simple arbitrage described above is complicated by several factors: the maximum loan-to-value that a lender will offer on the home; the different transaction costs of buying versus renting; and the fact that people prefer to buy than to rent because buying a home is an investment which also provides a consumption service – shelter, whereas renting a home only provides the consumption service. Nevertheless, these complications do not diminish the overarching connection between mortgage rates and rental yields. The lion’s share of the real estate boom has come from a massive valuation uplift, which in turn has come from structurally lower bond yields. All of which brings us to the decade long global real estate boom that has doubled the value of global real estate market to an eye-watering $350 trillion, four times the size of the $90 trillion global economy. During this unprecedented boom, global rents have risen by 40 percent, tracking world nominal GDP, as they should. This means that the lion’s share of the real estate boom has come from a massive valuation uplift, which in turn has come from structurally lower bond yields (Chart I-7). Chart I-7The Lion's Share Of The Global Real Estate Boom Has Come From A Massive Uplift In Valuations Since the global financial crisis, there has been an excellent empirical relationship between the global long-dated bond yield (US/China average) and the global rental yield. The important takeaway is that the global bond yield cannot rise much further before it destabilises the $350 trillion global real estate market and thereby destabilises the global economy (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Global Bond Yield Cannot Rise Much Further Before It Destabilises The $350 Trillion Global Real Estate Market Some Investment Conclusions The good news is that the recent rise in the global bond yield has been limited by the downdrift in Chinese bond yields. Given the massive overvaluation of Chinese real estate, the structural downtrend in Chinese bond yields has a lot further to go. Meanwhile in the US, unless bond yields back down quickly, flagging mortgage and housing market activity will weigh on an already slowing economy. If US bond yields don’t back down quickly, the feedback from consequent slowdown in the economy will ultimately bring yields down anyway. As I explained last week in Fat-Tailed Inflation Signals A Peak In Bond Yields I do expect the long T-bond yield to back down relatively quickly. The sharp drop in US core inflation to just 0.3 percent month-on-month in March signals that inflation is peaking. Hence, medium to long term investors should be buying US T-bonds, and switching equity exposure into long-duration sectors such as healthcare and biotech. Finally, a peak in bond yields will also take pressure off US homebuilder shares whose recent collapse has been the mirror-image of the surge in the 30-year mortgage rate (Chart I-9). Hence, go overweight US homebuilders versus US insurers. Chart I-9The Collapse In US Homebuilder Shares Is The Mirror-Image Of The Surge In The Mortgage Rate Fractal Trading Watchlist Given that inflation hedging investment demand has driven at least part of the strong rally in basic resources, a peak in inflation and bond yields threatens to unwind the recent outperformance of basic resources shares. This is corroborated by the extremely fragile 130-day fractal structure (Chart I-10). Accordingly, the recommended trade is to short basic resources (GNR) versus the broad market, setting the profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 11.5 percent. This week we are also adding to our watchlist: Switzerland versus Germany; and USD/EUR. The full list of 20 investments that are experiencing or approaching turning points is available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Chart I-10The Outperformance Of Basic Resources Is Vulnerable To Reversal Switzerland's Outperformance Vs. Germany Could End The Rally In USD/EUR Could End Chart 1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart 2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart 3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 4Canada Versus Japan Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart 6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software At Risk of Reversal Chart 7Bitcoin's 65-Day Fractal Support Is Holding For Now Chart 8A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart 9Biotech Is A Major Buy Chart 10CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart 11Financials Versus Industrials To Reverse Chart 12Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart 13Greece's Brief Outperformance To End Chart 14BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart 15The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 16The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 17Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart 18US Homebuilders' Underperformance Is At A Potential Turning Point Chart 19Fractal Trading Watch List Chart 20Fractal Trading Watch List Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 We estimate the value of Chinese real estate at the end of 2021 to be $97 trillion, comprising residential $85 trillion, commercial $6 trillion, and agricultural $6 trillion. The source is: the Savills September 2021 report ‘The total value of global real estate’, which valued the global real estate market to the end of 2020; and the February 2022 report ‘Savills Prime Residential Index: World Cities’ which allowed us to update the valuations to the end of 2021. 2 The US prime residential rental yield is the simple average of the prime residential rental yields in New York, Miami, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Source: Savills. Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Executive Summary Fed policy and the US stock market are on a collision course. US core inflation will not fall below 3.5% unless the economy slows considerably below its potential for a few quarters. As long as US share prices do not fall considerably, i.e., financial conditions do not tighten substantially, the Fed has no reason to halt its tightening and revert its hawkish posture. Odds are that US profit margins and equity multiples will compress, leading to lower share prices in the coming months. In China, monetary and fiscal stimulus have so far been insufficient to produce an economic recovery given the headwinds from the property sector and the rolling lockdowns. A broad-based EM rally will occur only when a commodity bull market is demand driven. The recent spike in commodity prices has been due to supply curtailment. Unit Labor Costs Are The Key To Core Inflation Bottom Line: Maintain an underweight position in EM equities and credit in global equity and credit portfolios, respectively. EM local currency bonds are becoming attractive. We are waiting to buy EM local bonds later this year using the potential weakness in their currencies. After a two-year hiatus, I traveled to the US last week for in-person meetings with clients. This report summarizes the key questions and points of discussion that emerged during these exchanges. Question: What are the key risks to EM markets at the moment? Answer: First, Fed policy and the US stock market are on a collision course. This is in fact a threat to global risk assets – not just US ones. Second, rolling lockdowns in China and the property market slump will delay the recovery of the mainland economy. Third, after the latest rebound in risk assets, geopolitical risks are underestimated. Before the situation in Ukraine stabilizes, President Putin will likely escalate the conflict to obtain a better negotiating position. The combination of these three risks warrants a cautious stance on EM assets. Chart 1The 1960s: US Inflation Outbreak And Negative Stock Price-To-Bond Yield Correlation Question: Let’s start with the Fed. Why do you think US share prices and the Fed are on a collision course? Historically, there were episodes during which the S&P 500 rallied even though the Fed was hiking rates. Why is this time different? Answer: Extremely elevated US core inflation, rising inflation expectations as well as very expensive equity valuations make this current episode different from those periods in the 1990s, 2000s and even 2010s when US equities advanced amid Fed tightening. In fact, share prices and bond yields were negatively correlated for 30 years between 1966 and 1997. The current episode is reminiscent of the late 1960s when core inflation spiked, and equity prices became negatively correlated with Treasury yields (Chart 1). As to the interaction between the Fed and financial markets, our reasoning is as follows: As long as US share prices do not fall and US credit spreads do not widen considerably, i.e., financial conditions do not tighten substantially, then the Fed has no reason to halt its tightening and revert its hawkish posture. The basis is that US core inflation is well above target, and inflation expectations are ratcheting up and could become entrenched. Question: Do you expect US inflation to moderate and in turn allow the Fed to go on hold? Answer: Investors and policymakers should differentiate between the annual inflation rate (a statistical measure) and a genuine inflation outbreak. The annual inflation rate is too high, and will likely drop in H2 this year. Chart 2Super Core US Consumer Inflation Is At 5% However, US inflationary pressures are genuine and broad-based. If these pressures are not contained, they will spiral out of control. Our measure of US average core inflation is currently around 5% (Chart 2). This series is an average of seven measures of core consumer price inflation from the Fed: core CPI and PCE, median CPI, market-based core PCE, trimmed-mean CPI and PCE, and sticky core CPI. Hence, this measure is not influenced by price movements of individual components. The annual rate of core CPI will drop in the US but we do not expect core CPI and PCE to fall below 3.5% unless the economy slows considerably below its potential for a few quarters, and labor market conditions deteriorate leading to lower wage growth. The reasoning is that underlying inflationary pressures have spilled over into the labor market, and the wage-price spiral has probably unraveled. Therefore, inflation cannot be contained without bringing economic growth down below potential growth and weakening the labor market. Chart 3US Wage Growth Is Between 4.3% and 7.7% The labor market is presently very tight, and wage growth will continue accelerating. Given that real wages have shrunk dramatically in the past 12 months, labor will be demanding wage increases that are on par or above the inflation rate. With sales still strong, companies will have to pay higher wages to maintain and attract skilled employees. US nominal wage growth is presently ranging between 4.3-7.7%, depending on the measure (Chart 3). With US underlying productivity growth unlikely to be more than 2% at best, unit labor costs are therefore rising at a rate of 2.5-5.5% and will accelerate further. Chart 4 illustrates that unit labor costs have been a major driver of core consumer price inflation in the US over the past 60 years. If unit labor costs accelerate, core inflation will not drop much from its current elevated levels. As core inflation proves to be sticky and does not fall rapidly below 3.5%, the Fed will have no choice but to keep raising interest rates… until something breaks. Chart 4Unit Labor Costs Are The Key To Core Inflation Question: What will be the first thing to break? Do you think Fed rate hikes will push the US economy into recession? Answer: Equity markets will be the first to break. It is hard to make a judgement about whether US real GDP will contract, but odds are high that US/global share prices will drop as the Fed tightens. The S&P 500 can drop 20-25% from its early January high without a recession in the American economy. Drivers of this selloff will be compressing equity multiples and shrinking profit margins. Chart 5Rising Rates = Lower Equity Multiples First, there are three drivers of equity returns – the top line, profit margins and valuation multiples. We believe that two of these three – profit margins and multiples – will be negative for the US market in the coming months. Valuation multiples will compress as US interest rates rise further (Chart 5). Profit margins will shrink as wage growth accelerates well above productivity gains, i.e., unit labor costs spike. Even if corporates’ top-line growth stays robust, the negative impact of compressing valuation multiples and lower profit margins will be overwhelming for equities. Hence, corporate profits could shrink mildly and share prices would drop materially even as real GDP does not contract. Second, it is important to mention that equity returns could be negative outside reccessions. Let’s recall what happened in 2000-2001 in the US. Nominal growth was robust, real GDP contracted only slightly, household spending in real terms did not contract at all, and the housing market was booming (Chart 6, top panel). Yet, the S&P 500 EPS plunged by 30% and the stock index was down by 50% (Chart 6, bottom two panels). We do not mean that US profits are about to crash by 30% and share prices will plunge by 50% like they did in the bear market of 2000-2002. The point is that profits could experience a mild contraction despite solid consumer spending. Chart 6S&P 500 EPS Can Shrink Even If Nominal GDP Growth Is Solid, As Happened In 2001 Chart 7US Real Consumption Of Goods: A Mean Reversion Ahead? Third, there is chance of a stagflation scare. US purchases of goods ex-autos have been extremely strong due to generous fiscal transfers to households and pandemic dynamics that discouraged service spending and boosted goods purchases. Americans’ real spending on goods ex-autos has been running well above its pre-pandemic trend and is likely to experience some sort of mean reversion (Chart 7). A shift in consumption away from goods ex-autos will weigh down on goods producers globally. Notably, manufacturers rather than service providers dominate equity markets outside the US. Hence, a period when US inflation is sticky, and the Fed is tightening while the global manufacturing cycle is slowing is a possibility. This will upset investors and lead them to pare back their equity holdings. Question: As we all know, the US dollar is very important for EM economies and financial markets. So, what is the outlook for the greenback? Answer: As long as the Fed sounds hawkish and continues tightening, the US dollar will strengthen. The motive is that when the central bank is willing to tighten and the economy does not collapse, the currency tends to appreciate. Even as the S&P 500 sells off, the risk-off phase is also positive for the US currency. The trade-weighted dollar will put a major top and will start depreciating only when the Fed does a dovish tilt. Odds are that this will take place later this year when the S&P 500 is down 25% or so. Yet, US inflation will still be entrenched. In other words, the Fed will fall behind the inflation curve. A central bank falling behind the inflation curve is bearish for the currency. Chart 8Mainstream EM Currencies: An Air Pocket? Concerning mainstream EM (excluding China, Korea and Taiwan) currencies, the total return index (including carry) versus the US dollar has hit a technical resistance (Chart 8). We expect a near-term relapse in EM exchange rates as a mirror image of US dollar strength and the risk-off trade in global markets. However, a major buying opportunity in EM currencies and fixed-income markets as well as EM equity markets will transpire later this year when the US dollar peaks. Question: Let’s turn to China. Growth continues to be disappointing. The COVID-related lockdowns are depressing economic activity. Have authorities stimulated enough for the business cycle to recover soon? Answer: We believe that monetary and fiscal stimulus have so far been insufficient to produce a major economic recovery given the headwinds from the property sector and the harsh lockdowns. The enacted fiscal stimulus is sizable (Chart 9), but it has not yet fully entered the economy. On the monetary front, the credit impulse – excluding local government bond issuance (which is counted in our fiscal spending impulse) – has not yet bottomed (Chart 10). Chart 9China's Fiscal Stimulus Is In The Pipeline Chart 10China: Corporate and Household Credit Impulse Has Not Bottomed Yet With rolling lockdowns impairing service employment and, hence, denting household income, and without sizable fiscal transfers to consumers, the economy will struggle to recover. Local government finances are squeezed by lack of revenues from land sales and their borrowing is limited by quotas set by the central government. So, only the central government is in a position to provide meaningful fiscal support to households, but it has not yet done so. Question: You mentioned that the current geopolitical climate remains a risk to financial markets as Putin will likely escalate before de-escalating. Is this not bullish for commodities? Also, you have argued over the years that commodity prices positively correlate with EM equity performance. Yet, there has been a major decoupling between commodity prices and EM equity absolute and relative performance (Chart 11). How do you explain this phenomenon? Chart 11Decoupling Between EM Stocks And Commodity Prices Answer: Re-escalation on the part of the Kremlin will be bullish for commodities in the short run. In the medium term however, as we argued in a report in early March, commodity prices will be very volatile, with upside risks for some (like wheat) but not for all of them. It all depends on how much of its resource exports Russia can sell/ship abroad. It is hard to forecast this in view of sanctions by Western governments and their private sectors, as well as the breakdown in existing market infrastructures (such as payment systems, freight, insurance, etc.). The breakdown between commodity prices and EM absolute and relative share prices is due to the following: When commodity prices rise due to demand from the real economy, EM stocks tend to rally and outperform. This is especially true when it is China’s demand that is driving commodity prices higher. The reason is that China is important for overall EM economies, and robust demand growth in China is bullish for EM assets. In such a scenario (a demand-driven commodity bull market), not only do commodity producers rally (Latin America) but also commodity consumers (Asia) perform well in absolute terms. The recent spike in commodity prices has been due to supply curtailment rather than demand strength. That has benefited commodity producers (Latin America) but not commodity consumers (Asia). Finally, TMT stocks have come to make up a large share of EM markets in recent years. So wild swings in their performance have distorted the correlation between the EM equity index and commodity prices. Question: Will equity and currency markets of commodity producers continue rallying? Answer: The key signals to monitor are the trend in the US dollar and the global risk-on/risk-off environment. If a risk-off move transpires and the US dollar firms (as we expect), share prices and currencies in commodity-producing countries will relapse in absolute terms. Also, Chart 12 illustrates net long positions in ZAR, BRL and MXN among asset managers and leveraged funds are elevated. In short, investors are already very long, and these currencies could correct. Finally, the prices of some commodities for which Russia and Ukraine are not major producers, like platinum, have already been relapsing. In fact, platinum prices correlate well with EM non-TMT share prices in US dollar terms and are currently pointing to downside risks (Chart 13). Chart 12Investors Are Very Long EM Commodity Currencies Chart 13Not All Commodity Prices Are Rising Question: Could high food and energy prices heighten political risks in some developing countries? How serious is this risk? Answer: This risk has already manifested itself in some countries, with protests in Peru and the 15% devaluation in Egypt. More countries could experience public demonstrations and political turbulence. An overarching theme for many developing nations will be a drag on growth from high food and energy prices. Unlike the US, wages in emerging economies are not rising fast, and labor markets are not tight. As a result, employees have no bargaining power, and their wages will shrink in real terms (adjusted for headline inflation). Given that food and energy make up a larger share of the consumer basket in emerging economies, high energy and food prices will meaningfully reduce household income available for discretionary spending. Consequently, EM household spending will disappoint. In light of lackluster consumer demand, business investment will not pick up much either. Finally, monetary and fiscal policies in EM are reasonably tight. In Latin America, the credit and fiscal spending and monetary impulses are pointing to economic weakness ahead (Chart 14). Overall, potential political volatility and disappointing domestic demand are risks to EM financial markets. Chart 14Latin American Economies Will Decelerate Chart 15A Buying Opportunity in EM Domestic Bonds Will Occur Later This Year Question: What is your recommended investment strategy for EM overall and country allocation? Answer: We continue recommending an underweight position in EM equities and credit in global equity and credit portfolios, respectively. EM local currency bonds are becoming attractive as their yields have spiked (Chart 15). We are waiting to buy EM local bonds later this year using the potential weakness in their currencies. For now, we have the following positions in individual local rates: long 10-year Brazilian bonds, currency unhedged; receiving 10-year swap rates in China and Malaysia; betting on yield curve flattening in Mexico; receiving 10-year Czech / paying 10-year Polish swap rates. The list of country allocation for EM equity, credit and domestic bond portfolios is presented in Table 1. Table 1Our Country Allocation Across Asset Classes Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com
Executive Summary To understand the economy and the market we must think of them as non-linear systems which experience sudden phase-shifts. The pandemic introduced phase-shifts in our lives, which led to phase-shifts in our goods demand, which led to phase-shifts in monthly core inflation. As our lives phase-shift back to normality, goods demand will phase-shift back to low growth, and monthly core inflation prints will phase-shift from ‘high phase’ to ‘low phase’. With the 12-month core US inflation rate likely to peak by June at the latest, the long bond yield is likely to peak at some point in April/May, justifying a cyclical overweight position in T-bonds. Go overweight healthcare and biotech versus resources and financials. The leadership of the equity market will once more flip from short-duration sectors to long-duration sectors. Fractal trading watchlist additions: JPY/CHF, non-life insurance versus homebuilders, US homebuilders (XHB), cotton versus platinum, healthcare versus resources, and biotech versus resources. Bottom Line: With the 12-month core US inflation rate likely to peak by June at the latest, the long bond yield is likely to peak at some point in April/May, and the leadership of the equity market will flip back to long-duration sectors such as healthcare and biotech. Feature Inflation is a non-linear system, meaning that you cannot just dial it up or down gradually like the volume on your music system. Instead of gradual changes, non-linear systems suddenly phase-shift from quiet to loud, from cold to hot, from solid to liquid, or from stability to instability (Box I-1). Box 1: A Classic Non-Linear System – A Brick On An Elastic Band To experience the sudden phase-shift in a non-linear system, attach an elastic band to a brick and try pulling it across a table. As you start to pull, the brick doesn’t move because of the friction with the table. But as you increase your pull there comes a tipping point, at which the brick does move and the friction simultaneously decreases, self-reinforcing the brick’s acceleration. Meanwhile, your pull on the elastic continues to increase as you react with a time-lag. The result is that this non-linear system suddenly phase-shifts from stability – the brick doesn’t move – to instability – the brick hits you in the face! Try as hard as you might, it is impossible to pull the brick across the table smoothly. In this non-linear system, the choice is either stability or instability. Back in 2017, in Mission Impossible: 2% Inflation – An Update, I posed a crucial question: “Given that price stability could phase-shift to instability, when should we worry about it?” I answered that “the risk remains low until the next severe downturn – when policymakers may be forced into desperate measures for a desperate situation.” The words proved prescient. Three years later, the desperate situation was a global pandemic, and the desperate measures were economic shutdowns combined with fiscal stimuluses of unprecedented scope and size. A Phase-Shift In Our Lives Produced A Phase-Shift In Inflation Developed economy inflation has just experienced a stark non-linearity. Since 2007, the US core month-on-month inflation rate remained consistently below 3.5 percent.1 Then came the pandemic’s shutdowns combined with policymakers’ massive response, and month-on-month inflation didn’t just rise to above 3.5 percent, it phase-shifted to well over 6 percent. Developed economy inflation has just experienced a stark non-linearity. The remarkable fact is that since 2007, there have been over a hundred monthly core inflation prints below 4 percent, and nine prints above 6 percent, but just one solitary print between 4 and 6 percent! In other words, monthly core inflation shows the classic hallmark of a non-linear system. It can be cold or hot, but not warm (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Monthly Core Inflation Shows The Classic Hallmark Of A Non-Linear System So, what caused the phase-shift in core inflation? The simple answer is a phase-shift in durable goods spending, which itself was caused by the pandemic’s shutdown of services combined with massive fiscal stimulus. Again, this is supported by a remarkable fact. Since 2007, the monthly increase in US (real) spending on durables remained consistently below 3.5 percent. Then came the pandemic’s shutdowns and stimulus checks, and the growth in durables demand didn’t just rise to above 3.5 percent, it phase-shifted to well over 8 percent. In other words, the growth in durable goods demand also shows the classic hallmark of a non-linear system. It can be cold or hot, but not warm (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Goods Demand Shows The Classic Hallmark Of A Non-Linear System The connection between the phase-shifts in goods demand and the phase-shifts in core inflation is staring us in the face – because the three separate phase-shifts in inflation have each been associated with a preceding or contemporaneous phase-shift in goods demand, which themselves have been associated with the separate waves of the pandemic (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Phase-Shifts In Core Inflation Have Been Associated With Phase-Shifts In Goods Demand Pulling all of this together, the pandemic introduced phase-shifts in our lives – lockdown or freedom. Which led to phase-shifts in our goods demand – above 8 percent or below 3.5 percent. Which led to phase-shifts in monthly core inflation – above 6 percent or below 4 percent. The key question is, what happens next? Bond Yields Are Close To A Peak As we learn to live with the pandemic, and assuming no imminent ‘super variant’ of the virus, our lives are phase-shifting back to a semblance of normality. Which means that our spending on goods is phase-shifting back to low growth. If anything, the recent overspend on goods implies an imminent corrective underspend. At the same time, it will be difficult to compensate a phase-shift down on goods spending with a phase-shift up on services spending. This is because the consumption of services is constrained by time and biology. There is a limit to how often you can eat out, go to the theatre, or even go on vacation. The upshot is that monthly core inflation prints are likely to phase-shift from ‘high phase’ to ‘low phase’ – even if the monthly headline inflation prints are kept up longer by the commodity price spikes that result from the Ukraine crisis. Monthly core inflation prints are likely to phase-shift from ‘high phase’ to ‘low phase’. Meanwhile central banks and markets focus on the 12-month core inflation rate – which, as an arithmetic identity, is the sum of the last twelve month-on-month inflation rates.2 To establish the 12-month core inflation rate, the crucial question is: how many of the last twelve month-on-month inflation prints will be high phase versus low phase? As just discussed, the new month-on-month core inflation prints are likely to phase-shift to low phase. At the same time, the historic high phase prints will disappear from the last twelve month window. Specifically, by June 2022, the three high phase prints of April, May, and June 2021 – 10 percent, 9 percent, and 10 percent respectively – will no longer be included in the 12-month core inflation rate, with the arithmetic impact of pulling it down sharply (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The High Phase Monthly Inflation Prints Of April, May, And June 2021 Will Disappear From The 12-Month Core US Inflation Rate, Thereby Pulling It Down. Clearly, the bond market anticipates some of this ‘base effect’ on 12-month inflation. This explains why turning points in the bond yield have led by 2-3 months the turning points in the 12-month core inflation rate (Chart I-5). With the 12-month core inflation rate likely to peak by June at the latest, this suggests that – absent some new shock – the long bond yield is likely to peak at some point in April/May. Reinforcing our cyclical overweight position in T-bonds. Chart I-5The Bond Yield Turns About 2-3 Months Before Core Inflation This also carries important implications for equity investors. Rising bond yields favour short-duration equity sectors such as resources and financials versus long-duration equity sectors such as healthcare and biotech. And vice-versa. Indeed, the recent performance of resources versus healthcare and financials versus healthcare is indistinguishable from the bond yield (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). Chart I-6The Performance of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Indistinguishable From The Bond Yield Chart I-7The Performance of Financials Versus Healthcare Is Indistinguishable From The Bond Yield With bond yields likely to peak soon, the leadership of the equity market will once more flip from short-duration sectors to long-duration sectors. Go overweight healthcare and biotech versus resources and financials. Fractal Trading Watchlist Reinforcing the fundamental analysis in the previous section, the 130-day outperformance of resources versus healthcare and biotech has reached the point of fractal fragility that has marked previous trend exhaustions, suggesting that the recent outperformance of resources is nearing an end. Also new on our watchlist is a commodity pair, cotton versus platinum, whose strong outperformance is vulnerable to reversal. And US homebuilders (XHB), whose recent underperformance is at a potential turning point. There are two new trade recommendations. First, the massive outperformance of world non-life insurance versus homebuilders is at the point of fractal fragility that has consistently marked previous turning points (Chart I-8). Hence, go short non-life insurance versus homebuilders, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 14 percent. Second, the strong underperformance of the Japanese yen is also at the point of fractal fragility that has marked several previous turning points (Chart I-9). Accordingly, go long JPY/CHF, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 4 percent. Please note that our full watchlist of 19 investments that are experiencing or approaching turning points is now available on our website: cpt.bcaresearch.com Chart I-8The Massive Outperformance Of Non-Life Insurance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-9Go Long JPY/CHF The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Is Vulnerable To Reversal Cotton’s Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal US Homebuilders’ Underperformance Is At A Potential Turning Point Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Annualized month-on-month inflation rate. 2 Strictly speaking, the 12-month inflation rate is the geometric product of the last 12 month-on-month inflation rates. Chart I-1The Strong Trend In The 18-Month-Out US Interest Rate Future Is Fragile Chart I-2The Strong Trend In The 3 Year T-Bond Is Fragile Chart I-3AUD/KRW Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-4Canada Versus Japan Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-5Canada's TSX-60's Outperformance Might Be Over Chart I-6US Healthcare Providers Vs. Software Approaching A Reversal Chart I-7The Euro's Underperformance Could Be Approaching a Resistance Level Chart I-8A Potential Switching Point From Tobacco Into Cannabis Chart I-9Bitcoin's 65-Day Fractal Support Is Holding For Now Chart I-10Biotech Approaching A Major Buy Chart I-11CAD/SEK Reversal Has Started Chart I-12Financials Versus Industrials Is Reversing Chart I-13Norway's Outperformance Could End Chart I-14Greece's Brief Outperformance Has Ended Chart I-15BRL/NZD At A Resistance Point Chart I-16The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Healthcare Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-17The Outperformance Of Resources Versus Biotech Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-18Cotton's Outperformance Is Vulnerable To Reversal Chart I-19US Homebuilders' Underperformance Is At A Potential Turning Point Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations