Economy
The Canadian economy is reaping the rewards of the country’s swift vaccination campaign. Employment rose by 157 thousand and reached its February 2020 pre-pandemic level in September. Importantly, the increase reflects a nearly 200 thousand jump in full time…
Highlights The DXY is sitting comfortably within our 94-95 range. A punch above this level will seriously challenge our bearish thesis. The biggest risk to our view is the outlook for global growth, which we believe will remain firm in 2022. Currency volatility will stay elevated in the near term, creating opportunities at the crosses. We are already positioned for this, with short EUR/NOK, long AUD/NZD, and long CHF/NZD positions as high-conviction trades. We were stopped out of our long silver and yen trades. We are standing aside on both for now, awaiting more clarity on the global macro outlook before reentering these positions. Feature Over the last few weeks, we have received significant pushback from clients on our bearish dollar view. In this report, we attempt to address some of the most common concerns. We will tackle other issues in future newsletters. Global Growth Is Peaking, Isn’t That Usually Dollar Bearish? It is true that global growth is peaking. But this is happening from levels well above trend. The global PMI currently sits at 54.1, within its 85th percentile over that last 20 years. Historically, when global growth has been this strong, the dollar declines on a year-on-year basis. Bloomberg estimates point to the US, euro area, Japan and China growing by 4.1%, 4.3%, 2.5%, and 5.5%, respectively, over the next year. These are very strong numbers that can only be torpedoed by a severe exogenous shock. When it comes to currencies, relative growth dynamics also matter. The strength in the US dollar this year has been driven by upbeat economic surprises in the US relative to its trading partners (Chart I-1). But evidence suggests that US growth is losing momentum compared to other countries. This can be seen via Bloomberg consensus growth forecasts, relative PMI indices, and other hard data. Chart I-1Relative Growth And The Dollar Chart I-2Euro Area Data: An Unsung Hero Let us take the example of the euro area. The market has already priced in that the ECB will never raise rates before 2025, while the probability of the Federal Reserve hiking interest rates twice next year is rising. With this as a backdrop, the leading economic indicator for the euro area has overshot indicators in the US, lending standards are very robust, and retail sales are gaining momentum relative to the US (Chart I-2). In a nutshell, while there is much pessimism priced into the euro (and other G10 currencies), upside surprises, either from economic data or ECB hawkishness, are not priced in. What About The Rising Risk Of Another Wave of COVID-19 ? This is a legitimate risk, given that we are learning new things about the virus every day. But the picture is much better today compared to the last 12 months. First, the number of daily new infections is peaking (Chart I-3). This is positive news for global growth as economies reopen. Second, the peak in new infections has been falling with every new wave. This suggests that as populations get vaccinated, the threat from new variants is ebbing. Chart I-3ALower Infection Rates... Chart I-3B...As Populations Get Vaccinated Chart I-4The Case For Japan Consider Japan, which hosted the Olympics with less than 10% of its population vaccinated a month earlier: It now boasts a higher vaccination rate than the US and new infection rates are falling off a cliff. This raises the prospect for a coiled spring rebound in Japanese economic activity (Chart I-4). The same will apply to other countries with low vaccination rates. China Is Important For Global Growth, How Do You Calibrate The Risk Of A Meaningful Slowdown? China is clearly important for global growth, but our bias is that the market has overstated the scale of a property slowdown and the crackdown on technology behemoths. Chart I-5China Risks And The RMB As currency investors, it has been peculiar that the RMB has stayed resilient, despite carnage in the equity market (Chart I-5). The reason is that there are no meaningful outflows from China. This suggests that both foreign and local investors believe the authorities will successfully contain the risk of contagion. The Fed Is Turning More Hawkish, Do You Want To Fight The Fed? There is what the Fed says and how its actions measure up compared to other central banks. Let’s start with what the Fed has said. Half of the committee expects at least one interest rate hike in 2022, with 7 or 8 hikes by the end of 2024. The tapering of asset purchases will also begin at the next policy meeting and end towards the middle of next year, in time for rate increases. This has been a hawkish shift from the Fed, well priced by the bond and currency markets (Chart I-6). However, the Fed is lagging other central banks. On the other side of the ocean, both the Norges Bank and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand have already hiked interest rates by 25 bps. The Riksbank will end asset purchases this year. The Bank of England has currently purchased £852bn of its £895bn target for government and corporate bonds, the Bank of Canada has already cut its asset purchases in half, and the Reserve Bank of Australia has been tapering asset purchases. Chart I-6Interest Rates And The Dollar Chart I-7Central Banks And Government Bonds Even assuming a terminal Fed fund rate of 2.5%, real interest rates will remain near zero for the US, which is running a massive balance of payments deficit. Meanwhile, within G10 central banks, the Fed has the least bloated balance sheet, providing room to stay relatively dovish (Chart I-7). Chart I-8A Snapshot Of Real Rate Inflation could hold the key to a Fed shift. Many central banks are withdrawing accommodation amidst inflation mandates that are near or above target. However, the Fed has telegraphed that it is willing to tolerate an inflation overshoot following downturns. Given our bias that the current inflationary pulse will subside, the Fed could become more dovish compared to market expectations. This will keep real rates in the US depressed (Chart 8). The Dollar Is A Momentum Currency, Why Go Against The Trend? The momentum factor for the dollar works until it doesn’t. That is usually the case at extremes. The dollar was in a well-defined bull market from 2011 to 2020, underpinned by a clean upward-sloped trendline (Chart I-9). That trendline was broken in 2020, and we are now recovering from capitulation lows. This is occurring within a context where everyone is bullish the dollar. Net speculative longs in the dollar are as high as in 2017 and even 2020. Being a contrarian back then was rewarded, but the dollar staged meaningful declines (Chart I-10). Chart I-9A Technical Profile For The Dollar Chart I-10A Bullish Consensus Over the longer term, the dollar tends to move in cycles of about a decade or so. During bear markets, countertrend rallies in the dollar are capped at around 4%-6%. This was what happened in the early 2000s. In bull markets, such as after the financial crisis, the dollar achieves escape velocity, with more durable rallies well into the teens (Chart I-11). So far, the current rise still fits within the narrative of a healthy reset in a longer-term bear market. Chart I-11Bear Market Rallies Are Not Unusual The Dollar Is Expensive, But Valuation Is A Poor Timing Tool. Why Should We Care In The Near Term? It is true that the dollar is expensive. Most PPP measures, both traditional as well as our in-house curated measure, show the dollar is overvalued by about 15% (Chart I-12). That said, we do agree that valuation in isolation is a poor timing tool for trading currencies. Chart I-12AThe Dollar Is Expensive Chart I-12BThe Dollar Is Expensive However, valuation needs to be considered in the proper context. Our base case is that global growth will stay robust, and will expand from the US to other countries that have had more severe lockdowns. That is a macro environment that is bearish for the dollar. We have also made the case that everyone is bullish USD, especially given its strong performance this year. In that sense, valuation usually becomes useful when you are going against the herd because it provides a margin of safety. In our report “A Simple Trading Rule For FX Valuation Enthusiasts,” we made the case that gains can be made trading FX purely on valuation grounds. Let’s Talk About Actual Performance: Your Yen And Silver View Have Been Offside. Are You Sticking To These Recommendations? For now, no. It is tough for either the yen or silver to rise when the dollar is strong. So, more accurately, our dollar view has been offside this year. Assuming global growth rebounds and policymakers stay relatively easy, silver will do well. The case for silver remains compelling. Almost every major economy has negative real interest rates. This is fertile ground for precious metals, including silver. While the odds are on the side of yields creeping higher from current low levels, this will still be bullish for precious metals if driven by rising inflation expectations. Competition for the dollar is also rising, not only from a precious metals perspective, but from cryptocurrencies as well. On the yen, the starting point is that it is the cheapest G10 currency. It is also one of the most shorted. It is interesting that investors are shorting the currency that has one of the highest real rates in the developed world. Both the DXY and USD/JPY tend to be positively correlated, but this correlation also shifts during crises, when the yen generally appreciates more than the dollar. This places the yen in a very enviable “heads I win, tails I don’t lose too much” position. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Currencies US Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 The US economy remains relatively robust: The ISM manufacturing index rose from 59.9 in August to 61.1 in September. While new orders were flat, prices paid surged from 79.4 to 81.2. ADP employment came in at 568K in September, versus expectations of a 430K increase. The US trade balance continues to deteriorate amidst robust domestic demand. The August balance was -$73.3bn, versus expectations of a -$70.8bn deficit. The US dollar DXY index rose by 0.3% this week. Risk sentiment is souring, and real rates have increased in the US relative to other countries. This should keep supporting the dollar in the near term. However, a rotation in growth from the US to other countries will pressure the dollar lower. Report Links: Arbitrating Between Dollar Bulls And Bears - March 19, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Are Rising Bond Yields Bullish For The Dollar? - February 19, 2021 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 Euro area data was mixed: Core CPI rose from 1.6% to 1.9% in September. The Sentix investor confidence index fell sharply in October, from 19.6 to 16.9. PPI continues to inflate higher in the euro area. The August number was at 13.4% year-on-year. Retail sales in the euro area were disappointingly flat in August. The euro fell marginally fell by 0.3% week. Everyone already expects the ECB to stay dovish. Ergo, any upside surprises will be on inflation, that nudges the ECB towards a more hawkish stance or growth. We think the euro already embeds a lot of negative news, while upside surprises are not fully priced in. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 The Euro Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward - April 2, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Recent Japanese data has been improving: Consumer confidence rose from 36.7 in August to 37.8 in September. Tokyo core CPI was inline with expectations, but the headline did print rise 0.3% year-on-year, well above consensus. Office vacancies in Tokyo continue to creep higher, now at 6.4% versus a low of under 2%. The yen fell 30bps this week. We were stopped out of our long yen position, but we remain bulls. In an environment where interest rates rise, the yen suffers. However, the yen is cheap and offers insurance against currency volatility. Report Links: The Case For Japan - June 11, 2021 The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 On Japanese Inflation And The Yen - January 29, 2021 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 There was scant data out of the UK this week: Most measures suggest UK growth was robust in Q2. UK productivity growth rose in Q2, a welcome fillip for the currency. The pound rose by 1% this week. Sterling is well into oversold levels. This is happening amidst rising gilt yields. In our view, longer-term investors should be accumulating the pound on weakness. Report Links: Why Are UK Interest Rates Still So Low? - March 10, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Thoughts On The British Pound - December 18, 2020 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data is improving: Terms of trade is robust, even taking into consideration the decline in iron ore prices. The trade balance improved in August from A$12bn to A$15bn. The RBA kept rates on hold at this week’s policy meeting. The AUD rose 1.2% this week. The AUD is due for a coiled spring rebound especially given the commodities it exports are in high demand. We are already long AUD/NZD, but outright long Aussie positions make sense given negative speculative positioning and a bombed-out technical indicator. Report Links: The Dollar Bull Case Will Soon Fade - March 5, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Australia: Regime Change For Bond Yields & The Currency? - January 20, 2021 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 The was scant data out of New Zealand this week: House prices inflated 28% year-on-year in September. ANZ consumer confidence fell from 109.6 to 104.5 in September. The RBNZ lifted rated by 25bps. The NZD rose by 1% week. The RBNZ is one of the few central banks that considers house price appreciation in its monetary mandate. We continue to believe the NZD will fare well cyclically, but hawkish expectations from the RBNZ are already priced. As such, the kiwi could lag other commodity currencies. We are long AUD/NZD on this basis. Report Links: How High Can The Kiwi Rise? - April 30, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Currencies And The Value-Versus-Growth Debate - July 10, 2020 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Data out of Canada this week has been robust: The Ivey Purchasing Managers Index rose sharply from 66 to 70.4 in September. The August trade balance rose from C$0.8bn to C$1.9bn. The Bloomberg Nanos Confidence index remains robust above 60. The CAD rose 1% this week. Strong oil prices and a relatively hawkish BoC bode well for the loonie. We expect the BoC to further telegraph interest rate hikes in its October meeting. Report Links: Relative Growth, The Euro, And The Loonie - April 16, 2021 Will The Canadian Recovery Lead Or Lag The Global Cycle? - February 12, 2021 The Outlook For The Canadian Dollar - October 9, 2020 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 The Swiss economy is on the mend: September manufacturing PMI rose to 87.7 from 68.1 Core CPI came in at 0.9% in September, in line with expectations. The labor markets remains robust. The unemployment rate dropped from 2.7% in August to 2.6% in September. CHF rose by 0.3% this week. We are long CHF/NZD as a hedge against rising currency volatility. Improving swiss domestic conditions are an added catalyst to this view. Report Links: An Update On The Swiss Franc - April 9, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 The Dollar Conundrum And Protection - November 6, 2020 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Norwegian data is consolidating at high levels: The DNB/NIMA manufacturing index fell from 62.2 to 59.2 in September. The unemployment rate came in at 2.4% in September, falling from 2.7% the prior month. Industrial production remains robust at 2.7% year-on-year. The NOK was up 1.9% this week. NOK benefits from high energy prices. We also continue to be bullish Scandinavian currencies as a cyclical play on a lower US dollar. Report Links: The Norwegian Method - June 4, 2021 Portfolio And Model Review - February 5, 2021 Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 Swedish economic data this week was robust: The Swedbank/Silf manufacturing PMI rose from 60.1 to 64.6 in September. On the service side, the Swedbank index increased from 64.7 to 69.6 in September. Both industrial production and household orders remain robust. The SEK fell 30 bps this week. The SEK is very sensitive to a bottoming in the Chinese credit impulse, which we believe will happen. Meanwhile, CPI will overshoot in Sweden, bringing forward expectations of tightening from the Riksbank. We are short both EUR/SEK and USD/SEK as reflation plays. Report Links: Revisiting Our High-Conviction Trades - September 11, 2020 More On Competitive Devaluations, The CAD And The SEK - May 1, 2020 Sweden Beyond The Pandemic: Poised To Re-leverage - March 19, 2020 Footnotes Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Strategic View Cyclical Holdings (6-18 months) Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders Closed Trades
Following an eye-popping 313% rally in the Baltic Dry Index this year, there is some sign of reprieve. Shipping costs for the China – US route appear to be in the process of peaking. The latest weekly data show that the price fell to the lowest since…
Russia’s inflation rate accelerated in September and was slightly above expectations. The headline index rose 7.4% y/y from 6.7% in August. Similarly, core CPI advanced 7.6% y/y following the prior month’s 7.1%. September’s figures mark the highest…
According to BCA Research’s Emerging Markets Strategy service, China’s electricity crisis is caused by excessive demand, rather than supply shortages. While both electricity consumption and production have been expanding, demand growth is outpacing supply.…
Highlights Gold prices will continue to be challenged by conflicting information flows regarding US monetary policy; higher inflationary impulses from commodity prices and supply-chain bottlenecks; global economic policy uncertainty, and risks to EM economic growth (Chart of the Week). Concern over the likely tapering of the Fed's asset-purchase program this year, rate hikes next year and fiscal-policy uncertainty will support rising interest-rate risk premia and a stronger USD. These will remain headwinds for gold. Going into the Northern Hemisphere's winter, risk premia in fossil-fuel prices are at or close to their zeniths, as is the Bloomberg commodity index. This will keep short-term inflation elevated. Heightened geopolitical tensions – particularly between Western democracies and China – will keep the USD well bid by risk-averse investors. The commodity-induced element of PCEPI inflation will be transitory. Uncertainty over US monetary policy and rising geopolitical tensions, however, will remain part and parcel of gold fundamentals indefinitely. The trailing stop on our long 1Q22 natural gas call spread – long $5.00/MMBtu call vs. short $5.50/MMBtu call – was elected, leaving us with a 20% gain. We will not be re-setting the spread at tonight's close, due to the difficulty in taking a price view in markets with extremely high weather-related uncertainty. Feature The quality of information informing the analysis of gold markets is highly uncertain at present. US monetary policy uncertainty and the future of Fed chairman Jerome Powell keep expectations twitchy when it comes issues like the tapering of the Fed's asset-purchase program. Our colleagues at BCA's US Bond Strategy expect the Fed will announce a taper in asset purchases by November 2021 which will end in June 2022.1 But the tapering really is not, in our estimation, as big a deal as inflation and inflation expectations, which will drive the Fed's rate-hiking timetable. Chart of the WeekUncertainty Weighs On Gold The first Fed rate hike expected by our bond desk likely will come at the end of next year. Our colleagues expect the Fed will want to check off three criteria before increasing interest rates (Table 1). The inflation targets – actual and expected – already have been checked off, leaving the labor market's recovery as the only outstanding issue on our internal checklist. By December 2022, once the maximum employment criterion has been met, the Fed will commence with rate hike.2 Subsequent rate hikes will depend on inflation expectations. Table 1A Checklist For Liftoff Uncertain Inflation Expectations The higher inflation that checks off our bond desk's list resulted from COVID-19-impacted services and tight auto markets (Chart 2). We also find evidence commodities feed into inflation expectations and realized inflation, both of which are key variables for the Fed (Chart 3). Transitory effects – chiefly supply-chain bottlenecks and a global scramble for coal, gas and oil – have lifted realized inflation in 2H21, and have taken the Bloomberg commodity index to record levels (Chart 4). Nonetheless, given the fundamental backdrop for the key industrial commodities – chiefly oil, gas, coal and base metals – the inflationary impulse from commodity markets could persist indefinitely into the future, in our estimation. In order to incentivize the investment in base metals needed to literally build out the renewable energy infrastructure, the grids that support it and the electric vehicles that will supplant internal-combustion-engine technology, higher energy and metals prices will be required for years.3 This will be occurring as the production of traditional energy sources – i.e., fossil fuels – winds down due to lower investment over the next 10-20 years. This also will result in higher and more volatile oil and gas prices. Chart 2Inflation Meets Fed Targets Chart 3Commodities Feed Into Inflation Expectations All of these real-economy factors will feed into higher inflation over time, which will present the Fed with difficult choices regarding monetary policy and interest rates. Chart 4Record Commodity Index Levels USD Strength Suppresses Inflation And Gold Prices It is worthwhile noting the current USD strength is suppressing inflation. However, it is not suppressing commodity prices entirely, as Chart 4 shows. The transitory weather-related price increases in energy commodities will pass, either when winter ends or if a less severe winter hits the Northern Hemisphere. We continue to expect a lower dollar, as the Fed's accommodative monetary policy remains in place. Even after the Fed tapers its asset-purchase program, policy will remain loose. The large fiscal packages that most likely will be approved by the US Congress will swell the US debt and budget deficits, which likely will weaken the USD over time. On a purchasing-power-parity basis (PPP) we also expect a weaker dollar (Chart 5). We also are expecting the availability of more efficacious vaccines in EM economies to boost economic activity, which will strengthen incomes and local currencies vis-à-vis the USD. Chart 5Weaker USD Expected On A PPP Basis The risk to this USD view – which would support gold prices – remains the heightened geopolitical tensions between Western democracies and China, which will keep political uncertainty elevated and will keep the USD well bid by risk-averse investors. Persistent USD strength would restrain inflation, and weaken the case for owning gold. Investment Implications We remain bullish gold over the medium- and long-term, expecting higher inflation and inflation expectations to lift demand for this safe haven. However, persistent commodity-induced inflation could force the Fed to tighten monetary policy more than is currently expected to get out ahead of higher inflation and inflation expectations. This could lead to stagflation, wherein inflation runs high but growth stalls as interest rates move higher. Persistent geopolitical risk also will keep risk-averse investors well bid for the USD. Commodities Round-Up Energy: Bullish First-line US natural gas prices were down ~ 9% as we went to press, following reports Russia would make more gas available to European buyers. This report apparently was later contradicted by a Gazprom official, who said Russian inventories still were being filled ahead of winter.4 WTI crude oil prices came close to hitting a seven-year high early in the trading day Wednesday, then promptly retreated (Chart 6). The news flow is indicative of the extreme sensitivity of gas and oil buyers going into the coming winter. Base Metals: Bullish Earlier this week, the Peruvian government struck an deal with MMG Ltd, owner of the Las Bambas mine, and the local community around the site, which reportedly will involve hiring local residents to provide services to the mine, including helping transport minerals and maintaining key transit roads. The community had been protesting to seek more of the income from the mine, and created blockades en route to the site, which threatened ~ 2% of global copper supply. Peru's newly elected president, TK Castillo, rose to power on the promise to redistribute mining wealth to Peruvian citizens. This was his first negotiation with a mining company since his election in July. MMG’s major shareholder is China Minmetals Corp. The Leftist president will need to balance the interests of local stakeholders on the one hand, while ensuring the world’s second largest copper producing nation is still attractive to international miners. Precious Metals: Bullish In 2021, the World Platinum Investment Council expects the platinum to swing to a physical surplus of 190k oz, which reverses an earlier forecast for a deficit made in the Council's 1Q21 report (Chart 7). Demand is forecast to increase year-over-year, spurred by increases in automotive, industrial and jewelry demand. On the supply side, growth in South Africa's mined output growth will keep markets in a surplus for 2021. According to SFA Oxford, gross palladium demand and refined supply for 2021 are expected to be at 10.03mm oz, and 6.77mm, respectively. Palladium balances (ex-ETFs) are projected to remain in a physical deficit of 495k ounces for 2021. Chart 6 Chart 7 Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Damage Assessment, published by BCA Research's US Bond Strategy on September 28, 2021. 2 Please see 2022 Will Be All About Inflation, published by BCA Research's US Bond Strategy on September 14, 2021, which notes the concept of maximum employment is not a well-defined term. 3 Please see La Niña And The Energy Transition, which we published last week. 4 Please see Energy price surge sends shivers through markets as Europe looks to Russia published by reuters.com on September 6, 2021. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations
Highlights Equity valuations are extremely stretched versus bonds, so there is little wiggle room for bonds to sell off before pulling down large tracts of the stock market. We estimate that bond yields can rise by no more than 30 bps, before the Fed is forced to talk them back down again. Starting from an earnings yield that is extreme versus its history, we should prudently assume that the prospective long-term real return from equities will be far below the current earnings yield of 4.6 percent, and closer to zero, even if not actually negative. In capitalist economies, gluts may or may not lead to shortages; but shortages always lead to gluts. In other words, the current inflation is sowing the seeds of its own destruction. Hence, we reiterate our structural recommendation to overweight US T-bonds versus US TIPS. Fractal analysis: Cotton, and Polish equities. Feature Chart of the WeekTech Stocks Have Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price One-For-One Equity valuations are extremely stretched versus bonds. The upshot is that there is little wiggle room for bonds to sell off before pulling down large tracts of the stock market. This is not just an abstract hypothesis – it is an empirical fact, as recent market action is making painfully clear. Since February, the global tech sector has tracked the 30-year T-bond price almost one-for-one. The near perfect fit proves that the tech (and broader growth stock) rally has been entirely premised on the bond market rally. Hence, on the three occasions that bonds have sold off sharply – including in the last couple of weeks – tech stocks have sold off sharply too (Chart of the Week). Put simply, the performance of the tech sector is being driven by the change in its valuation, and the change in its valuation is being driven by the change in the bond yield (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Tech Stock Valuations Are Being Driven By The Bond Yield Of course, stock prices are also premised on earnings. So, given enough time, rising earnings can make valuations less stretched, adding more wiggle room for bonds to sell off. The trouble is that a change in earnings happens much more gradually than can a change in valuation – a 10 percent rise in earnings can take a year, whereas a 10 percent fall in valuation can happen in a week. Bond Yields Remain The Dominant Driver Of The Stock Market For the next few months at least, the movement in bond yields will remain the dominant driver of the most stretched parts of the stock market and, by extension, the overall market itself. This is especially true for the growth-heavy S&P 500 which, since March, has been tracking the 30-year T-bond price one-for-one (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The S&P 500 Has Also Been Tracking The 30-Year T-Bond Price One-For-One The key question for investors is, what is the upper limit to bond yields before stock market damage causes the Federal Reserve to talk them down again? To answer this question, our working assumption is that a 15 percent drawdown in growth stocks would damage the growth-heavy S&P 500 enough – and thereby worsen ‘financial conditions’ enough – for the Fed to change its tone. Based on this year’s very tight relationship between tech stocks and the 30-year T-bond yield, a 15 percent drawdown would occur if the 30-year T-bond yield increased to 2.4 percent from 2.1 percent today (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Fed's 'Pain Point' Is Only 30 Basis Points Away This confirms our view that the resistance level to long-duration bond yields is around 30 bps above current levels, equivalent to around 1.8 percent on the 10-year T-bond yield. More About The ‘Negative Equity Risk Premium’ Our recent report The Equity Risk Premium Turns Negative For The First Time Since 2002 caused quite a stir. So, let’s elaborate and clarify the arguments we made about the equity risk premium (ERP) – the estimated excess return that stocks will deliver over bonds over a long investment horizon, such as 10 years. Many investors estimate the ERP by taking the stock market’s earnings yield – currently 4.6 percent in the US1 – and subtracting the real 10-year bond yield – currently -0.9 percent on US Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS). At first glance, this presents a very generous ERP of 5.5 percent. So, equities are attractively valued versus bonds, right? Wrong. The glaring error is that the earnings yield estimates the stock market’s prospective return only if the earnings yield starts and ends at the same level. If it does not, then the prospective return could be very different to the earnings yield. For example, imagine that the stock market was trading at a bubble price-to-earnings multiple of 100, meaning an earnings yield of 1 percent. Clearly, from such a bubble valuation, nobody would expect the market to return 1 percent. Instead, as the bubble burst, and valuations normalised, the prospective return would be deeply negative. It follows that when, as now, the earnings yield is extreme versus its history, we must build in some prudent normalisation to estimate the prospective return. The question is, how? One approach is to use history to inform us of the likely normalisation. Chart I-5 does this using the ‘best-fit’ relationship between the earnings yield at each point through 1990-2011 and subsequent 10-year real return from each starting point. Using the best-fit for this specific episode, the current earnings yield of 4.6 percent implies a prospective 10-year real return not of 4.6 percent, but of -1.1 percent. Chart I-5Based On History, The Current Earnings Yield Implies A Prospective 10-Year Real Return Much Less Than 4.6 Percent Yet this best-fit approach meets a common reproach – that the best-fit for this specific episode is massively distorted by the dot com bubble peak and the global financial crisis (GFC) trough occurring (by coincidence) almost 10 years apart. We can counter this reproach in two ways. First, the best-fit relationship is much better than the raw earnings yield even for undistorted 10-year periods such as 1995-2005 or 2011-2021. Better still, we can change the prospective return from 10 years to 7 years and thereby remove the dot com bubble peak to GFC trough distortion. Chart I-6 shows that this 7-year best-fit relationship also works much better than the raw earnings yield. Chart I-6Based On History, The Current Earnings Yield Implies A Prospective 7-Year Real Return Much Less Than 4.6 Percent Admittedly, the best-fit comes from just one episode in history, and there is no certainty that the 10-year and 7-year relationships that applied during that one episode should apply through 2021-31 and 2021-28 respectively. Nevertheless, starting from an earnings yield that is extreme versus its history, as is the case now, we should prudently assume that the prospective long-term real return from equities will be far below 4.6 percent, and closer to zero, even if not actually negative. Will The ‘Real’ Real Yield Please Stand Up Measuring the ERP also requires an estimate of the prospective real return on bonds. This part should be easy because the yield on the US 10-year TIPS – currently -0.9 percent – is the guaranteed 10-year real return of buying and holding that investment. It is derived by taking the yield on the 10-year T-bond – currently 1.5 percent – and subtracting the market’s expected rate of inflation over the next 10 years – currently 2.4 percent. But the equivalent real return on the much larger conventional bond market could be quite different. In this case, it will be the 10-year T-bond yield minus the actual rate of inflation over the next 10 years. To the extent that the actual rate of inflation turns out less than the expected rate of 2.4 percent, the real return on the T-bond will turn out higher than that on the TIPS. In fact, this has consistently turned out to be the case. The market has consistently overestimated the inflation rate over the subsequent 10 years, meaning that the real return on T-bonds has been around 1 percent higher than that on TIPS (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Will The 'Real' Real Yield Please Stand Up Yet given the current surge in inflation, and no end in sight for supply chain disruptions and bottlenecks, is it plausible that the next ten years’ rate of inflation will be lower than 2.4 percent? The answer is yes. Because, as my colleague Peter Berezin points out: in capitalist economies, gluts may or may not lead to shortages; but shortages always lead to gluts. And gluts always cause prices to collapse. In other words, the current inflation is sowing the seeds of its own destruction. Hence, we reiterate our structural recommendation to overweight US T-bonds versus US TIPS. The Cotton Is Stretched, And So Are Polish Equities Talking of shortages, cotton now adds to the list of commodities in which supply bottlenecks have raised prices to extremes. Cotton prices have reached a 10-year high due to weather conditions in the US (the world’s biggest cotton producer) combined with shipping disruptions. However, with cotton now exhibiting extreme fragility on its combined 130/260-day fractal structure, there is a high likelihood of a price reversal in the coming months when the shortage turns into a glut (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Cotton Is Stretched Meanwhile, the bank-heavy Polish equity market has surged on the back of the spectacular outperformance of its banks sector. This strong uptrend has now reached the point of fragility on its 130-day fractal structure that has indicated several previous reversals (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Poland's Outperformance Is Stretched Accordingly, this week’s recommended trade is to underweight the Warsaw General Index versus the Eurostoxx 600, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 6 percent. Dhaval Joshi Chief Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Based on the 12-month forward earnings yield. Fractal Trading System Fractal Trades 6-Month Recommendations Structural And Thematic Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields ##br##- Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields ##br##- Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields ##br##- Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields ##br##- Other Developed Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-5Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations
The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is sending an extremely pessimistic signal about the US economy. Its estimates of Q3 GDP growth have been consistently deteriorating over the past two months. The model’s latest output now predicts real GDP growth in the third…