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Special Report This week, we present the BCA Central Bank Monitors Chartbook, detailing our set of proprietary indicators measuring the cyclical forces influencing future monetary policy decisions. The Chartbook has previously been published by BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy but, starting today, will be jointly published with BCA Research Foreign Exchange Strategy twice per year.  Given how expectations of monetary policy changes influence both bond yields and currencies, we see the Chartbook as a useful forum for cross-market analysis of fixed income and foreign exchange. We have Monitors for ten major developed market economies and, currently, all are below the zero line, indicating the need for continued easy global monetary policy (Charts 1A & 1B). The Monitors are all trending higher, however, as global growth and financial markets have steadily recovered from the brutal collapse spurred by the first wave of COVID-19 earlier this year. The recovery in the Monitors is consistent with two of BCA’s highest conviction views for 2021 – rising global bond yields, led by the US, but with additional weakness in the counter-cyclical US dollar. The compression in the US interest rate advantage this year is sufficient to allow for some upside, without derailing the dollar bear market. Chart 1ALess Easy Money Required... Chart 1B...Given The Rebound From Depressed Levels   An Overview Of The BCA Research Central Bank Monitors The BCA Research Central Bank Monitors are composite indicators that include data that have historically been correlated to changes in interest rates.  The economic data series used to construct the Monitors are not the same for every country, but the list of indicators generally measure the same things (i.e. manufacturing cycles, domestic demand strength, commodity prices, labor market conditions, financial conditions). The data series are standardized and combined to form the Monitors.  Readings above the zero line for each Monitor indicate pressures for central banks to raise interest rates, and vice versa. Through the nexus between growth, inflation, and market expectations of future interest rate changes, the Monitors do exhibit broad correlations to government bond yields in the major developed markets (Charts 2A & 2B). Chart 2AA Rebound In Our CB Monitors... Chart 2B...Suggesting Bond Yields Should Creep Higher The Monitors do also exhibit steady correlations to currencies, although not in the same consistent fashion as with bond yields. For example, the Fed Monitor is typically negatively correlated to the US dollar, while the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Monitor is positively correlated to the Australian dollar.  We present charts showing the links between the Monitors and bond yields (and foreign exchange rates) in the individual country sections of this Chartbook. Previously, the country coverage for the Monitors has included the US, euro area, UK, Japan, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Sweden. In this report, we introduce new Monitors for Norway and Switzerland – countries with relatively small government bond markets but with actively traded currencies.  We have also revamped the individual component lists of the existing Monitors to include a broader range of economic and inflation data, as well as adding more measures of financial conditions like equity prices or corporate credit spreads. The latter is critical as policymakers have increasingly realized the importance of financial conditions as a key transmission mechanism of monetary policy to the real economy. Within each country, we have aggregated the various data series within the Monitors into sub-groupings covering economic, inflation and financial conditions indicators. The weightings of each bucket vary by country, based on the strength of historical correlations of the Monitors to actual changes in policy interest rates.  Disaggregating the Monitors this way offers an additional layer of analysis by helping describe central bank reaction functions (i.e. some central banks respond more strongly to economic growth, others to inflation or financial conditions). None of the Monitors is indicating a need for policymakers to turn more hawkish. At the moment, the common signal from the Monitors is that there is diminished pressure to ease global monetary policies compared to mid-2020. At the same time, none of the Monitors is indicating a need for policymakers to turn more hawkish. There are growing divergences between the individual Monitors, though, which are creating more interesting opportunities for relative bond and currency trades and portfolio allocations – as we discuss throughout the pages of this Chartbook. Fed Monitor: Less Pressure For More Easing Our Fed Monitor has rebounded sharply during the latter half of 2020 on the back of improving US economic growth momentum and booming financial markets. However, it is not yet signaling a need for the Fed to begin moving to a less accommodative policy stance (Chart 3A).    The US economy has recovered impressively from the COVID-19 recession, with real GDP expanding at an annualized 33% pace in Q3 and the ISM Manufacturing index reaching a two-year high in October. Rapid growth also fueled a recovery in the labor market, with the US unemployment rate falling from a peak of 14.7% in April to 6.7% in November. It will take a few years for the US economy to return to full employment, given the severity of this year’s recession. The IMF estimates that the US output gap will not be effectively closed until 2023, thus a sustained return of US inflation to the Fed’s 2% target will take time to develop (Chart 3B). Chart 3AUS: Fed Monitor Chart 3BAn Improving US Economic Backdrop Chart 3CThe US Dollar Is Countercyclical The recovery in the Fed Monitor has been led primarily by the financial and growth components (Chart 3C). The inflation components will be more relevant to time the start of the Fed’s next rate hiking cycle. The Fed’s recent shift to an Average Inflation Targeting framework means that US monetary policy will not be tightened based on a forecast of higher inflation, as the Fed has done in past cycles. This means that both US growth and inflation will be allowed to accelerate in 2021 without a pre-emptive hawkish response from the Fed. The result: additional downward pressure on the counter-cyclical US dollar, which tends to weaken when the Fed Monitor is rising (bottom panel). The current surge in US COVID-19 cases represents a near-term downside risk to US growth momentum, as evidenced by a string of softer data prints in November.  Another round of fiscal stimulus and, more importantly, the start of the vaccine distribution process will give a bigger lift to economic confidence and growth – and US bond yields - in the first half of 2021.  We recommend an underweight strategic allocation to US Treasuries within global government bond portfolios (Chart 3D). Chart 3DUpside For Treasury Yields BoE Monitor:  Subdued Inflation Requires A Dovish Stance Our Bank of England (BoE) Monitor has rebounded sharply from the Q2 collapse, but remains well below zero indicating the ongoing need for easy UK monetary policy (Chart 4A). To that end, the BoE increased the size of its Gilt quantitative easing (QE) program by £150bn last month. However, the central bank chose to not cut the Bank Rate from 0.1% into negative territory, despite many public flirtations with such a move by BoE officials in recent months. Both the output gap and unemployment gap show high levels of excess capacity in the UK economy that are projected to take years to unwind according to the IMF and OECD (Chart 4B). UK real GDP grew by 15.5% on a quarter-on-quarter basis in Q3, a big reversal from the -19.8% plunge in Q2, but more recent domestic data has softened with the UK under national lockdowns to fight a surge in COVID-19 cases. UK headline CPI inflation is threatening to dip into deflation, even with a soft pound. Chart 4AUK: BoE Monitor Chart 4BUK Excess Capacity Will Take Years To Unwind Chart 4CLingering Weakness In UK Inflation Components Looking at the details of our BoE Monitor, all three main sub-components remain below the zero line, but with some diverging trends (Chart 4C). The inflation components remain very weak, but the growth components have almost rebounded back to the pre-pandemic level. The financial components have also recovered sharply thanks in no small part to the BoE’s highly accommodative monetary policy. The BoE Monitor has historically been positively correlated to the momentum of the UK currency, and the trade-weighted pound appears to have outperformed the weakness in the Monitor (bottom panel). The near term direction of the pound, however, is completely linked to the final stage of the UK-EU Brexit negotiations. A no-deal Brexit would likely see the gap between the momentum of the pound and our BoE Monitor close via a sharp fall in the currency.  If a trade agreement is reached, however, we would expect the convergence to happen via a rising Monitor catching up to a firming currency, driven by a likely improvement in portfolio inflows. With COVID-19 vaccines already starting to be administered in the UK, a “peaceful” resolution to the Brexit saga could give the UK economy a solid lift in 2021 – especially with the UK government preparing a big fiscal impulse.  Our BoE Monitor currently indicates little upward pressure on 10-year Gilt yields. Our BoE Monitor currently indicates little upward pressure on 10-year Gilt yields (Chart 4D). Given the lack of UK inflation, and with the BoE taking down a large share of new Gilt issuance via QE, UK bond yields will lag the rise in global bond yields that we expect in the first half of 2021, even if there is good news on Brexit. We continue to recommend an overweight stance on UK Gilts. Chart 4DExpect UK Gilts To Lag Behind As Global Bond Yields Rise ECB Monitor: Price Deflation Leads To Asset Reflation Our European Central Bank (ECB) Monitor is in “easy money required” territory, but has rebounded significantly from the lows seen earlier in 2020 (Chart 5A). The ECB delivered on that easing message at the December policy meeting, increasing the size of its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Program by €500bn to €1.85tn and extending the end-date of the program from June 2021 to March 2022.  The central bank also extended the maturity date for its offer of heavily discounted funding (at rates as low as -1%) for bank lending to June 2022. The ECB needed to deliver another round of easing because the euro area has fallen back into deflation. Year-over-year headline CPI inflation reached -0.3% in November, while core inflation was not much further behind at +0.2% (Chart 5B). With much of Europe now under increased economic restrictions due to the latest surge in COVID-19 cases, the near-term downside risks to euro area growth could push inflation even deeper into negative territory in the coming months. Chart 5AEuro Area: ECB Monitor Chart 5BLots Of Slack In The Eurozone Chart 5CThe Euro Is Too Strong For The Economy Looking at the breakdown of our ECB Monitor, there is a very large divergence between the components. The inflation components are at the most depressed levels since the turn of the century, while the growth components have rebounded sharply (Chart 5C). The financial conditions components have now surged above the zero line, suggesting pressure on the ECB to tighten policy from robust European financial markets. Of course, booming markets are a direct result of the ECB’s dovish monetary stance, which includes the rapid expansion of its balance sheet and significant purchases of riskier sovereign bonds in Italy, Spain and even Greece.  The ECB realizes that it cannot cut policy interest rates any further into negative territory without harming the ability of the fragile European banking system to earn profits.  This effective floor on nominal policy rates, combined with deepening price deflation, has boosted real European interest rates.  The result is a steadily climbing euro, even as the ECB has continued to signal a continued dovish policy bias and an aggressive expansion of its balance sheet.  The weakening trend for the US dollar that we expect in 2021 will leave the ECB little choice but to continue doing what it has been doing – more asset purchases, more cheap funding for bank lending and extending the time duration of all its easing programs in an effort to keep European financial markets aloft while also limiting the damage from an appreciating euro.  The introduction of a COVID-19 vaccine should provide a lift to growth, but inflation is likely to remain very subdued without a weaker euro. Inflation is likely to remain very subdued without a weaker euro. The depressed level of the ECB Monitor suggests that there is additional scope for lower euro area bond yields (Chart 5D), although the impact will not be the same for all countries in the region.  Deeply negative German and French bond yields will likely not decline much in 2021, although they will not rise much either even as US Treasury yields move higher, making them good defensive overweights in a global bond portfolio. At the same time, Italian and Spanish bond yields will continue to grind lower as ECB buying and more European fiscal co-operation help further reduce the risk premium on Peripheral Europeans - stay overweight. Chart 5DEuropean Yields Should Lag The US BoJ Monitor:  Fighting Deflation, Once Again Our Bank of Japan (BoJ) Monitor has rebounded from the recent low but is still well below zero, indicating that easier monetary policy is required (Chart 6A). That will be hard for the BoJ to deliver, however - policy rates are already negative, the BoJ’s balance sheet has blown up to 128% of GDP, and a more dovish forward guidance is impossible as most market participants already believe the BoJ will keep rates untouched for years. Japan’s economic recovery is currently at near-term risk from a particularly sharp increase in COVID-19 cases, although Japan’s labor market did not suffer much from the pandemic-induced plunge in growth earlier this year (Chart 6B). Nonetheless, while the unemployment rate remains below the OECD’s estimate of full employment (4.1%), there remains significant excess capacity in Japan according the IMF output gap estimates, with headline CPI inflation now in mild deflation. Chart 6AJapan: BoJ Monitor Chart 6BSignificant Excess Capacity In Japan Chart 6CJapanese Equities Have Bolstered Financial Conditions The individual elements of the BoJ Monitor show a large divergence between the growth and inflation components, which are very depressed, and the more stable financial component (Chart 6C). The latter reflects the outstanding performance of Japanese equities in recent months, with some benchmark indices reaching levels last seen in the mid-1990s. The continued steady expansion of the BoJ’s balance sheet is clearly helping to underwrite easy financial conditions in Japan. While the BoJ is reaching some operational constraints with its asset purchases, owning nearly one-half of all JGBs and three-quarters of all Japanese equity ETF’s, the central bank has no choice but to continue buying assets to support financial conditions. Cutting policy interest rates deeper into negative territory is a non-starter given the negative impact sub-0% rates have had on the profitability of Japanese banks. The inability of the BoJ to further ease Japanese monetary policy is boosting real rates and supporting the yen. The historical correlation between the BoJ Monitor and the yen has not been as consistent as that seen in other countries, but since the 2008 financial crisis a deteriorating BoJ Monitor has tended to coincide with a rising yen – given the lower bound of policy rates.  The inability of the BoJ to further ease Japa-nese monetary policy is boosting real rates and supporting the yen.  The weakness of our BoJ Monitor indicates that Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yields should fall significantly (Chart 6D). However, the BoJ’s Yield Curve Control policy, with the central bank buying enough bonds to keep the 10yr JGB yield around 0%, is preventing JGB yields from plunging to the deeply negative yield levels seen in core Europe. This policy-induced stability of Japanese yields actually makes JGBs a defensive bond market when US Treasury yields are rising. Thus, we recommend an overweight stance on JGBs given our view that US bond yields have more upside. Chart 6DPolicy Will Keep JGB Yields Stable BoC Monitor:  No Choice But To Stay Ultra-Dovish Our Bank of Canada (BoC) Monitor has seen a much weaker rebound off the lows than some of our other Central Bank Monitors, indicating that the BoC cannot lay off the monetary gas pedal (Chart 7A). The BoC has already been aggressive in easing policy earlier this year, cutting the Bank Rate to 0.25%, initiating several liquidity facilities and quickly ramping up bond purchases. The central banks now owns around 40% of all Government of Canada bonds outstanding, from a starting point of essentially 0% before the pandemic, and has started to shift its purchases to longer maturity bonds in order to suppress risk-free yields and lower borrowing costs for households and business. While Canada did see a sharp recovery in GDP growth in Q3 – rising 8.9% on a non-annualized, quarter-on-quarter basis following the -11.3% drop in Q2 – the level of real GDP is still -5.2% lower than Q3 2019 levels.  The BoC has already significantly revised down its estimates of potential growth for 2020-22 by nearly one full percentage point due to the various negative shocks including COVID-19. Inflation remains weak because of significant economic slack – the BoC forecasts that CPI inflation will remain below its target until 2022 (Chart 7B).  Chart 7ACanada: BoC Monitor Chart 7BCanada: BoC Monitor Chart 7CWeaker Growth Is Holding Down Our BoC Monitor Within the details of our BoC Monitor, the weakness in the overall indicator is clearly driven by the depressed level of the growth components (Chart 7C). Heavy containment measures to fight the spread of COVID-19, combined with uneven recoveries in different sectors, have weighed on the Canadian economy. At the same time, the financial conditions components have been relatively stable, even with the rapid expansion of the BoC’s balance sheet. The Canadian dollar has clearly outperformed its typical positive correlation to the BoC Monitor (bottom panel), as the “loonie” has benefitted from rising global commodity prices and the overall depreciation of the US dollar. Both of those trends are likely to remain in place in 2021 as global growth gains upward momentum, which should keep the Canadian dollar well supported – and also force the BoC to stay dovish to prevent an even greater rise in the currency. We currently recommend a neutral stance on Canadian government bonds within global fixed income portfolios. In more normal times, a backdrop of accelerating economic growth and rising commodity prices would typically push Canadian yields higher and justify an underweight stance – particular given the relatively high historical “yield beta” of Canada to changes in US bond yields  (Chart 7D). However, with the BoC forced to stay aggressive with its QE program to dampen Canadian yields and suppress the rising Canadian dollar, Canadian government bonds are likely to outperform their normal high-beta status as US Treasury yields continue to drift higher in 2021. Chart 7DAn Aggressive BoC Will Hold Down Canadian Yields RBA Monitor: Not Out Of The Woods Yet Our Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) monitor remains in “easier policy required” territory despite a strong rebound after bottoming in April (Chart 8A).  Since our last update, the RBA has slashed the official cash rate once more to 0.1%, largely in an effort to contain the surging Australian dollar. The unemployment gap in Australia has staged a tentative recovery but is set to remain elevated and recover only gradually going forward, according to the IMF’s forecast (Chart 8B). The RBA actually sees unemployment ticking up slightly in the near term as the eligibility conditions for the JobSeeker program tighten. Inflation, meanwhile, will have a tough time reaching the target 2-3% band in the absence of wage price pressures. Chart 8AAustralia: RBA Monitor Chart 8BA Lot Of Slack In The Australian Economy Chart 8CFinancial Conditions In Australia Call For Tightening Breaking down our RBA monitor into its constituent growth, inflation, and financial conditions components, we see a sharp rebound led by financial conditions which, taken in isolation, are calling for tighter monetary policy (Chart 8C). This comes as no surprise with the RBA growing its balance sheet at an unprecedented rate. The growth component, meanwhile, has been driven by rebounding consumer and business sentiment data with Australia benefitting from Chinese reflation. We are also beginning to see a divergence in the historically tight correlation between the RBA monitor and the trade-weighted Australian dollar, as investors pile into the growth-sensitive currency with the Fed reflating the global economy. For its part, the RBA has tried to combat this by reiterating its support for its QE program and leaving the door open to further bond-buying. We can see the RBA’s core problem summarized in Chart 8D. The rise in Australian bond yields has cornered the RBA towards a more dovish tilt. Although RBA Governor Lowe has ruled out negative rates, the RBA has some bullets remaining, including shifting its purchases to the long-end of the curve. With that in mind, we feel confident reiterating our neutral stance on Australian sovereign debt. Chart 8DAustralian Yields Have Outpaced Our RBA Monitor RBNZ Monitor: Between A Rock And A Hard Place Our Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) monitor has rebounded slightly but is still calling for easing (Chart 9A). While the RBNZ has held its official cash rate steady at 0.25% since our last update, it has expanded its large-scale asset purchase (LSAP) program to a whopping NZD 100bn. Unemployment and output gaps indicate a good deal of slack in the New Zealand economy, with the output gap set to recover slightly faster than the unemployment gap, according to IMF forecasts (Chart 9B). Although inflation momentarily breached the 2% mark, it is expected to remain subdued as spare capacity and low tradables inflation weigh on the overall measure. Chart 9ANew Zealand: RBNZ Monitor Chart 9BNZ Inflation Is Set To Subside Chart 9CThe Appreciating NZD Is A Problem As with neighboring Australia, financial conditions have led the rebound in the RBNZ monitor while the growth component has ticked up slightly and the inflation component remains subdued (Chart 9C). However, one of the variables in our model, house prices, has recently leapt to the forefront of the monetary policy discussion in New Zealand, with the government asking the RBNZ to cool the rapidly heating market. The RBNZ has responded by reinstating loan-to-value ratio restrictions but we cannot expect the bank to turn hawkish anytime soon, given recent appreciation in the New Zealand dollar, which not only hurts export competitiveness but also threatens import price inflation. Going forward, political pressure on the RBNZ will prevent it from taking an overly accommodative stance and has made it unlikely that the bank will go into negative rate territory next year. The momentum in NZ yields has largely kept pace with our RBNZ monitor despite the dramatic spike last month (Chart 9D). The RBNZ will increasingly have to find ways to suppress both bond yields and the New Zealand dollar without stimulating the housing market. Given these opposing forces, yields will likely move sideways, supporting our neutral stance on NZ sovereign debt. Chart 9DYields Have Kept Pace With Our RBNZ Monitor Riksbank Monitor: Sluggish Recovery Ahead Our Riksbank monitor has rebounded but is still calling for easier policy (Chart 10A). Given the bank’s fraught relationship with negative rates and the associated financial stability concerns, it will likely deliver further stimulus in the form of asset purchases, which it has recently ramped up to SEK 700bn while also promising to step up the pace of purchases in the next quarter. Both output and unemployment gaps indicate slack in the Swedish economy, with OECD and IMF estimates pointing towards a gradual recovery (Chart 10B). While GDP in the third quarter did come out stronger than expected, it was likely just a temporary development. After failing to contain surging infections, the Swedish government has finally decided to impose restrictions, which will limit the recovery until we start to see mass immunization. The Riksbank does not expect inflation to be sustainably close to 2% until 2023. Chart 10ASweden: Riksbank Monitor Chart 10BSweden Is Set For A Slow Recovery Chart 10CThe Rallying Swedish Krona Is A Concern For The Riksbank Looking at the components of the Riksbank monitor, all of them are currently below zero, implying a need for easier policy (Chart 10C). The growth component rebounded strongly on the back of improving exports and sentiment data. On the currency side, we have seen strong appreciation in the trade-weighted Krona this year, far exceeding the levels implied by our Riksbank monitor. This could dampen export growth in the small, open economy, making it a prime concern for policymakers. While the Riksbank monitor fell drastically, Swedish government bond yields remained largely rangebound this year, with the 10-year yield hovering around zero (Chart 10D). The bottom line is that yields for the most part are reflecting expectations of a policy rate stuck at 0%, that the Riksbank is unwilling to cut and cannot afford to hike. Chart 10DSwedish Yields Have Remained Rangebound Norges Bank Monitor: On A Recovery Path Our Norges Bank Monitor is improving from very depressed levels, but still remains well below the zero line. This is signaling that continued monetary accommodation is still needed, but emergency settings are no longer appropriate (Chart 11A). Consistent with the message from the Monitor, Norges Bank governor Øystein Olsen has pledged to keep interest rates at zero for the next couple of years, before a gradual rise begins. The central bank also continues to extend emergency F-loans to commercial banks at 0%, to encourage much needed lending to Norwegian firms. The rebound in Q3 mainland GDP (which excludes oil & gas production) was the strongest on record. The unemployment rate has also declined from a high of 10.4% to 3.9% for the month of November. That said, there was a small tick up in November, a sign that the second wave of COVID-19 engulfing the euro area is beginning to bite into Norwegian growth. Underlying inflation remains above well above target, while headline inflation is slowly rebounding. But given that the output gap is expected to remain wide into 2021, these trends should flatten, rather than accelerate (Chart 11B). Chart 11ANorway: Norges Bank Monitor Chart 11BNorwegian Inflation Is At Target Chart 11CThe Norwegian Krone Tracks The Monitor The key improvement in our Norges Bank Monitor has come from the growth component, which is very close to the zero line (Chart 11C). Not surprisingly, the Monitor shows a very tight correlation with the trade-weighted currency, suggesting the latter is an important valve in adjusting monetary conditions. As an oil-producing economy, the drop in the krone cushioned the crash in oil prices. A recovery will benefit the krone.  The correlation between the Monitor and Norwegian bond yields has become more robust (Chart 11D). This suggest yields in Norway should participate as global yields modestly grind higher. Within a global bond portfolio, our default stance is neutral, as the market is thinly traded. Chart 11DNorwegian Yields Should Modestly Track Higher SNB Monitor: More Currency Weakness Needed Our Swiss National Bank (SNB) Monitor has shown very tepid improvement, as the SNB has maxed out its policy options (Chart 12A). Interest rates have been at -0.75% since 2015, making the currency channel the only valve to ease monetary conditions. To achieve this, the central has been heavily expanding its balance sheet via the accumulation of foreign assets and reserves. Switzerland has seen a less powerful rebound in Q3 GDP at 7.2%, compared to the euro zone where growth stood at 12.5%. Meanwhile, Q4 data is likely to disappoint as Switzerland was hit harder by the second COVID-19 wave. Labor market tightness has eased, with the unemployment rate at a 2020 high of 3.4%. This will continue to suppress inflationary pressures, which are now the weakest since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (Chart 12B). Chart 12ASwitzerland: SNB Monitor Chart 12BThe Swiss Economy Is Deflating Chart 12CThe Swiss Franc Is Too Strong Looking at the components of our SNB Monitor, both growth and inflation are anchoring down the indicator. The message is that Switzerland needs a weaker currency, especially relative to its trading partners (Chart 12C). This concern is repeatedly echoed by SNB governor Thomas Jordan. As such, the Swiss franc should lag other European currencies, including the euro and Swedish krona.  The SNB Monitor does a good job at capturing shifts in Swiss bond yields. Constrained by the lower bound, they were not really able to fall when the pandemic was raging in March. By the same token, they should lag any modest increase in global bond yields, as suggested by the Monitor (Chart 12D). Like Norway, our default stance on Swiss bonds is neutral in a global portfolio, given low market liquidity. Chart 12DSwiss Yields Should Lag The Global Upswing   Robert Robis, CFA  Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ray Park, CFA Research Analyst ray@bcaresearch.com Shakti Sharma Research Associate shaktiS@bcaresearch.com Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com
Initial jobless claims rose to a nearly three-month high of 853 thousand in the week ending December 5, from 712 thousand, surpassing expectations of a more muted rise to 725 thousand. The disappointing data extended to continuing claims, which registered the…
The European Central Bank (ECB) followed through on messaging that it would “recalibrate its instruments” in order to stimulate further amid renewed weakness in Europe. As expected, the central bank expanded the PEPP by 500 billion euros to 1.85 trillion…
Dear Client, We are sending you our Strategy Outlook today, where we outline our thoughts on the macro landscape and the direction of financial markets for 2021 and beyond. Next week, please join me for a webcast on Thursday, December 17 at 10:00 AM EST (3:00 PM GMT, 4:00 PM CET, 11:00 PM HKT) where I will discuss the outlook. Our publishing schedule will resume early next year. On behalf of the entire Global Investment Strategy team, I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and a Healthy New Year! Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Macroeconomic outlook: The global economy will strengthen in 2021 as the pandemic winds down. Inflation will remain well contained for the next 2-to-3 years before moving sharply higher by the middle of the decade. Global asset allocation: Stocks are technically overbought and vulnerable to a short-term correction. Nevertheless, investors should favor equities over bonds in 2021 given the likelihood that earnings will accelerate while monetary policy stays accommodative. Equities: This year’s losers will be next year’s winners. In 2021, international stocks will outperform US stocks, small caps will outperform large caps, banks will outperform tech, and value stocks will outperform growth stocks. Fixed income: Bond yields will rise modestly next year, implying that investors should maintain below average duration exposure. Spread product will outperform safe government bonds. Favor inflation-protected securities over nominal bonds. Currencies: The US dollar will continue to weaken in 2021. The collapse in US interest rate differentials versus its trading partners, stronger global growth, and a widening US trade deficit are all bearish for the greenback. Commodities: Tight supply conditions and a cyclical recovery in oil demand will support crude prices. Investors should favor gold over bitcoin as a hedge against long-term inflation risk. I. Macroeconomic Outlook V Is For Vaccine Chart 1Efficacy Rates Of Seasonal Flu Vaccines Are Well Below Those Of The Covid-19 Vaccines Ten months after the start of the pandemic, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. Both of the vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna using mRNA technology have demonstrated efficacy rates of around 95%. AstraZeneca’s vaccine, produced in collaboration with Oxford University, showed an efficacy rate of 90% in one of its clinical arms. Russia and China have also launched vaccines. The Russian vaccine, Gamaleya, displayed an efficacy rate of 91% based on 22,000 test participants. Such high efficacy rates are on par with the measles and smallpox vaccines, and well above the typical 30%-to-50% success rate for the seasonal flu vaccine (Chart 1). Inoculating most of the world’s population will not be easy. Nevertheless, large-scale vaccine production has already begun. More than half of the professional forecasters enrolled in the Good Judgement Project expect enough doses to be available to vaccinate 200 million Americans (about 60% of the US population) by the end of the second quarter of 2021 (Chart 2). Chart 2Mass Distribution Of Covid-19 Vaccines Expected By Mid-2021 According to opinion polls, public concern about the potential side effects from the vaccines, while still high, has diminished over the past few weeks (Chart 3). Most countries will start by vaccinating health care workers and other at-risk groups. Assuming no major side effects are reported, the successful deployment of the vaccines among health care professionals should bolster confidence within the general public. Chart 3The Public Is Slowly Becoming Less Worried About Covid-19 Vaccines Vaccines And Growth: A Short-Term Paradox? There is no doubt that the availability of a safe and effective vaccine will bolster economic activity over the medium-to-long term. The short-term impact, however, is ambiguous. On the one hand, vaccine optimism could reduce household precautionary savings. It could also prompt more firms to invest in new capacity. On the other hand, the expectation that a vaccine is coming could motivate people to take even greater efforts to avoid getting sick in the interim. Think about what happens when you take cover under a tree after it starts to rain. Your decision to stay under the tree depends on how long you expect the rain to continue. If the rain will last for only 10 minutes, staying put makes sense. However, if it will rain continuously for the next two days, you are better off going home. You are going to get wet anyway. Who wants to get sick just as the pandemic is winding down? It is like being the last soldier killed on the battlefield. Growth In Europe Suffering More Than In The US… So Far The number of new daily cases has declined by 45% in the EU from the highs reached in the second week of November. That said, progress on the disease front has come at a cost. As Covid infections surged, European governments were forced to reimplement a variety of lockdown measures (Chart 4). Correspondingly, growth indicators have weakened across the region (Chart 5). At this point, it looks highly likely that GDP will contract in the euro area and the UK in the fourth quarter. Chart 4The Latest Viral Surge Led To Lockdowns In Europe   In contrast to Europe, the US economy should expand in the fourth quarter. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is pointing to growth of 11.2% in Q4, led by a recovery in personal consumption, strength in residential and nonresidential investment, and inventory restocking. Nevertheless, dark clouds are forming. After a short-lived dip in late November, the number of new daily cases in the US is on the rise again. The 7-day average of confirmed new cases has jumped to around 200,000. The Centers for Disease Control  (CDC) estimates that for every single case that is caught, seven go undiagnosed.1 This implies that over 11 million people are being infected each week, or about 3% of the US population. With the weather getting colder and the Christmas holiday season approaching, a further viral surge looks probable. Just as in Europe, we may see more lockdowns and more voluntary social distancing in the US over the coming weeks. Building A Fiscal Bridge To A Post-Pandemic World Lockdowns would be less of a problem if governments provided enough income support to struggling households and businesses. Unfortunately, at least in the US, considerable uncertainty remains about whether such support will be forthcoming. After a burst of stimulus earlier this year, US fiscal policy has tightened sharply. Since peaking in April, real disposable personal income has dropped by 9%, reflecting a steep decline in government transfer payments (Chart 6). The latest data suggest that real disposable income will be down in Q4 compared to the preceding quarter. Chart 5Renewed Lockdowns Are Weighing On Economic Activity In The Euro Area Chart 6Less Transfers Mean Less Income   President Trump tried to offset some of the sting from the expiration of emergency unemployment benefits in the CARES Act by diverting funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to support jobless workers. However, this money has now run out (Chart 7). Likewise, the resources in the Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses have been depleted, and many state and local governments are facing a cash crunch. Chart 7Drastic Drop In Unemployment Insurance Payments Chart 8People Are Eager For More Stimulus The US Congress has been squabbling over a new stimulus bill since May. Ultimately, we think a bill will be passed, potentially as part of a year-end omnibus spending package. Public opinion still very much favors maintaining stimulus. A survey conducted by Pew Research after the election found that about 80% of respondents supported passing a new stimulus package (Chart 8). Similarly, according to a recent NY Times/Siena College poll, 72% of voters supported a hypothetical $2 trillion stimulus package that would extend emergency unemployment insurance benefits, distribute direct cash payments to households, and provide financial support to state and local governments (Table 1). Such a package is basically what the Democrats are proposing. Strikingly, when this package is described in non-partisan terms, even the majority of Republicans are in favor of it. Table 1Even Republicans Want More Stimulus Peak Chinese Stimulus Even though it originated there, China has weathered the pandemic better than any other major country. Chinese export growth accelerated to 21.1% year-over-year in November. The Caixin manufacturing PMI rose to 54.9 on the month, the strongest reading since November 2010. The service sector PMI increased to a healthy 57.8. The “official” PMIs published by the National Bureau of Statistics also rose. Chinese growth will moderate over the coming months. The magnitude of China’s policy support has peaked, as evidenced by the rise in bond yields and interbank rates (Chart 9). The authorities have also permitted more corporate issuers to default, while tightening rules on online lending. Turning points in Chinese domestic demand and imports tend to lag policy developments by about 6-to-9 months (Chart 10). Thus, the tailwind from Chinese stimulus should fade by the middle of next year, hopefully just in time for the baton to be passed to a more organic, vaccine-driven global growth recovery. Chart 9China: Bond Yields And Interbank Rates Have Been Rising Chart 10Tailwind From Chinese Stimulus Will Fade By The Middle Of Next Year Japan: Near-Term Wobbles Japan is in the midst of its third wave of the pandemic. While not as bad as the latest waves in the US and Europe, it has still been disruptive enough to slow the economy. Although it did tick up in November, the manufacturing PMI remains below the crucial 50 boom/bust line, notably weaker than in other APAC countries. The outlook component of the Economy Watchers Survey fell to 36.5 in November (from 49.1), while the current situation component slid to 45.6 (from 54.5). Nevertheless, there are some encouraging signs. The number of new Covid cases seems to be stabilizing. Machine tool orders rose to 8% year-over-year in November, the first positive print since September 2018. Retail sales have recovered from a low of -14% year-over-year in April to around +6% in October. Broad money growth has reached a record high. The Japanese government is also considering a new ¥73 trillion fiscal stimulus package to fight the pandemic. Global Monetary Policy To Stay Accommodative Chart 11Service And Shelter Inflation Tend To Be Largely Determined By Labor Market Slack Could a vaccine-led economic recovery cause central banks to remove the punch bowl? We think not. Inflation is likely to rise in the first half of 2021 as the “base effects” from the pandemic-induced drop in prices reverse. However, central banks will see through these short-term oscillations in inflation. Inflation in modern economies is largely driven by services and shelter (goods account for only 25% of the US core CPI and 37% of the euro area core CPI). Both service inflation and shelter inflation tend to be largely determined by labor market slack (Chart 11). In its October 2020 World Economic Outlook, the IMF projected that the unemployment rate in the main developed economies would fall back to its full employment level by around 2025 (Chart 12). While this is too pessimistic in light of the subsequent progress that has been made on the vaccine front, it is probable that unemployment will remain too high to generate an overheated economy for the next 2-to-3 years. Chart 12Unemployment Rate Is Projected To Decline Towards Pre-Covid Lows In The Coming Years Chart 13Long-Term Inflation Expectations Are Still Subdued   Moreover, despite vaccine optimism, long-term inflation expectations are still below target in most of the major economies (Chart 13). Not only do central banks want inflation to return to target, they want inflation to overshoot their targets in order to make up for the shortfall in inflation in the post-GFC era. Had the core PCE deflator in the US risen by 2% per year since 2012, the price level would be about 3.3% higher than it currently is. In the euro area, the price level is about 9.5% below where it would have been if consumer prices had risen by 2% over this period. In Japan, the price level is 11.6% below target (Chart 14). Chart 14Central Banks Have Missed Their Inflation Targets II. Financial Markets A. Global Asset Allocation Remain Overweight Equities Versus Bonds On A 12-Month Horizon Equities have run up a lot since the start of November. Bullish sentiment has surged in the American Association of Individual Investors weekly bull-bear poll, while the put-to-call ratio has fallen to multi-year lows (Chart 15). This makes equities vulnerable to a short-term correction. Nevertheless, rising odds of an effective vaccine and continued easy monetary policy keep us bullish on stocks over a 12-month horizon. Stronger economic growth should lift earnings estimates. Stocks have usually outperformed bonds when growth has been on the upswing (Chart 16). Chart 15A Lot Of Bullishness Chart 16Stocks Rarely Underperform Bonds When The Global Economy Is Strengthening Valuations also favor stocks. As Chart 17 illustrates, the global equity risk premium – which we model by subtracting real bond yields from the cyclically-adjusted earnings yield – remains quite high. Along the same lines, dividend yields are above bond yields in the major markets. Even if one were to pessimistically assume that nominal dividend payments stay flat for the next 10 years, real equity prices would have to fall by 24% in the US for stocks to underperform bonds (Chart 18). In the euro area, real equity prices would need to tumble 32%. In Japan, they would have to drop 20%. Chart 17Equity Risk Premia Remain Elevated Chart 18Stocks Would Need To Fall A Lot For Equities To Underperform Bonds As such, investors should overweight global equities relative to bonds. We recommend a neutral allocation to cash to take advantage of any short-term dip in stock prices. Our full suite of asset allocation and trade recommendations are shown at the back of this report.   B. Equity Sectors, Regions, Styles This Year’s Losers Will Be Next Year’s Winners The “pandemic trade” is giving way to the “reopening trade.” We are still in the early innings of this transition. Hence, going into next year, it makes sense to favor stocks that were crushed by lockdown measures but could thrive once restrictions are lifted. Chart 19 shows relative 12-months forward earnings estimates for US/non-US, large caps/small caps, and tech/overall market. In all three cases, the tables have turned: Estimates are now rising more quickly for non-US stocks, small caps, and non-tech sectors. Non-US Stocks To Outperform Stocks outside the US are significantly cheaper than their US peers based on price-to-earnings, price-to-book, price-to-sales, and dividend yields (Chart 20). The macro outlook also favors non-US stocks, which tend to outperform when global growth is strengthening and the US dollar is weakening (Chart 21). Chart 19Relative Earnings Expectations For Non-US Stocks, Small Caps, And Non-Tech Are Improving   Chart 20Non-US Stocks Are Cheaper Chart 21Non-US Equities Tend To Outperform Their US Peers When Global Growth Is Improving And The Dollar Is Weakening As we discuss below, the dollar is likely to depreciate further over the next 12 months. A weaker dollar benefits cyclical sectors of the stock market more than defensives (Chart 22). Deep cyclicals are overrepresented outside the US (Table 2). Being more cyclical in nature, small caps usually outperform when the dollar weakens (Chart 23). Chart 22Cyclicals Tend To Outperform Defensives In A Falling Dollar Environment Table 2Financials Are Overrepresented In Ex-US Indices, While Tech Dominates The US Market Chart 23Small Caps Also Tend To Outperform When Global Growth Strengthens And The Dollar Weakens   Chart 24Banks’ Net Interest Margins Will Receive A Boost Buy The Banks Banks comprise a larger share of non-US stock markets. Stronger growth in 2021 will put upward pressure on long-term bond yields. Since short-term rates will stay where they are, yield curves will steepen. Steeper yield curves will boost banks’ net interest margins (Chart 24).   In addition, faster economic growth will put a lid on defaults. Banks have set aside considerable capital for pandemic-related loan losses. Yet, the wave of defaults that so many feared has failed to materialize. According to the American Bankruptcy Institute, commercial bankruptcies are lower now than they were this time last year (Chart 25). Personal loan delinquencies have also been trending down. The 60-day delinquency rate on credit card debt fell to 1.16% in October from 2.02% a year earlier. The delinquency rate for mortgages fell from 1.54% to 0.98%. Only auto loan delinquencies registered a tiny blip higher (Table 3). Chart 25Commercial Bankruptcies Are Well Contained Table 3Personal Loan Delinquencies Have Also Been Trending Lower Just A “Value Bounce”? In our conversations with clients, many investors are open to the idea that value stocks are due for a cyclical bounce. However, most still believe that growth stocks will fare best over a longer-term horizon. Such a view is understandable. After all, profit growth is the principal driver of equity returns. If, by definition, growth companies enjoy faster earnings growth, does it not stand to reason that growth stocks will outperform value stocks over the long haul? Well, actually, it doesn’t. What matters is profit growth relative to expectations, not absolute profit growth. If earnings rise quickly, but by less than investors had anticipated, stock prices could still go down. Historically, investors have tended to extrapolate earnings trends too far into the future, which has led them to overpay for growth stocks. Chart 26 demonstrates this point analytically. It features the results of a study by Louis Chan, Jason Karceski, and Josef Lakonishok. The authors sorted companies by projected five-year earnings growth and then compared the analysts’ forecasts with realized earnings. For the most part, they found that there was no relationship between expected profit growth and realized profit growth beyond horizons of two years. In general, the higher the long-term earnings growth estimates, the more likely actual earnings were to miss expectations. Chart 26Investors Tend To Overpay For Growth The Paradox Of Growth Given the difficulty of picking individual stocks that will consistently surpass earnings estimates, should investors simply allocate the bulk of their capital to sectors such as technology that have the best long-term growth prospects while eschewing structurally challenged sectors such as energy and financials? Again, the answer is not as obvious as it may seem. As Chart 27 illustrates, stocks in industries that experience a burst of output growth do tend to outperform other stocks. However, over the long haul, companies in fast growing industries do not outperform their peers (Chart 28). In other words, stock prices seem to respond more to unanticipated changes in industry growth rather than to the trend level of growth. Chart 27Stocks In Industries That Experience A Burst Of Output Growth Do Tend To Outperform Other Stocks … Chart 28… But Over The Long Haul, Companies In Fast-Growing Industries Do Not Outperform Their Peers Explaining Tech Outperformance In this vein, it is useful to examine what has powered the performance of US tech stocks over the past 25 years. Chart 29 shows that faster sales-per-share growth explains less than half of tech’s outperformance since 1996 and none of tech’s outperformance in the period up to 2011. The majority of tech’s outperformance is explained by greater margin expansion and an increase in the P/E ratio at which tech stocks trade relative to the rest of the stock market. Chart 29Decomposing Tech Outperformance What accounts for the significant increase in tech profit margins? In two words, the answer is “monopoly power.” Tech companies are particularly susceptible to network effects: The more people who use a particular tech platform, the more attractive it is for others to use it. Facebook is a classic example. Second, tech companies benefit significantly from scale economies. Once a piece of software has been written, creating additional copies costs almost nothing. Even in the hardware realm, the marginal cost of producing an additional chip is tiny compared to the fixed cost of designing it. All of this creates a winner take-all environment where success begets further success. Normally, structurally fast-growing industries attract more competition, which increases the odds that up-and-coming firms will displace incumbents. The growth of tech monopolies has subverted that process, allowing profits to rise significantly. A Tougher Path Forward For Tech A key question for investors is how much additional scope today’s tech monopolies have to expand profits. While it is difficult to generalize, two broad forces are likely to curtail future earnings growth. First, many tech titans have become so big that their future growth will be driven less by their ability to take market share from competitors and more by the overall size of the markets in which they operate. As it is, close to three-quarters of US households have an Amazon Prime account. Slightly over half have a Netflix account. Nearly 70% have a Facebook account. Google commands 92% of the internet search market. Together, Google and Facebook generate about 60% of all online advertising revenue. Second, the monopoly power wielded by tech companies makes them vulnerable to governmental action, including higher taxes, increased regulation, and stronger anti-trust enforcement. Importantly, it is not just the left that wants greater scrutiny of tech companies. According to a recent Pew Research study, more than half of conservative Republicans favor increasing government regulation of the tech sector (Chart 30). Chart 30Conservatives Favor Increased Government Regulation Of Big Tech Companies We do not expect tech stocks to decline in absolute terms since they still have a variety of tailwinds supporting them. Nevertheless, our bet is that the cyclical shift in favor of value stocks we are seeing now will usher in a period of outperformance for value names that could last for much of this decade. Not only are value stocks exceptionally cheap compared to growth stocks (Chart 31), but as we discuss below, bond yields likely reached a secular bottom this year. This could set the stage for a period of lasting outperformance for value plays. Chart 31Value Stocks Are Extremely Cheap Relative To Growth Stocks C. Fixed Income Position For Steeper Yield Curves As discussed earlier, central banks are unlikely to raise rates over the next 2-to-3 years. In fact, short-term real rates will probably decline further in 2021 as inflation expectations rise towards central bank targets. What about longer-term bond yields? Chart 32 displays the expected path of policy rates in the major developed economies now and at the start of 2020. The chart suggests that there is still scope for rate expectations in the post-2023 period to recover some of the ground they have lost since the start of the pandemic. This implies that bond investors should position for steeper yield curves, while keeping duration risk at below-benchmark levels. They should also favor inflation-linked securities over nominal bonds. Chart 32Policy Rate Expectations Remain Below Pre-Pandemic Levels Avoid “High Beta” Government Bond Markets The highest-yielding bond markets tend to have the highest “betas” to the general direction of global bond yields (Chart 33). This means when global bond yields are rising, higher-yielding markets such as the US usually experience the biggest selloff in bond prices. Chart 33High-Yielding Bond Markets Are The Most Cyclical This pattern exists because faster growth has a more subdued impact on rate expectations in economies such as Europe and Japan where the neutral rate of interest is stuck deep in negative territory. For example, if stronger growth lifts the neutral rate in Japan from say, -4% to -2%, this would still not warrant raising rates. In contrast, if stronger growth lifts the neutral rate from -1% to +1% in the US, this would eventually justify a rate hike.  As such, we would underweight US Treasurys in global government bond portfolios. We expect the 10-year Treasury yield to increase to around 1.3%-to-1.5% by the end of 2021, which is above current expectations of 1.15% based on the forward curve. Conversely, we would overweight European and Japanese government bond markets. After adjusting for currency-hedging costs, US Treasurys offer only a small yield pickup over European and Japanese bonds but face a much greater risk of capital losses as rate expectations recover (Table 4). Table 4Bond Markets Across The Developed World BCA’s global fixed-income strategists have a neutral recommendation on Canadian and Australian bonds. While Canadian and Australian yields are also “high beta,” both the BoC and the RBA are very active purchasers in their domestic markets. Stay Overweight High-Yield Developed Market Corporate Debt In fixed-income portfolios, we would overweight corporate debt relative to safer government bonds. In an economic environment where monetary policy remains accommodative and growth is rebounding, corporate default rates should remain contained, which will keep spreads from widening. Within corporate credit, we favor high yield over investment grade. Geographically, we prefer US corporate bonds over euro area bonds. The former trade with a higher yield and spread than the latter (Charts 34A & B). Chart 34AFavor High-Yield Bonds Over Investment-Grade ... Chart 34B… And US Corporates Over Euro Area One way to gauge the attractiveness of credit is to look at the percentile rankings of 12-month breakeven spreads. The 12-month breakeven spread is the amount of credit spread widening that can occur before a credit product starts to underperform a duration-matched, risk-free government bond over a one-year horizon. For US investment-grade corporates, the breakeven spread is currently in the bottom decile of its historic range, which is rather unattractive from a risk-adjusted perspective. In contrast, the US high-yield breakeven spread is currently in the 62nd percentile, which is quite enticing. In the UK, high-yield debt is more appealing than investment grade, although not quite to the same extent as in the US. In the euro area, both high-yield and investment-grade credit are fairly unattractive (Chart 35). Chart 35Corporate Bond Breakeven Spread Percentile Rankings Outside the corporate sector, our US bond strategists like consumer ABS due to the strength of household balance sheets. They also see value in municipal bonds. However, they would avoid MBS, as prepayment risks are elevated in that sector. EM credit should also benefit from the combination of stronger global growth and a weaker US dollar. Long-Term Inflation Risk Is Underpriced As noted earlier in the report, inflation is unlikely to rise significantly over the next three years. Beyond then, a more inflationary environment is probable. Chart 36 shows that the wage-version of the Phillips curve in the US is alive and well. It just so happens that over the past three decades, the labor market has never had a chance to overheat. Something always came along that derailed the economy before a price-wage spiral could develop. This year it was the pandemic. In 2008 it was the Global Financial Crisis. In 2000 it was the dotcom bust and in the early 1990s it was the collapse in commercial real estate prices following the Savings and Loan Crisis. Admittedly, only the pandemic qualifies as a true “exogenous” shock. The prior three recessions were endogenous in nature to the extent that they were preceded by growing economic imbalances, laid bare by a Fed hiking cycle. One can debate the degree to which the global economy is suffering from imbalances today, but one thing is certain: no major central bank is keen on raising rates anytime soon. Central banks want higher inflation. They are likely to get it. D. Currencies, Commodities, And Yes, Bitcoin Dollar Bear Market To Continue In 2021 The dollar faces a number of headwinds going into next year. First, interest rate differentials have moved significantly against the greenback. At the start of 2019, US real 2-year rates were about 190 basis points above rates of other developed economies; today, US real rates are around 60 basis points lower than those abroad. In fact, as Chart 37 shows, the trade-weighted dollar has weakened less than one would have expected based on the decline in interest rate differentials. This suggests that there could be some “catch-up” weakness for the dollar next year even if rate differentials remain broadly stable. Chart 36Is The Phillips Curve Really Dead? Chart 37A Relatively Muted Decline In The Dollar Given The Move In Real Yield Differentials   Second, the US dollar is a counter-cyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of the global business cycle (Chart 38). If the global economy strengthens next year thanks to an effective vaccine, the dollar should weaken. Chart 38The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Chart 39USD Remains Overvalued Third, the US dollar remains about 13% overvalued based on Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) exchange rates (Chart 39). This overvaluation is also reflected in the large US current account deficit, which rose in the second quarter to the highest level since 2008 and is on track to swell even further in the second half of the year. Technicals Are Dollar Bearish Admittedly, many investors are now bearish on the dollar. Shouldn’t one be a contrarian and adopt a bullish dollar view? Not necessarily. In most cases, being contrarian makes sense. However, this does not apply to the dollar. The dollar is a high-momentum currency (Chart 40). When it comes to trading the dollar, it pays to be a trend follower. Chart 40The Dollar Is A High Momentum Currency One of the simplest and most profitable trading rules for the dollar is to go long the greenback when it is trading above its moving average and go short when it is trading below its moving average (Chart 41). Today, the trade-weighted dollar is trading below its 3-month, 6-month, 1-year, and 2-year moving averages. Along the same lines, the dollar performs best when sentiment is bullish and improving. In contrast, the dollar does worse when sentiment is bearish and deteriorating, as it is now (Chart 42). Chart 41Being A Contrarian Doesn’t Pay When It Comes To Trading The Dollar (I) Chart 42Being A Contrarian Doesn’t Pay When It Comes To Trading The Dollar (II) The bottom line is that both fundamental factors – interest rate differentials, global growth, valuations, current account dynamics – and technical factors – moving average rules and sentiment – all point to dollar weakness next year. Top Performing Currencies In 2021 EUR/USD is likely to rise to 1.3 by the middle of next year. The ECB does not want a stronger currency, but with euro area interest rates already in negative territory, there is not much it can do. The Swedish krona, as a highly cyclical currency, should strengthen against the euro. In contrast, the Swiss franc, a classically defensive currency, will weaken against the euro. It is more difficult to forecast the direction of the pound given uncertainty about ongoing Brexit talks. The working assumption of BCA’s geopolitical team is that Prime Minister Boris Johnson has sufficient economic and political incentives to arrive at a trade deal, a parliamentary majority to get it approved, and a powerful geopolitical need to mollify Scotland. This bodes well for sterling. The yen is a very defensive currency. Thus, in an environment of strengthening global growth, the yen is likely to trade flat against the dollar, and in the process, lose ground against most other currencies. We are most bullish about the prospects for EM and commodity currencies going into next year. China is likely to let its currency strengthen further in return for a partial rollback of tariffs by the Biden administration. A stronger yuan will allow other currencies in Asia to appreciate. Stay Bullish On Commodities And Commodity Currencies The combination of a weaker US dollar and stronger global growth should support commodity prices in 2021. Industrial metals outperformed oil this year, but the opposite should be true next year. Chart 43Oil Prices Are Expected To Recover While the long-term outlook for crude is murky in light of the shift towards electric vehicles, the near-term picture remains favorable due to the cyclical rebound in petroleum demand and ongoing OPEC and Russian supply discipline. BCA’s commodity strategists expect the average price of Brent to exceed market expectations by about $14 in 2021, which should help the Norwegian krone, Canadian dollar, Russian ruble, Mexican peso, and Colombian peso (Chart 43). Favor Gold Over Bitcoin As An Inflation Hedge Gold has traditionally served as the go-to hedge against inflation. These days, however, there is a new competitor in town: bitcoin. In traditional economic parlance, money serves three purposes: as a medium of exchange; as a unit of account; and as a store of value. Both gold and bitcoin flunk the test for the first two purposes. Few transactions are conducted in either gold or bitcoin. It is even rarer for prices of goods and services to be set in ounces of gold or units of bitcoin. Gold arguably does better as a store of value. It has been around for a long time and if all else fails, it can always be melted down and turned into nice jewelry. Bitcoin’s Achilles Heel Bitcoin’s defenders argue that the cryptocurrency does serve as a store of value because one day, it will reach a critical mass that will make it a viable medium of exchange and a functional unit of account. Yet, this argument is politically naïve. Countries with fiat currencies derive significant benefits from their ability to create money out of thin air that can then be used to pay for goods and services. In the US, this “seigniorage revenue” amounts to over $100 billion per year. The existence of fiat currencies also gives central banks the power to set interest rates and provide liquidity backstops to the financial sector. Bitcoin’s ability to facilitate anonymous transactions is also its Achilles heel. The widespread use of bitcoin would make it more difficult for governments to tax their citizens. All this suggests that bitcoin will never reach a critical mass where it becomes a viable medium of exchange or functional unit of account. Governments will step in to ban or greatly curtail its usage before then. And without the ability to reach this critical mass, bitcoin’s utility as a store of value will disappear. Hence, investors looking for some inflation protection in their portfolios should stick with gold. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1  Heather Reese, A. Danielle Iuliano, Neha N. Patel, Shikha Garg, Lindsay Kim, Benjamin J. Silk, Aron J. Hall, Alicia Fry, and Carrie Reed, “Estimated incidence of COVID-19 illness and hospitalization — United States, February–September, 2020,” Clinical Infectious Diseases (Oxford Academic), November 25, 2020. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Special Trade Recommendations This table provides trade recommendations that may not be adequately represented in the matrix on the preceding page. Current MacroQuant Model Scores
Highlights Brexit no-deal vs. deal = 1.28 vs. 1.37 on GBP/USD. Any break-out into the high 1.30s is a tactical sell – because the bigger driver of GBP/USD is the global stock market, which is due a breather. The medium-term direction of EUR/USD is gently higher… …yet the best expression of this is not through EUR/USD per se, but through a 50:50 combination of the defensive CHF/USD and the cyclical SEK/USD. Underweight technology versus healthcare. Fractal trade: Long RUB/ZAR. Feature Chart of the WeekWhat's Driving Pound/Dollar? Hint: It's Not Brexit Brexit is the story that refuses to go away. In the four and a half years since Britons voted to leave the EU, Americans have managed to elect and then reject a president. But as we write, four and a half years of negotiation have still not managed to deliver a UK/EU trade deal. Perhaps, in true European style, a deal will materialise at the eleventh hour, fifty-ninth minute, and fifty-ninth second. The Big Brexit Decisions Have Already Been Made Yet the recent haggling over a free trade deal is a sideshow, a choice between the most minimalist of deals, or no deal. The much bigger decisions on the UK/EU economic and political relationship have already been made. The recent haggling over a UK/EU free trade deal is a sideshow. The UK will end the free movement of people, leave the customs union and single market, and will have the scope to set its own rules, regulations, and standards. In response to these much bigger decisions, foreign direct investment (FDI) into the UK has fully adjusted, which is to say, slumped. Hence, the pound has largely absorbed Brexit and reverted to its traditional dependence on the direction of global equities (Chart of the Week and Chart I-2). This traditional dependence exists because the value of the UK stock market and other risk-assets is outsized relative to the UK economy. Additionally, the UK stock market is over-weighted to economically sensitive sectors. This makes the pound ultra-sensitive to equity and other risk-asset portfolio inflows and outflows (Chart I-3).   Chart I-2Brexit Has Become Less Important For The Pound Chart I-3FDI Has Adjusted For Brexit, So Portfolio Flows Once More Drive The Pound Having said that, Brexit developments can still cause deviations from the pound’s established relationship with global equities. For example, the escalation and resolution of tensions over the Withdrawal Agreement last year resulted in a 4 cent (3.5 percent) discount and then a 4 cent premium in pound/dollar within a 1.22-1.30 range. Applying the same framework to the current Brexit tensions, the equivalent range would be 1.28-1.37. But to repeat, the bigger driver of pound/dollar is the direction of global equities, and as we explain later, equities may be due a breather. If, for example, stocks corrected by 10 percent, cable could easily retest 1.25. Hence, any break-out of cable into the high 1.30s is a tactical selling opportunity. The ECB Is Exhausted This week, the ECB will once again dip into its alphabet soup of policy weapons: PEPP, TLTRO, APP, NIRP. Not forgetting the potent, and yet unused, OMT. The unfortunate thing is that these instruments have done all they can. They are exhausted. Weapons that provide liquidity to solvent but illiquid banks are exhausted. The ECB’s weapons can tighten the gap between the EONIA (interbank) lending rate and the ECB deposit facility rate. If the EONIA rate is elevated, it means that the interbank lending market is dysfunctional. But right now, EONIA is deeply negative and little different to the ECB deposit facility. Meaning that there is no liquidity shortage in the banking system, and there is little more that the ECB weapons can do on this front (Chart I-4). Weapons that provide liquidity to solvent but illiquid sovereign borrowers are exhausted. The ECB’s weapons can tighten the gap between a periphery bond yield, say Italy, and a core bond yield, say France. If periphery yields are elevated, it means that periphery sovereigns might be struggling for market funding. But right now, 2-year yields in Italy are deeply negative and little different to those in France. Meaning that there is no liquidity shortage among euro area sovereign borrowers, and there is little more that the ECB weapons can do on this front (Chart I-5). Weapons that depress interest rates along the entire term-structure are exhausted. The ECB’s weapons can depress the level of short-term and long-term euro area interest rates. But right now, both the deposit facility rate and the euro area 7-10 year bond yield are deeply negative. Meaning that euro area interest rates are within touching distance of the lower bound along the entire term-structure, and there is little more that the ECB weapons can do on this front (Chart I-6). Chart I-4Ample Liquidity For Euro Area Banks Chart I-5Ample Liquidity For Euro Area Sovereigns Chart I-6Euro Area Interest Rates Cannot Go Much Lower Some people counter that the ECB is not out of ammunition. It could just buy government debt in the primary market – meaning, print money for government spending. In theory, yes, but this would constitute fiscal easing, and it would require a major rewriting of the central bank mandate including a likely loss of independence. To repeat, in terms of pure monetary easing, the ECB is exhausted, and this carries important implications for the euro, and the euro’s inverse – the dollar. The broad level of the dollar index (DXY) depends on the US versus euro area long-duration bond yield spread. The broad level of the dollar index (DXY) depends on the US versus euro area long-duration bond yield spread (Chart I-7). Given that the ECB’s monetary easing is exhausted, the spread cannot widen from the euro area side, it can only narrow. Chart I-7In The Long Term, The Dollar Index (DXY) Tracks The US Vs. Euro Area Bond Yield Spread From the US side, the spread could move symmetrically, at least in theory. But as we explain in the next section, the ability of risk-assets to tolerate higher bond yields is very limited. This imposes a de facto asymmetry on US yield direction to the downside – a fact reinforced by the Federal Reserve’s recent strategic review which explicitly made its reaction function asymmetric. The central bank will be thick-skinned to reflationary shocks, but trigger-happy to the slightest further deflationary shock. And the biggest risk of a deflationary shock comes from the elevated valuations in financial markets. The upshot is that the medium-term direction of the euro versus the dollar is gently higher. But the caveat is that this will be punctuated by sharp countertrend euro sell-offs during periods of market stress, as occurred in March. During such dislocations, equity portfolio flows flee to haven assets and markets, which boosts the dollar, yen, and Swiss franc. The compelling proof is that in 2020 the broad dollar index has traded as the perfect mirror-image of the stock market (Chart I-8). Chart I-8In The Short Term, The Dollar Is A Mirror-Image Of The Stock Market Hence, the best expression of medium-term euro appreciation version the dollar is not through the euro per se, but through a 50:50 combination of the defensive Swiss franc and the cyclical Swedish krona. Tech Stocks Are Exhausted Three weeks ago, in Sell Stocks If the Bond Yield Rises By 0.3 Percent, we pointed out that the (earnings) yield premium on tech stocks versus the 10-year T-bond yield was just 0.3 percent above a 2.5 percent lower threshold that had signalled four previous ‘tipping points.’ In the intervening three weeks, a 5 percent rally in tech stocks combined with a 0.1 percent rise in the bond yield has taken tech stocks to this tipping point (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Tech Stock Valuations Are At A Tipping Point Previous flirtations with this tipping point in February 2018, October 2018, April 2019, and January 2019 resulted in an exhaustion or, worse, a correction, in tech stocks – and by extension in the overall market. In this regard, note that the stock market had already peaked in mid-January this year well before the pandemic devastated it in mid-February. Independently signalling an exhaustion of the tech rally, at least in relative terms, the 130-day fractal structure of technology versus healthcare is also at its tipping point of fragility. Again, previous flirtations with this tipping point have resulted in an exhaustion, or reversal, in relative performance. This is because a fragile fractal structure implies excessive trending and a potential liquidity shortage, requiring a price reversal to match sell and buy orders (Chart I-10). Chart I-10Tech Versus Healthcare Performance Is At A Tipping Point Investment does not present certainties. It only presents probabilities which you must play to your advantage. The combination of two independent indicators that suggest that the tech rally is fragile implies a higher than even chance of an exhaustion or correction in the sector in the coming months. Which would then spread to the aggregate market. One thing that might mitigate this is if bond yields backed down again. Therefore, for the time being, we are not making an absolute recommendation, just a relative recommendation between two growth sectors. Underweight technology versus healthcare. On a 6-month horizon, underweight technology versus healthcare. Fractal Trading System* This week’s recommended trade is long RUB/ZAR, whose long downtrend is now at a 130-day fractal reversal point. The profit-target and symmetrical stop-loss is set at 5 percent. The rolling 12-month win ratio now stands at 59 percent. When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com.   Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System*   Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields   Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations   Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations    
BCA Research’s China Investment Strategy service concludes that Chinese credit growth will slow next year. While policymakers will be data-dependent and the slowdown will be managed, our baseline scenario suggests that the credit impulse will decline by…
Chinese money and credit data surprised to the upside in November. Aggregate financing reaccelerated to CNY2.13 trillion from CNY1.42 trillion, slightly above expectations of CNY2.08 trillion. New loan issuance picked up to CNY1.43 trillion from CNY0.69…
Indian equities have outperformed emerging markets since Q2, rising more than 40% between April and September. However, their relative performance has since slumped. While Indian stocks can rise in absolute terms next year, they are unlikely to…
Dear Client, Next week I will be presenting our 2021 outlook on China at our last webcasts of the year "China 2021 Key Views: Shifting Gears In The New Decade".  The webcasts will take place next Wednesday, December 16 at 10:00AM EST (English) and at 9:00 AM Beijing/HK/Taipei time, 12:00 PM Australian Eastern time (Mandarin). In addition, our final weekly publication for 2020 will be on Wednesday, December 16, 2020. Best regards, Jing Sima, China Strategist   Highlights Chinese policymakers have shifted their focus from supporting economic growth at all costs to risk management. The trend will likely gather speed in 2021. A deceleration in credit growth next year is almost a certainty. While policymakers will be data dependent and the slowdown will be managed, our baseline scenario suggests a decline of approximately three percentage points in credit impulse in 2021. Chinese stocks could still trend higher in Q1, but prices will falter as the market starts to price in a tighter policy environment and slower profit growth in 2H21. We recommend a tactical neutral stance in both the onshore and offshore markets.  We continue to favor Chinese government bonds on a cyclical basis, while gyrations in the onshore corporate bond market will endure for at least the next six months. Feature China’s economic growth momentum has strengthened in recent months, but the nation’s policy stance has also turned more hawkish. As set out in the 14th Five-Year Plan, 2021 will mark the beginning of a new era in which policymakers will switch gears from building a "moderately prosperous society" to becoming a "great modern socialist nation.” The pivot means China’s top officials may tolerate slower economic growth, implement tougher financial and industry regulations, and accelerate structural reforms by allowing more bankruptcies and industry consolidations. As we pointed out in our November 4, 2020 Strategy Report,1 external challenges combined with a stronger domestic leadership will allow China to initiate more meaningful reforms in the next decade than in the past ten years. The reforms will strengthen our structural view on China’s economy and financial assets, but this restructuring will create headwinds for growth in the short to medium term.  Therefore, investors should maintain low expectations for Chinese growth and financial asset prices. In 2021, credit growth will decelerate, regulations will be tightened and the “old economy” will moderate in the second half of the year.  We will discuss four main themes in our outlook for 2021. Key Theme #1: Macro Policy: Turning More Hawkish Government officials recently stepped up mention of financial risk containment in their public announcements, along with tightened industry regulations. Many market commentators are downplaying the risk of a tighter policy in 2021, citing China’s fragile recovery and a weak global economy. However, the current environment resembles the policy backdrop in late 2016/early 2017 when President Xi Jinping began his financial deleveraging campaign. Our policy framework suggests that China currently faces fewer constraints than in 2016/2017. Thus, the odds are high that the leaders will turn their tough rhetoric into action in the next six to twelve months.   Importantly, despite low year-over-year GDP growth, the pace of China’s domestic economic recovery has been faster than in 2016 (Chart 1). The PMIs in both the manufacturing and service sectors have been above the 50 percent boom-bust threshold for nine consecutive months (Chart 2). The laggards in the economy - manufacturing investment and household consumption - have been consistently improving (Chart 3). Bond yields have climbed sharply, but given that corporate bond issuance only accounts for 10% of total social financing, the economic impact from rising corporate bond yields has been more than offset by the large number of government bonds issued (Chart 4). Moreover, the recovery in China’s export sector and current account balance has fared surprisingly well this year, propelled by the global demand for medical supplies and stay-at-home electronic goods (Chart 5). Portfolio inflows also have been strong, fueling a rapid appreciation in the RMB.  Chart 1Current Economic Recovery In Better Shape Than In 2016 Chart 2PMI Remains Strong Chart 3The Laggards Are Catching Up Chart 4Large Fiscal Stimulus More Than Offset Tighter Monetary Stance Chart 5Exports Surged Chart 6Chinese Business Cycle Upswing Still Has Steam Looking forward, China’s economic recovery should continue for at least another two quarters due to this year’s credit expansion. Economic activities usually lag the turning points in credit growth by six to nine months (Chart 6). Moreover, headline economic data in 1H21 should be impressive, given the deep slump in domestic output during the same period in 2020. The strengthening economic data will provide China’s leadership with a long-awaited opportunity to focus on risk management. Chart 7A Mild Deflation Will Not Stop Policymakers From Reining In Stimulus Furthermore, the ongoing deflation in the ex-factory prices should not stop the authorities from scaling back policy support. It is worth noting that Xi’s administration doubled down on squeezing shadow banking activity in early 2017 when the CPI was decelerating; the PPI turned positive only due to a low base factor from deep contractions in 2016 (Chart 7). In this vein, as long as the deceleration in both the CPI and PPI does not drastically worsen, we think that policymakers will see less need to reflate the economy. China’s external environment will be less challenging in 2021 than in 2016/2017. Geopolitical tensions are set to ease, at least temporarily, with US President-elect Joe Biden taking office in January. This contrasts with 2016/2017 when President Xi began his financial deleveraging campaign despite increasing strain from then newly-elected President Donald Trump. In hindsight, Xi’s intention may have been to solidify China’s financial sector in preparation for a trade war with the US. The same logic can be applied to our view for next year: Xi will accelerate structure reforms to mitigate risk in the domestic economy before the Biden administration turns its focus to China. We do not think the Communist Party’s 100th anniversary next year will prevent Xi from adopting a hawkish policy bias either. Xi plowed ahead with tightening financial regulations in 2017 even as the ruling Communist Party Committee (CPC) was preparing for a generational leadership reshuffle. In the past two years, the escalation in US-China tensions has strengthened Xi’s power in the CPC and Chinese society. The recent large number of changes in provincial CPC leaders should help Xi to further consolidate his centralized power over local governments. All signs indicate that both the domestic and external landscapes should provide Xi with even more room to undertake reforms in 2021 compared with 2017. Key Theme #2: Stimulus: Deceleration Ahead A deceleration in both credit growth and fiscal support in 2021 is almost a certainty in light of the more hawkish tone by Chinese policymakers. Chart 8 shows that between 2017 and 2019, policymakers came close to stabilizing the macro leverage ratio, but the progress was more than reversed this year due to the pandemic. If policymakers are to allow the increase in the 2021 debt-to-GDP ratio to be within the range of the past four years, then credit may expand at a rate slightly above nominal GDP growth in 2021 (assuming nominal output growth at around 10-11% next year). This scenario, which is our baseline view, is in line with recent statements from the PBoC, which calls for aligning credit growth with nominal GDP in 2021.  Our calculation suggests that credit impulse will reach around 29% of next year’s GDP, about 2 to 3 percentage points lower than in 2020 (Chart 9). Chart 8Financial Deleveraging Efforts Erased By COVID-19 Chart 9Credit Growth Will Decelerate In 2021 Even if the PBoC keeps its official policy rate (i.e. the 7-day interbank repo rate) steady, tightening regulations and repricing credit risk will lead to higher funding costs and a lower appetite for borrowing (Chart 10). Banking regulators have made it clear that some of the one-off easing measures from this year, such as the extension of loan payments (through March 2021) and the delay of macro-prudential assessments (through end-2021), will end next year. Financial institutions will need to slow the pace of their asset balance sheet to comply with these regulations. The regulatory pressures will lead to de facto deleveraging. On the fiscal front, we expect the large budget deficit to remain intact next year. Targeted stimulus through subsidies and tax cuts to support household consumption and small businesses will likely continue. Government spending in the new economy sectors such as semiconductor and tech-related infrastructure will even accelerate. However, the new-economy infrastructure investment is estimated to only account for about 1% of China’s total capital formation, having limited impact on the overall economy.2 Chart 10Higher Funding Costs Will Discourage Corporate Borrowing Chart 11Fiscal Boost For Infrastructure Will Scale Back The proceeds from the large number of the local government special purpose bonds (SPBs) this year will continue to provide tailwinds for infrastructure investment into Q1 2021. However, as the laggards in the economic recovery catch up and government tax revenue improves next year, 2021 quotas for government general and SPBs are likely to be scaled back, reining in expenditure growth in the traditional infrastructure sector (Chart 11).   Finally, investors should watch for signs of further hawkishness from China’s leaders at the Central Economic Work Conference this December and the National People’s Congress next March.  While we expect policymakers to be data dependent and keep a controlled deceleration in credit and economic growth, risks of a policy overkill cannot be ruled out. A more bearish scenario would be if policymakers decide to fully revert the pace of debt accumulation to the average rate in 2017-2019. In this case, credit impulse in 2021 could fall by more than 5 percentage points compared with 2020 (Scenario 2 in Chart 9 on Page 6). Key Theme #3: Chinese Equities: Position For A Peak In Prices This year’s cyclical (6- to 12 months) call to overweight Chinese stocks within a global portfolio has panned out. In the next 12 months, the risks in Chinese stocks relative to global benchmarks are to the downside; Chinese stocks are vulnerable to setbacks in policy support next year, in both absolute and relative terms. We are closing the following trades: Long MSCI China Index/Short MSCI All Country World Index, for a 1.5% profit; Long MSCI China A Onshore Index/Short MSCI All Country World Index, for a 5.6% profit; Long MSCI China Ex-TMT/Short MSCI Global EX-TMT, for a 0.7% loss; Long Investable Materials/Short broad investable market, for a 5.6% profit; and Long Onshore Materials/Short broad A-Share market, for a 9.3% profit. Chart 12Onshore Equity Market Investors Will Start To Price In Slower Profit Growth In 2H21 In absolute terms, Chinese onshore stocks on an aggregate level could still inch higher in the next quarter, supported by an improving business and profit cycle (Chart 12). However, in Q2 the market may start to price in slower economic and profit growth in 2H21, erasing the gains from the first quarter.  The resilient performance in Chinese stocks against a tightening policy backdrop in 2017 is not likely to repeat itself next year. Current valuations in both China’s onshore and offshore equity markets are higher than at the end of 2016; the price-to-forward earnings ratios in both markets this year have breached the peak levels achieved in 2017 (Chart 13A and 13B). Recovering earnings in the next year will help to digest the currently elevated valuations, i.e. the market has already priced in a substantial post-pandemic profit recovery and investors’ focus will soon switch to a more pessimistic outlook for corporate earnings in 2H21.  Chart 13AInvestable Stocks Are More Expensive Now Than Prior To The Last Tightening Cycle Chart 13BA-Shares Are Less Expensive, But Valuations Still Elevated Additionally, a property market boom in 2017 boosted the stock performance of real estate developers and related sectors in the supply chain (Chart 14). Policies have already turned much more restrictive in the past month, and deleveraging pressures faced by property developers may weigh on both the sector’s profit growth and stock performance in the next six to twelve months.3 The investable market may not be insulated from tighter domestic policies either. Recent anti-trust regulations in China could create headwinds for mega-cap technology stocks in the near term. Global investors will demand a higher risk premium for China’s tech sector than in the past, as the rich valuations of tech stocks pose more downside risks in a less friendly policy environment (Chart 15).  Chart 14Housing Boom In 2017 Also Helped Sustain A Bull Market Back Then Chart 15Valuations In Chinese Tech Stocks Are Elevated Chart 16A Policy Overkill Will Significantly Raise Prob Of A Earnings Contraction In 12 Months Furthermore, if we presume a policy overkill with more aggressive deleveraging and a further appreciation in the RMB in 2021, our model shows a significant increase in the probability of a profit growth contraction in the next 12 months (Chart 16). In this scenario, selloffs in Chinese stock prices may start in Q1, a risk that cannot be ruled out. In relative terms, Chinese stocks will likely underperform global equities. It is doubtful that the impressive outperformance in Chinese investable stocks throughout 2017 will be repeated in 2021. Chinese equities have benefited from the successful containment of China’s COVID-19 situation in the past year (Chart 17). As breakthroughs in vaccines make the pandemic less threatening to the global economy, Chinese risk assets relative to global ones will become less appealing. Global cyclical stocks, particularly European and Japanese equities, should benefit from improvements in business activities and relatively low valuations (Chart 18). Chart 17Chinese Equities Have Benefited From A Better Control Of COVID-19 This Year... Chart 18...But Vaccines Will Give A Boost To Other Markets Next Year Importantly, despite strong inflows this year from foreign investors to China’s bond market, foreign portfolio flows into China’s onshore equity market have been less than one-third of that in 2019 (Chart 19). Looking ahead, global investors will be less keen to support Chinese stocks, based on the expectation of tighter onshore liquidity conditions and less buoyant economic growth.   Chart 19Foreign Investors Have Not Been So Keen On Chinese Risky Assets This Year Everything considered, we anticipate that Chinese A-shares and investable stocks will start descending in Q2 in absolute terms. Their performance relative to global equities will also peak. We recommend a neutral stance on both bourses in the next three months to minimize the downside risks.  Key Theme #4: Chinese Bonds: Favor Onshore Government Over Corporate Bonds We continue to recommend a cyclical long position in Chinese government bonds within a global fixed-income portfolio. However, we are closing our long Chinese onshore corporate bond trade for now, for a 17% gain (Chart 20). The large interest rate differential between yields in Chinese bonds versus those in other major developed nations should remain intact into the new year. The yield on the short-duration government notes will continue to trend higher in 1H21, based on the prospect of tighter monetary policy. The yield on long-dated bonds will also escalate as the outlook for the economy continues to improve. We are pricing in a 70BPs increase in the 1-year government bond yield and a 40BPs rise in the yield of the 10-year bond from their current levels (Chart 21).   Chart 20Handsome Returns On Chinese Government Bonds Chart 21Our Projections On Government Bond Yield Hikes Next Year Chart 22RMB Appreciation Will Continue In 2021, But At A Slower Pace Than This Year The ongoing appreciation in the RMB will also make Chinese government bonds attractive to global investors. The speed of the gain in the RMB against the US dollar may slow in 2021, but the economic fundamentals do not yet suggest that this trend will reverse. Relative growth and interest rates between China and the US will probably narrow and the geopolitical tailwinds affecting the RMB following the Biden win in the US election will subside in the new year (Chart 22). However, China's strong export sector should still support a record high trade surplus and provide a floor to the Chinese currency against the USD. Chinese onshore corporate bonds have undergone a major shakeout in the domestic corporate bond market in the past month. A slew of state-owned enterprise (SOE) bond defaults has pushed up the yields on the lower-rated corporate bond by nearly 40BPs in one month. In our view, the recent panic selloff in the onshore corporate bond market is overdone and domestic corporate bonds are starting to look attractive on a cyclical basis. Bloomberg data shows that the value of defaulted bonds in the first three quarters of this year is in fact much lower than in the past two years: it dropped to 85Bn RMB from 142Bn RMB defaults in 2019 and the default of 122Bn RMB in 2018. Bondholders have been spooked by the fact that the Chinese local government and top financial regulators allow defaults by state-backed firms. The policy change to shift risk to the markets should result in a continuation of risk-off sentiment among investors, inducing selling pressure in the domestic corporate bond market in the near term. However, on a cyclical basis, such selloffs could present good buying opportunities. While we expect China’s onshore corporate bond defaults to be higher in 2021, the default rate remains below the global average (Chart 23). As we pointed out in our previous report, since 2017 Chinese onshore corporate bonds have been priced with a significantly higher risk premium than their global peers, which in our view is overdone (Chart 24). Chart 23Chinese Corporate Bond Default Rate Lower Than Global Average... Chart 24...And Much Lower Than Their Risk Premiums Imply Chart 25Chinese Corporate Bonds Can Bring Better Returns Once The Peak Intensity In Policy Tightening Passes In addition, Chart 25 shows that the total returns on Chinese onshore corporate bonds briefly declined in 2017 when the government’s financial de-risking efforts intensified. It sequentially rebounded in 2018, suggesting a turnaround in investors’ sentiment after the first cleanup wave in the corporate sector.  As such, while we do not favor Chinese onshore corporate bonds in the next six months, on a 12-month horizon, conditions could become more favorable to initiate a long position. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1Please see China Investment Strategy Report "The 14th Five-Year Plan: Meaningful Transformations Ahead," dated November 4, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report "Chinese Economic Stimulus: How Much For Infrastructure And The Property Market?" dated March 25, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report "China: The Implications Of Deleveraging By Property Developers," dated October 21, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
The German ZEW’s December survey highlights optimism regarding the outlook for the economic recovery. The Expectations component shot up in both Germany and the Eurozone to 55 and 54.4 from 39 and 32.8, respectively, with the German reading handily beating…