Economy
Highlights The US dollar is likely to weaken over the next 12 months as global growth accelerates and the narrowing in real interest rate differentials continues to thwart the greenback. Theoretically, the relationship between exchange rates and budget deficits is indeterminate. Whether or not a larger budget deficit leads to a weaker currency ultimately depends on how the central bank responds and what other countries are doing. Today, the Fed is effectively capping nominal yields through unlimited bond purchases and aggressive forward guidance. As such, the passage of a new US fiscal stimulus package should mitigate deflationary fears, reduce real rates, and put modest downward pressure on the dollar. While a disorderly dollar selloff cannot be ruled out, it is a low-probability scenario at the moment. A major dollar decline would require that realized inflation increases dramatically, which is unlikely at a time when unemployment is still so elevated. Moreover, to the extent that the US economy is operating below its potential, increased fiscal stimulus will lead to higher private-sector savings. Higher private-sector savings, in turn, will limit any deterioration in the current account balance. Investors should remain overweight global equities over a 12-month horizon, favoring cheaper non-US stocks and cyclical sectors. Beep Beep In the classic Road Runner cartoon, Wile E. Coyote has a habit of inadvertently running off a cliff, stopping for a moment in mid-air to look down, only to realize that there is nothing beneath him. Like the coyote, the US economy has gone over the fiscal cliff. The extra $600 a week in emergency federal unemployment benefits have lapsed. The small business Paycheck Protection Program has stopped accepting new applications, while state and local governments face a massive cash crunch. President Trump’s executive orders, if implemented, will mitigate some of the fiscal tightening. However, it is probable that they will be challenged in court. And even if the states are able to get the new unemployment benefit program up and running quickly – which seems doubtful – the $44 billion in federal funding for the program, which was taken from the Department of Homeland Security’s Disaster Relief Fund, will run out in six weeks. The stimulative effect of the adjustment to payroll taxes is also likely to be limited, given that the President’s order only defers tax liabilities until next year, rather than forgiving them altogether. So why hasn’t the stock market reacted negatively to the withdrawal of large-scale fiscal stimulus? The answer is that investors are assuming that Congress will manage to cobble together a deal over the coming days that resolves the shortcomings in Trump’s executive orders. Given that voters favor more stimulus, some sort of a deal is more likely than not (Table 1). However, with the stock market near record highs, the impetus for Trump to seek a compromise with Congress is not yet at hand. Risk assets may need to suffer a setback to catalyze an agreement. Table 1Majority Continues To Support Expanded Unemployment Insurance Still Sticking With Our Overweight 12-Month View On Stocks Despite our near-term concerns, we continue to recommend that investors overweight equities on a 12-month horizon. While stocks are not particularly cheap, they are not expensive either. The MSCI All-Country World index is trading at 18-times calendar 2021 earnings. The forward PE ratio based on projected 2021 earnings is 21 in the US and 15 outside the US. Even if one allows for the likelihood that earnings estimates are overly optimistic – as they usually are – the earnings yield on stocks is about six percentage points above the real yield on bonds. This suggests that the equity risk premium is still quite high, compensating investors for earnings risk (Chart 1). Meanwhile, sentiment towards stocks remains downbeat. Bears outnumbered bulls by 12 percentage points in this week’s American Association of Individual Investors sentiment poll (Chart 2). On average, bulls have exceeded bears by 8 percentage points in the 33-year history of this survey. Stocks are more likely to go up than down when sentiment is bearish. Chart 1Favor Equities Over Bonds Over A 12-Month Horizon Chart 2Many Investors Are Bearish On Stocks Dollar: Stick With The Herd Chart 3The Dollar Has Started Breaking Down Bears also outnumber bulls in surveys of sentiment towards the dollar (Chart 3). Does that mean that one should position for a stronger greenback? No. The dollar is a high momentum currency (Chart 4). Unlike in the case of equities, being a contrarian has been a losing strategy for trading the dollar. The dollar is more likely to weaken when sentiment is bearish and the currency is trading below its moving averages, as is currently the case (Chart 5). Chart 4The Dollar Is A High Momentum Currency Chart 5Trading The Dollar: The Trend Is Your Friend The US Dollar Is Normally A Risk-Off Currency Chart 6The US Economy Is Less Cyclical Than Those Of Its Trading Partners What are the implications of a weaker dollar for risk assets? Just like bond yields can either fall for risk-on reasons (i.e., when monetary policy turns dovish) or fall for risk-off reasons (i.e., when deflationary pressures set in), a weakening in the US dollar can either be a risk-on or a risk-off event. Historically, the dollar has traded as a risk-off currency. This is partly because the US Treasury market is one of the most liquid and safest in the world. When investors panic, they flock to Treasuries, which raises the demand for dollars. In contrast, when investors feel emboldened to take on more risk, they tend to sell dollars. The US economy is less cyclical than those of its trading partners (Chart 6). While the US benefits from stronger global growth, the rest of the world benefits even more. Thus, when global growth accelerates, capital tends to flow from the US to other economies, hurting the dollar in the process. Moreover, changes in interest-rate differentials can affect the value of the dollar. For example, at the start of 2019, euro area 2-year real rates were 221 basis points below comparable US rates. Today, they are 19 basis points above US rates, representing a net swing of 240 basis points. If anything, the dollar has fallen less than one would have anticipated based on changes in interest rate differentials (Chart 7). Chart 7AInterest Rate Differentials Do Not Favor The Dollar Chart 7BInterest Rate Differentials Do Not Favor The Dollar Will Bloated Fiscal Deficits Undermine The Dollar? To the extent that the recent dollar selloff has been driven by stronger global growth and a more dovish Fed, it is not surprising that risk assets have rallied. However, an increasing number of commentators have begun to wonder whether the next leg of the dollar bear market could be less benign than the one that preceded it. The US dollar will weaken over the next 12 months. This weakness will mainly stem from “risk-on” forces, namely stronger global growth and a very dovish Fed. Stephen Roach has argued that soaring budget deficits will push the US current account further into deficit, while America’s disengagement from the rest of the world will undermine the dollar’s reserve status. He reckons that the dollar could plunge by 35% “sooner rather than later.” I agree with Stephen that the dollar faces a variety of long-term challenges. However, I do not think these challenges will be the primary drivers of the dollar over the next 12 months or so. A Simple Framework For Thinking About Currencies To understand why, let me describe a simple two-country framework that I have found to be very useful for thinking about currencies’ sensitivity to various macroeconomic forces. This framework, which draws on the seminal work of Rudi Dornbusch in the 1970s,1 relies on two “equilibrium conditions”: A long-run equilibrium condition that says that the price of a comparable basket of goods and services should be the same across countries. This implies, for example, that if the price level in Country A rises relative to Country B by say 10%, then Country A’s currency should eventually depreciate by 10% relative to Country B’s. A short-run equilibrium condition that says that the expected risk-adjusted return on investment assets should be the same across countries. This implies that all excess returns are arbitraged away. Suppose that interest rates and inflation are initially the same in Country A and B, but that A suddenly and unexpectedly decides to run a larger budget deficit for the next ten years. What will happen to the value of A’s currency? The answer depends on how Country A’s central bank reacts; specifically, on whether real interest rates end up going up or down in response to the bigger budget deficit. First, let us consider an extreme situation where investors believe that Country A’s central bank will not hike interest rates at all in response to the larger budget deficit, but that annualized inflation will nevertheless rise by 2% over the following decade due to the additional aggregate demand from easier fiscal policy. In that case, the price level in Country A will end up being 20% higher than previously expected after a decade, implying that A’s currency would have to fall immediately by 20% (Chart 8 – left-hand side column). Chart 8Short- And Long-Run Moves In Currencies Under Various Inflation And Interest Rate Scenarios The reason Country A’s currency has to fall by 20% at once, rather than grinding lower by 2% per year for ten years, is that we are assuming that interest rates in the two countries remain equal. If Country A’s currency were to fall slowly, Country B’s bonds would earn a higher return in common-currency terms during the entire period when Country A’s exchange rate was trending lower. This would violate the second equilibrium condition. Thus, this framework implies that only unanticipated changes to policy can lead to discrete (i.e., step function) changes in exchange rates. Let us now consider a different scenario where the central bank in Country A, rather than accommodating easier fiscal policy, immediately moves to neutralize the stimulative impact of a larger budget deficit by hiking interest rates by two full percentage points. Since there is no net impact on aggregate demand, inflation expectations in Country A do not change.2 Country A’s exchange rate does change, however: it immediately appreciates by 20% (Chart 8 – middle column). This appreciation is necessary to engender the expectation of a subsequent two percentage point per year depreciation in A’s exchange rate. The ensuing slow depreciation in A’s currency offsets the additional two percentage points in interest that A’s bonds pay over B’s bonds. One can easily imagine intermediate cases. For example, suppose Country A’s central bank raises interest rates by only one percentage point, which results in A’s price level rising by 5% over the subsequent decade relative to B’s price level. As the right-hand side column of Chart 8 shows, A’s exchange rate would initially appreciate by 5%, but then depreciate by one percent every year for a decade, ultimately finishing 5% below where it started. An Added Wrinkle: Portfolio Balance Effects Before we apply this framework to the outlook for the US dollar, we need to discuss something that is central to Stephen Roach’s thesis, which is the role of portfolio balance effects. In the discussion above we said nothing about current account deficits, US indebtedness to the rest of the world, or the dollar’s reserve currency status. This is because we assumed that investors would be indifferent between holding Country A's and B’s bonds as long as they offered the same expected returns after accounting for projected exchange rate movements. In reality, financial assets are not perfectly substitutable. Changes in “portfolio balance” – the quantity and composition of assets available to the public – is likely to have an effect on returns. Thus, if Country A’s government issues more debt in order to finance a wider budget deficit, investors may demand a higher return to induce them to hold that additional debt. This extra return is likely to be larger if there is more uncertainty about the path of inflation. In the context of the first example discussed above, Country A’s exchange rate may have to fall by more than 20%. A weakening of Country A’s exchange rate would allow investors in B to purchase the same number of Country A bonds but at a lower cost when measured in B’s currency. Moreover, by undershooting its long-term fair value – and thus creating expectations of an appreciation in its currency – Country A can increase the appeal of its bonds. The expected appreciation of A’s exchange rate following a big depreciation effectively compensates investors with a risk premium for owning A’s bonds. This is why we phrased our second equilibrium condition in terms of “risk-adjusted” returns rather than simply expected returns. What All This Means For The Dollar Chart 9Rising Budget Deficits Do Not Automatically Translate Into A Weaker Dollar The key insight from our analysis is that the relationship between budget deficits and exchange rates is indeterminate. If the Fed adopts a hawkish stance in order to keep inflation from accelerating, like Paul Volcker’s Fed did in the early 1980s, the dollar could rise (Chart 9). In contrast, if the Fed keeps rates on hold in the face of rising budget deficits, the dollar is more likely to weaken. Arguably, this is what happened in the early 2000s following the Bush tax cuts. The downward pressure on the dollar would intensify if, as per our discussion of portfolio balance effects, investors started demanding a higher risk premium to hold US assets. Today, the Fed is effectively capping nominal bond yields through unlimited bond purchases and aggressive forward guidance committing to easy policy for years. Jay Powell has gone as far as to say that “we’re not even thinking about thinking about raising rates.” As such, the passage of a new US fiscal stimulus package would mitigate deflationary fears, reduce real rates, and put modest downward pressure on the dollar. Chart 10Labor Market Slack Will Keep Inflation In Check Chart 11Inflation Expectations Tend To Track Realized Inflation Could further dollar weakness morph into a disorderly dollar selloff which hurts, rather than helps, global equities and other risk assets? While such an outcome cannot be ruled out, it is a low-probability scenario for the moment. For one thing, the US output gap – the difference between what the economy can potentially produce and what it is producing now – is very large. Inflation is unlikely to rise significantly if there is still a fair amount of labor market slack (Chart 10). Historically, inflation expectations have tended to track actual inflation (Chart 11). If the latter remains contained for the next few years, so will the former. What about the possibility that bigger budget deficits will produce much larger current account deficits? It is certainly true that if private-sector savings did not change, a bigger budget deficit would reduce national savings, leading to a larger current account deficit. It is also true that US external liabilities now far exceed foreign assets, reflecting the fact that the US has run a current account deficit every year since 1982 (Chart 12). Chart 12Many Decades Of Current Account Deficits Have Led To A Negative Net International Investment Position For The US Fortunately, things are not quite as bleak for the dollar as they seem, at least for now. Despite a net international investment position of negative 56% of GDP, the US still generates substantially more income from its overseas assets than it pays to service its liabilities (Chart 13). This reflects the fact that US foreign liabilities are mainly comprised of low-yielding government bonds, while its assets largely consist of higher-yielding equities and foreign direct investment (Chart 14). Chart 13The US Generates More Income From Its Overseas Assets Than It Pays On Its Liabilities Chart 14A Breakdown Of US Assets And Liabilities Chart 15Government Transfers Primarily Boosted Personal Savings This Year With Little External Spillovers So Far Moreover, to the extent that the US economy is operating below its potential, fiscal stimulus will lead to higher private-sector savings. Higher private-sector savings, in turn, will reduce the need for the US to source capital from abroad. If the government transfers money to households and they save it, private-sector savings will rise by the same amount that government savings fall. If households spend the money, GDP and national income will rise. The resulting increase in income will boost savings.3 This is precisely what has happened this year: The fiscal deficit has soared, private-sector savings have exploded, and the trade balance has basically gone sideways (Chart 15). Granted, to the extent that some of the spending will be directed towards imports, the current account deficit will widen over the coming months. However, stronger growth will also increase corporate profitability. This could attenuate any capital outflows from the US, thus preventing the dollar from falling as much as it otherwise would have. Investment Conclusions Chart 16Global Equities Tend To Outperform Bonds When Global Growth Is Strengthening And The Dollar Is Weakening The US dollar will weaken over the next 12 months. This weakness will mainly stem from “risk-on” forces, namely stronger global growth and a very dovish Fed. Global equities have generally outperformed bonds when global growth is strengthening, and the dollar is weakening (Chart 16). Non-US stocks, cyclical stocks, value stocks, and small caps all tend to fare best in a weaker dollar environment (Chart 17). These stocks are also quite cheap compared to their counterparts: US stocks, defensive stocks, growth stocks, and large caps (Chart 18). Chart 17ANon-US Stocks, Cyclical Stocks, Value Stocks, And Small Caps Perform Better When The Dollar Is Falling… Chart 17BNon-US Stocks, Cyclical Stocks, Value Stocks, And Small Caps Perform Better When The Dollar Is Falling… Chart 18… And They Are Cheap To Boot Looking further out, the outlook for equities is less rosy. Stagflationary pressures could emerge in 2023 or thereabouts as unemployment falls to pre-pandemic levels and supply-side constraints begin to bite. If that were to happen, profit margins would come under pressure, sending equities lower. It is not clear how the US dollar would perform in that environment. On the one hand, a risk-off environment would tend to favor the greenback. On the other hand, if the Fed is perceived as being too slow to tame inflation, the dollar could sink. Of course, much depends on what is happening in other economies. Exchange rates are relative prices. If inflation rises everywhere, the big winners from higher inflation would not be other fiat currencies, but hard currencies such as gold. That is why we continue to recommend that investors stay long the yellow metal. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Global Investment Strategy View Matrix Current MacroQuant Model Scores Footnotes 1 Rudiger Dornbusch, “Expectations And Exchange Rate Dynamics,” The Journal of Political Economy, (84:6), December 1976. return to text 2 We are assuming that the central bank in Country A takes into account the impact that a stronger currency will have on aggregate demand when choosing the appropriate level of interest rates that neutralizes the effect of easier fiscal policy. return to text 3 For example, suppose households spend 75 cents of every dollar the government transfers to them exclusively on domestically-produced goods and services. If a government transfers $100 to households, $25 will be saved while the remaining $75 will be spent, thereby generating an additional $75 in GDP and income for the economy. Of the additional $75 in income, 25% ($18.75) will be saved while 75% ($56.25) will be spent. It is straightforward to show that if this process continues indefinitely, a total of 75+0.75*75+0.75^2*75+0.75^3*75+…=75/(1-0.75)=$300 in GDP and income will be generated. This means that private-sector savings will increase by 25+0.25*300=$100, which is exactly equal to the decline in government savings. Private-sector savings would rise by less than $100 if a portion of the spending was directed to imports. For instance, if households spent 15 cents of every dollar of income on imports, GDP would rise by 60+0.60*60+0.60^2*60+0.60^3*60+…=60/(1/1-0.60)=$150, while private savings would rise by 25+0.25*150=$62.50. return to text
Highlights The strong rally in certain mega-cap stocks has masked the muted revival in the broad equity universe. Limited fiscal stimulus and a broken monetary transmission mechanism herald lackluster economic and profit recoveries. While dedicated EM equity investors should for now maintain an underweight position in India within an EM equity portfolio, they should consider upgrading this bourse on potential near-term underperformance. Absolute-return investors should consider buying this bourse on a setback in the coming months. Fixed-income investors should continue receiving 10-year swap rates but use any rupee selloff to rotate into cash bonds. Feature Indian share prices have staged a remarkable comeback following the financial carnage in March. However, the outlook for the economy and for corporate profits does not justify the current level of share prices. While this thesis is applicable to most markets around the world, the gap between share prices and economic activity is even larger in India. Chart I-1Loans To Companies Are Muted In India In particular: The credit and liquidity crunch has been more acute in India than in many other EM and DM economies. Bank loan growth has surged in many countries as companies have borrowed to avoid a liquidity crunch due to a plunge in sales. However, in India bank loans to companies been shown little improvement (Chart I-1). This means that enterprises in India have not been able to draw on bank loans – to the same extent as they have done elsewhere – to attenuate a liquidity crunch stemming from revenue contraction. As a result, Indian enterprises have retrenched more in terms of both employment and capital spending, and their rebound has been more muted. As an example, the global manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs have risen above the 50 line but the same measures in India remain below the 50 line (Chart I-2). India’s employment index from the Manpower group has fallen to a record low as of early July (Chart I-3). As a result, household nominal income growth – which was slumping before the pandemic – has fallen much further. Chart I-2India Is Lagging In Global Recovery Chart I-3India: Employment Conditions Are Very Poor Passenger car and commercial vehicle sales have plummeted (Chart I-4). Corporate investment expenditure and production have crashed. Manufacturing output, capital goods production and imports all plummeted in March and April and rebounded only mildly in June (Chart I-5). Chart I-4India: Discretionary Spending Is Slow To Recover... Chart I-5...As Are Production And Investment Table I-1India: Share Of Each Equity Sector In Profits & Market Cap Economic activity will improve gradually but the level of activity will remain below the pandemic level for some time. As a result, corporate profits will be slow to revive. Odds are that it will take more than one and half years before the EPS of listed companies reach their 2019 level. This is especially true for severely hit sectors – financials, industrials, materials, and consumer discretionary stocks – which together account for 44% of listed companies’ profits. The sectors less affected by the pandemic recession – namely, consumer staples, information technology and health care – together account for 30% of corporate profits (Table I-1). A Breakdown In The Monetary Transmission Mechanism Impediments to rapid economic recovery are the modest fiscal stimulus and a breakdown in the monetary transmission mechanism. While India announced a large fiscal stimulus, much of this is made up of loan guarantees. Some measures like central bank purchases of government bonds also do not represent actual fiscal spending. Chart I-6 illustrates that government spending has risen only moderately and it has been offset by the drop in the credit impulse. Provided that the credit impulse will remain weak due to reasons we discuss below, the aggregate stimulus will not be sufficient to produce a robust and rapid recovery. The outlook for the economy and for corporate profits does not justify the current level of share prices. Critically, the monetary policy transmission mechanism was impaired even before the pandemic broke out in India, and the situation has gotten worse since March. Even though the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been reducing its policy rate, the prime lending rate has dropped very modestly (Chart I-7). Indian commercial banks which are saddled with non-performing loans (NPLs) have been reluctant to reduce their lending rates. Chart I-6Drag From Credit Impulse Has Offset Fiscal Stimulus Chart I-7India: Very Little Decline In Prime Lending Rate Even though AAA local currency corporate bond yields have dropped, BBB corporate bond yields remain above 10% (Chart I-8). This compares with 5-year government bond yields of 5%. Critically, in real (inflation-adjusted) terms, borrowing costs remain elevated (Chart I-9). Such elevated real borrowing costs will continue to hinder credit demand. Chart I-8Corporate Bond Yields Remain Elevated Chart I-9Borrowing Costs In Real Terms Are Restrictive Finally, banks might be reluctant to originate much credit because of the rise in NPLs and the uncertainty over the extension of government guarantees on pandemic-induced NPLs and their own recapitalization programs. Bottom Line: Limited fiscal stimulus and a broken monetary transmission mechanism herald lackluster economic and profit recoveries. Beyond Mega Caps The strong rally in certain mega-cap stocks has masked the muted revival in the broad equity universe. The MSCI equity index has rallied by 50% since its late March lows and stands only 7% below its pre-pandemic highs in local currency terms. Yet, the MSCI equal-weighted index and small caps are, in local currency terms, still 15% and 16% below their pre-pandemic highs, respectively (Chart I-10). The performance of the overall equity index has been exaggerated by the rally in Reliance Industries’ share price as well as information technology stocks, consumer staples and health care. The 150% surge in Reliance Industries stock price since late March lows is due to company-specific rather than macro factors. This company presently accounts for 15% of the MSCI India index. The monetary policy transmission mechanism was impaired even before the pandemic broke out in India. In addition, info technology, consumer staples and health care (including sales of personal care products and medicine) have benefited due to the pandemic. By contrast, equity sectors leveraged to the business cycle in general and discretionary spending in particular have all underperformed. Importantly, bank share prices have been devasted due to poor economic growth and rising NPLs. India’s mega-cap stocks that have led the rally since March lows are expensive, as anywhere else. Finally, India’s equal-weighted equity index has failed to meaningfully outperform the EM equal-weighted index after underperforming severely in late 2019 and Q1 2020 (Chart I-11). Chart I-10Muted Revival In Broader Equity Universe Chart I-11India Relative To EM: Little Outperformance Bottom Line: The advance in Indian share prices has been amplified by the rally in large-cap stocks. Meanwhile, the equal-weighted and small-cap indexes have done considerably worse reflecting the downbeat economic conditions. Equity Valuations And Strategy Chart I-12Indian Equity Valuations Are Elevated On A Market-Cap Basis... As discussed earlier, India’s equity market leaders like information technology, consumer staples and health care are already expensive, trading at a trailing P/E ratio of 23, 47 and 33, respectively. The rest of the equity market is not expensive, but its profit outlook is mediocre. As to other valuation metrices, the market seems to be moderately expensive both on an absolute basis and versus the EM equity benchmark: The 12-month forward P/E ratio is 22.5, the highest in the decade (Chart I-12, top panel). Relative to the EM benchmark, on the same measure is trading at 50% premium (Chart I-12, bottom panel). Based on the equal-weighted equity index – i.e. stripping out the effect of large-cap stocks on the index, Indian equities are overvalued in absolute terms (Chart I-13, top panel). On this equal-weighted measure, Indian stocks are currently trading at a 35% premium versus their EM peers (Chart I-13, bottom panel). The cyclically-adjusted P/E ratio is close to the historical mean (Chart I-14, top panel). Chart I-13...And On An Equal-Weighted Basis Chart I-14Cyclically-Adjusted P/E Ratio However, the CAPE ratio is agnostic to corporate earnings on a cyclical horizon. It assumes corporate profits will revert to their long-term rising trend (Chart I-14, bottom panel). This is not assured in the next six months in our opinion. Hence, a lackluster profits recovery – profits disappointments – is a risk to the performance of India’s bourse in the coming months. Equity Strategy: Weighing pros and cons, we recommend that dedicated EM equity investors maintain an underweight position in India within an EM equity portfolio. However, they should consider upgrading this bourse on potential near-term underperformance. The strong rally in certain mega-cap stocks has masked the muted revival in the broad equity universe. Absolute-return investors should consider buying this bourse on a setback in the coming months. Odds are that the index could drop up to 15% in US dollar terms triggered by a potential global risk-off phase and domestic profit disappointments. Currency And Fixed-Income Chart I-15Consumer Inflation Is Not A Problem In India We have been recommending receiving 10-year swap rates in India since April 23 and this recommendation remains intact. As argued above, the economic recovery will be gradual, and the output gap will remain negative for some time. Consequently, wages and inflation will likely surprise on the downside. Even though headline and core inflation rates have recently picked up, this has been due to a rise in food prices, transportation and personal care products (Chart I-15). Hence, there are not genuine inflationary pressures in India and the RBI will be making a mistake if it stops easing due to rises in headline or core CPI readings. Food prices have been rising for a while due to supply shocks. Importantly, the rise in food prices should not be interpreted as genuine inflation. Meanwhile, personal care products include gold jewelry and this CPI sub-component has therefore been rising due to the surge in gold prices (Chart I-15, bottom panel). Finally, transport costs have been on the rise due to supply chain bottlenecks in India as a result of COVID-19 and due to the rise in global oil prices. The broken monetary transmission mechanism means that the RBI will have to cut rates by much more. The fixed-income market is not discounting rate cuts. There is value in long-term rates in India. The yield curve is very steep – the spread between 10-year and 1-year swap rates is 92 basis points. In addition, 10-year government bond yields are currently yielding 522 basis points above 10-year US Treasurys. We are not particularly concerned about public debt. Central government debt was at 52% of GDP before the recession and total public debt (including both central and state governments) was 80% of GDP. The same ratios are much higher in many other EM and DM economies. Chart I-16India's Stock-To-Bond Ratio Is At A Critical Resistance Finally, the rupee could correct as the US dollar rebounds from oversold levels, but foreign investors should use that setback in India’s exchange rate to rotate from receiving rates to buying 10-year government bonds outright, i.e., taking on currency risk. The RBI has been accumulating foreign exchange reserves, meaning it has been preventing the currency from appreciating. The current account is balanced and the financial/capital account has passed its worse phase. India will continue to attract foreign capital due to its long-term appeal and higher-than-elsewhere interest rates. Domestic investors should favor bonds over stocks in the near term (Chart I-16). Bottom Line: Continue betting on lower interest rates in India. Fixed income investors should switch from receiving rates to buying 10-year government bonds on a correction in the rupee in the coming months. Dedicated EM local currency bond portfolios should continue overweighting India. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Ayman Kawtharani Editor/Strategist ayman@bcaresearch.com Footnotes Equities Recommendations Currencies, Credit And Fixed-Income Recommendations
BCA Research's Emerging Markets Strategy team in the newly published report on India argued that limited fiscal stimulus and a broken monetary transmission mechanism herald a lackluster economic recovery. The monetary policy transmission mechanism was…
Unemployment insurance claims (UICs) fell below one million for the first time since March 14, coming in at 963,000 and beating expectations of 1.1 million. The labor market is improving on the margin which is promising. All eyes are now set on…
BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy services conclude that the Beirut blast calls attention to instability in the Shia Crescent. The August 4 explosion at the Port of Beirut was devastating. It killed more than 220,…
The US core consumer price index (CPI excluding food and fuel) came in at a surprising 0.6% month-on-month. The three-month annualized rate of change showed up at a perky 3.22%. The year-on-year reading was 1.57%. The upside surprise in inflation sent US bond…
BCA Research's China Investment Strategy service is sticking to its strategic and cyclical overweight view on Chinese equities despite President Trump's opening a new front in the Sino-US tech war by banning China-based apps like TikTok. The impact on both…
Dear Client, In lieu of our regular report next week, we are sending you a Special Report from my colleague Chester Ntonifor, Foreign Exchange Strategist. Chester will share his outlook on the Hong Kong Dollar. I hope you will find his report insightful. Please note that next week’s report will be published on Friday, August 21. Best regards, Jing Sima, China Strategist Highlights President Trump's ban of China-based apps marks a new front in the Sino-US tech war. There is no change in our strategic views. The impact on both China’s aggregate economic growth outlook and the financial markets should be limited on a cyclical basis. Consider overweight Chinese offshore ex-TMT stocks and onshore semiconductor stocks within a global equity portfolio, against a backdrop of escalating hostilities in the tech sphere. Feature Chart 1Five Chinese Companies Are Mentioned In The New "Clean Network" Initiative Geopolitical risks again stirred up volatility last week in China’s equity markets. President Trump issued two executive orders to take effect in 45 days, banning US transactions with the Chinese-owned social media apps TikTok and WeChat. Shares in Tencent, the China-based Internet giant that owns WeChat, have plummeted by 11% in China’s offshore market following the ban announcement (Chart 1). The event underscores that technology is at the root of a power struggle between the US and China. The struggle will likely be exploited by Trump as the US presidential election nears and Trump’s polling numbers lag. However, we remain constructive on Chinese stocks over the next 6 to 12 months. Although the latest development remains highly fluid, the tensions should not have a material impact on the cyclical outlook for China’s aggregate economy or financial markets. This will be the case as long as the situation does not degenerate into an outright tariff increase on Chinese export goods or other strategic actions with the potential to cause major economic damage. Given rising downside risks to Chinese tech company stocks in the near term, we recommend investors hold a neutral position on Chinese tech giant company equities versus their global peers. Instead, investors should overweight Chinese “old economy” stocks as well as sectors that are greatly benefited from policy support. We initiate two trades today: long MSCI China ex-TMT versus MSCI Global ex-TMT;1 and long domestic semiconductor stocks versus global semiconductor benchmark. A New Front In Tech War It is likely that the US will implement the ordered bans in some way. Banning TikTok wasn’t a surprise because the US had amply signaled its displeasure with the app in preceding months. The social media company has rapidly gained US market share and hence access to American users’ data. Its parent company ByteDance is based in Beijing and therefore subject to China’s cybersecurity laws, a major source of bilateral tensions. The company originated in a Chinese acquisition of an American company, another irritant for the Trump administration. The US is now pressuring TikTok’s US operations to sell the app to an American-based company such as Microsoft. Regarding Trump’s executive order on WeChat and Tencent, it is not clear what “transactions” with Tencent will be disallowed from the US market.2 Additionally, US officials later appeared to backpedal and limit the scope of the executive order on Tencent to only the WeChat app. We have a few preliminary observations on the evolving situation: It is unknown how far the executive action will go regarding Tencent. The Internet titan gets less than 5% of its revenues from outside China, according to its 2019 financial statement. However, Tencent has many prominent investments in the US gaming and music industries. The US Commerce Department has 45 days to interpret and enforce the directive. The vague language in the executive order provides the US with enough legal space to deprive Tencent of US technologies in those sectors, and would severely curtail Tencent’s online gaming business, which is its main engine of growth. The bans underscore the US administration’s intention to extend tech hostilities with China by denying Chinese tech companies the access to compete and expand globally. Last week, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced a five-pronged “Clean Network” initiative that would scrub Chinese companies from US telecommunications networks entirely.3 China, for its part, has been progressively banning US social media giants since 2009. China has not announced any retaliatory actions since the executive orders were issued. Top Chinese policymakers seem to have shifted gears from a tit-for-tat retaliation to a carefully calibrated diplomatic reaction that does not ramp up tensions further. Moreover, there is a sizeable contingent of top Chinese policymakers pushing for reconciliation with the US. We think that China’s senior leaders prefer to dial down the current conflict and take a wait-and-see approach until after the US presidential election in November. Nevertheless, the next two to three months will be unpredictable as the election nears and Trump’s polling numbers lag behind his rival Joe Biden. Bottom Line: China’s leading Internet and tech companies are embroiled in a US-China feud. Pressures will likely intensify with other tech companies potentially also targeted. For now, stay neutral on leading Chinese tech company stocks within a global equity portfolio. Stick With The Knowns Chinese tech company stock prices will likely be extremely volatile in the short run. Nevertheless, we are staying the course with our constructive cyclical view on overall Chinese stocks and we do not recommend any one-way bets on the market during the next two to three months. China’s financial markets have been shaken by negative surprises relating to frictions with the US. However, investors cheer on even the slightest easing of tensions between the two countries. Last Friday’s volatile trading was a good example: initial confusion over the ban’s scope in Trump’s order led to a more than 10% plunge in Tencent stock during morning trading in the Hong Kong market, but the losses were cut in half after the US indicated the ban only affected the WeChat app. Chart 2Chinese Tech Company Stocks Rallied Through Most Of The Trade War Economic policy support from the Chinese government and “national team” can also distort the short-term price trend in tech equities. These stocks have risen by more than 20% in both the onshore and offshore markets since the beginning of 2018, despite the deteriorating US-China relationship (Chart 2). While we are neutral on tech company stocks, we recommend overweight Chinese “old economy” stocks and remain constructive on domestic sectors that are beneficiaries of government policy support. We are initiating two trades: long MSCI China ex-TMT versus MSCI Global ex-TMT; and long domestic semiconductor stocks versus global semiconductor benchmark. The reflationary efforts since early this year facilitated a strong rebound in China’s industrial sector activities and profits (Chart 3). In turn, China’s ex-tech "old economy" stocks have outperformed relative to their global peers. Even though the handful of tech titans account for roughly 35% of the investable market capitalizations, MSCI China stock prices excluding tech titans have decisively broken out of their 200-day moving average, which suggests there is still sufficient support to our constructive view on the overall investable index (Chart 4). Chart 3Investors Have Been Focusing On China's Stimulus And Economic Recovery Chart 4Chinese "Old Economy" Stocks Have Prevailed Of Late Our cyclical overweight view on China’s domestic stocks also remains unchanged. The domestic market is much more sensitive to the trend in monetary conditions, credit growth and economic cycles than the investable market. As we pointed out in last week’s report,4 monetary conditions are accommodative and credit and economic growth remain in an uptrend. This underscores that China’s domestic stocks have more upside potential than investable stocks, even in an escalating geopolitical risk environment. Chart 5Chinese Semis Are On Fire Lastly, more pressure from the US and the West to curb the advancement of Chinese technology will only encourage the leadership to double down on supporting state-led technology programs. This argues for a more bullish view on Chinese tech companies that focus on the domestic market, at least on a cyclical basis (Chart 5). Last week the State Council updated its policy, supporting two strategically important sectors: integrated circuits and software. The central government has had policies in place to support these two sectors since 2000 and updates its support policies every decade or so. Last week's updated version will allow chip companies to enjoy even more tax exemptions and favorable financing than the first set of support policies. China has clearly stepped up its promotion of self-sufficiency and redoubled its efforts to thwart any pressures meant to restrain its technological progress. As pointed out by our Geopolitical Strategy team,5 the U.S. and its allies control 95% of the global semiconductor market (Chart 6). Nonetheless, China is the world’s largest importer, accounting for about one-third of global semiconductor sales, making it the largest consumer of semiconductors (Chart 7). Chart 6China’s Chip Makers Are Still Small Fry Chart 7China Accounts For 60% Of Global Semiconductor Demand Chart 8Made In China 2025 Targets In brief, China relies a lot on imported semiconductors and is working to mitigate this dangerous vulnerability. The Made in China 2025 program estimates that China will produce 70% of its demand for integrated circuits by 2030 (Chart 8). Bottom Line: China’s domestic industrial sector will continue to recover in the next 6 to 12 months. The nation’s semiconductor industry will get a boost from recently shored-up government policy supports. Overweight these sectors in the face of expanding tensions from the US tech war against China. Jing Sima China Strategist jings@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1TMT stocks include information technology prior to December 2018, and include media & entertainment and internet & direct marketing retail sectors after December 2018. 2Please see the orders: https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-addressing-threat-posed-tiktok/ and https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-addressing-threat-posed-wechat/ 3https://www.state.gov/announcing-the-expansion-of-the-clean-network-to-safeguard-americas-assets/ 4Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China Macro And Market Review," dated August 5, 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 5Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report "U.S.-China: The Tech War And Reform Agenda," dated December 12, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
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