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Highlights Duration: The global economic recovery is more synchronized than at any time since 2011. This suggests that foreign demand will be less of an impediment to the bond bear market and that Treasury yields will rise once U.S. data start to surprise on the upside. Stay at below-benchmark duration. MBS: Agency MBS option-adjusted spreads have widened significantly and no longer look expensive. With Treasury yields moving higher and mortgage refinancings likely to stay depressed, we advise upgrading MBS from underweight to neutral. Economy & Inflation: The U.S. economic data are starting to outperform beaten-down expectations. Survey data point to further GDP acceleration in the second half of this year and we expect inflation will soon follow growth higher. Feature Chart 12-Factor Treasury Model The relationship between the global breadth of economic growth, the value of the dollar and the outlook for Treasury yields has been a running theme in this publication.1 To summarize, stronger global growth pressures bond yields higher (and vice-versa). But how that growth is distributed across different countries matters as well. For example, if global growth is mostly concentrated in the U.S., then yield spreads will widen between the U.S. and the rest of the world and the dollar will appreciate as money pours in from overseas. Investors then respond to a stronger dollar by downgrading their U.S. growth and rate hike expectations. This caps the upside in long-dated U.S. Treasury yields. Conversely, if global growth is more evenly spread out throughout the world, then the dollar will come under less upward pressure when U.S. growth accelerates and Treasury yields can rise further. We developed a simple two-factor model to show how the trade-off between global growth and the exchange rate impacts the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 1). The model uses the Global Manufacturing PMI as its proxy for global growth and a survey of bullish sentiment toward the dollar as its proxy for growth synchronization. So far this year, the Global PMI has moved higher and sentiment toward the dollar has become less bullish. Both developments have bond-bearish implications and our model now pegs fair value for the 10-year Treasury yield at 2.65%, 28 bps above the current 10-year yield. In Sync The Global PMI came in at 53.2 in September, the same as in August, but still a strong reading compared to recent history (Chart 2). But the most stunning detail of the September PMI releases is that 33 out of the 36 countries we track had PMIs above the 50 boom/bust line. As a result, our Global PMI Diffusion Index hit 90% for only the second time since 2011 (Chart 2, panel 1). The elevated reading of our diffusion index leads us to two market related observations. First, stronger growth outside of the U.S. explains why the 10-year Treasury yield is only 8 bps lower than at the start of the year despite U.S. economic data that have severely undershot expectations (Chart 2, bottom panel). Second, it suggests that when U.S. economic data inevitably start to surprise on the upside - a process which is only now beginning (see Economy & Inflation section below) - the dollar will appreciate by less than it would have when our PMI diffusion index was near 50. This removes a huge impediment from the bond bear market. In Chart 3 we see that the recent peak in 7-10 year U.S. bond yields occurred at 2.54% on Dec 16th. On that same date the spread between 7-10 year U.S. bond yields and average 7-10 year yields in the rest of the world was 178 bps, and bullish sentiment toward the dollar was above 80%. With the global recovery now more synchronized than it was last year, we anticipate that by the time U.S. yields take out that prior peak, the yield spread and dollar bullish sentiment will still be lower than they were last December. This means that less foreign capital will be encouraged into the U.S. and yields will rise even further. Chart 2Broad Based Recovery Chart 3Spreads Less Of A Constraint Where Is Growth Coming From? Considering the major economic blocs, the biggest change during the past year has been the surging Eurozone PMI (Chart 4). The U.S. PMI is still firmly above the 50 boom/bust line but has actually moderated in 2017. The Japanese PMI is similarly entrenched above 50 and while the Chinese PMI was weak earlier this year, it has rebounded during the past four months. At roughly 20%, China carries the largest weight in the Global PMI. The outlook for the Chinese economy is therefore crucial for the path of bond yields. On that note, while the Chinese PMI has been strong in recent months, a couple of warning signs are beginning to flash (Chart 5). Chart 4Global Manufacturing PMIs Chart 5Chinese Monetary Conditions Commodity prices - which correlate strongly with Chinese PMI - have declined since early September, although they remain above levels seen last year and do not yet pose a major risk. What's more important is that monetary conditions are starting to tighten (Chart 5, panel 2). If tighter monetary conditions persist, then we should expect growth to slow. The mild tightening in monetary conditions that has already occurred will probably lead to some near-term moderation in Chinese growth. But our China Investment Strategy service thinks it's unlikely that monetary conditions will tighten enough to cause a meaningful slowdown.2 Our China strategists note that with GDP growth within the government's target range, inflation exceedingly low and signs that financial excesses have been reigned in, there should not be much appetite for draconian policy tightening. We would also add that the causes of this year's tightening in monetary conditions have been relatively benign. The monetary conditions index shown in Chart 5 has fallen because the trade-weighted RMB is no longer depreciating and because real interest rates have moved a tad higher. Crucially, the RMB has only stabilized, it is not appreciating in trade-weighted terms. Also, the nominal policy rate remains flat at a low level. The increase in real interest rates resulted purely from weaker consumer price inflation. Bottom Line: The global economic recovery is more synchronized than at any time since 2011. This suggests that foreign demand will be less of an impediment to the bond bear market and that Treasury yields will rise once U.S. data start to surprise on the upside. Stay at below-benchmark duration. Buy The News In MBS Last week we upgraded our allocation to Agency MBS from underweight to neutral, noting that spreads had become more attractive during the past few months. In all likelihood this is the result of the market pricing in the wind-down of the Fed's balance sheet.3 With the Fed's plans now well known (and unlikely to change), there is an opportunity to increase MBS exposure from a more attractive starting point. After having sold the rumor, we think it's time to buy the news. The Value Proposition Chart 6OAS Look Attractive To be clear, we are not forecasting stellar excess returns from Agency MBS. But with spreads compressed across the entire U.S. fixed income universe, we would note that the option-adjusted spread (OAS) differential between conventional 30-year Agency MBS and investment grade corporate bonds (in duration-matched terms) has risen back to levels last seen in 2014 (Chart 6). The lagged OAS differential is a decent predictor of relative returns between MBS and corporate credit, and at current levels it suggests that MBS could even outperform corporate bonds at some point during the next 12 months (Chart 6, panel 2). This year's decline in Treasury yields has also biased OAS differentials between MBS and corporate bonds wider. Because of negative convexity, MBS duration is positively correlated with yields (Chart 6, bottom panel). If yields rise from here, as we expect they will, then MBS duration will also extend. This means that MBS OAS will start to appear less and less attractive relative to duration-matched comparables. In other words, MBS are less likely to cheapen relative to other spread product in an environment of rising Treasury yields. The Drivers Of MBS Spreads A simplified formula for excess MBS returns, relative to duration-matched Treasuries, could be written as follows: Excess Return = Starting OAS - Duration*(Change in nominal spread) + 0.5*Convexity*(Change in yield) 2 That is, OAS is the correct measure of MBS carry because it adjusts for expected losses due to prepayments. However, it is the change in the nominal spread (not the OAS) that will determine capital gains and losses during the investment horizon. On that note, we observe that nominal MBS spreads have rarely been tighter during the past 30 years (Chart 7). However, it is also hard for us to see a catalyst for significantly wider nominal spreads during the next 6-12 months. The two factors that correlate most closely with nominal MBS spreads are credit spreads and mortgage refinancings. Chart 7Nominal MBS Spreads Are Driven By Credit Spreads And Refinancings On credit spreads, we have repeatedly outlined why they are unlikely to widen materially in the absence of more significant inflationary pressure.4 As for refis, we are also hard pressed to see much upside for three main reasons: First, changes in mortgage rates are the number one driver of refinancings (Chart 8). Refis only increase when mortgage rates fall, making the proposition of refinancing more attractive. As yields rise during the next 6-12 months, refis will stay low. Second, the distribution of outstanding mortgages across the coupon stack impacts how sensitive refis are to changes in rates. The second panel of Chart 8 shows our measure of "moneyness", aka the dispersion of outstanding mortgages around the current coupon rate.5 Given today's dispersion levels we can calculate that even if the current coupon mortgage rate falls back to its recent low of 2.24%, our measure of moneyness would not get back to its late-2016 peak. For our moneyness indicator to rise back to 2013 levels the current coupon mortgage rate would have to fall all the way to 1.68%. Needless to say, we would characterize that risk as low. Third, the final factor that can impact the pace of mortgage refinancing is the seasoning of outstanding mortgages. Typically, we think of mortgages between 30 and 60 months old as being the most likely to refinance. Given that net mortgage origination was close to zero between 30 and 60 months ago and that mortgage purchase applications were at multi-year lows (Chart 9), most of the outstanding mortgage universe probably falls outside of this zone. Chart 8Refis Will Stay Low Chart 9Most Mortgages Are Not Yet Seasoned Bottom Line: Agency MBS option-adjusted spreads have widened significantly and no longer look expensive. With Treasury yields moving higher and mortgage refinancings likely to stay depressed, we advise upgrading MBS from underweight to neutral. Economy & Inflation Bring On The Upside Surprises As was alluded to in the opening section of this report, after have disappointed expectations year-to-date, we are just now starting to see U.S. economic data surprise to the upside (see Chart 2). The most recent datapoints that caught our eye were the ISM manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs.6 Our inclination is to mostly ignore last Friday's employment report as an outlier due to the recent hurricanes.7 The ISM non-manufacturing survey jumped to 59.8 in September, its highest level since 2005. Taken together with other survey indicators that tend to track GDP growth - the BCA Beige Book Indicator and the BCA Composite New Orders Indicator - the case is quite strong for further GDP acceleration in the third and fourth quarters (Chart 10). Of course the pressing issue for bond markets is whether that growth acceleration translates into higher inflation. On that note, we would suggest that the weak inflation we have seen during the past six months was a reaction to the growth slowdown witnessed in 2015 and the first half of 2016. The stronger ISM manufacturing index, in particular, sends a powerful signal that inflation is poised to put in a bottom (Chart 11). Chart 10Survey Indicators Of U.S. Growth Chart 11Inflation Lags Growth Bottom Line: The U.S. economic data are starting to outperform beaten-down expectations. Survey data point to further GDP acceleration in the second half of this year and we expect inflation will soon follow growth higher. Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Dollar Watching: Another Update", dated January 31, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "On A Higher Note", dated October 5, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, "Return Of The Trump Trade", dated October 3, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Won't Back Down", dated September 26, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 For each coupon bucket in the Bloomberg Barclays Conventional 30-year Agency MBS index we calculate the squared deviation between its coupon and the current coupon rate. We then weight those squared differences by the market capitalization of each coupon bucket. 6 These are different than the Markit PMI that is included in our 2-factor Treasury model. 7 Please see BCA Daily Insights, "U.S. Jobs Report: All Noise, No Signal", dated October 6, 2017, available at din.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights It's ok to ignore the September jobs report. Is the small cap comeback sustainable? Assessing the threat to the consumer from higher rates and oil prices. The ISM is over 60, now what? Feature Risk assets outperformed again last week, as the S&P 500, the dollar, and the 10 year- Treasury yield all moved higher. Oil was an exception, as WTI dipped back below $50 per barrel, but BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects WTI to end the year over $55/bbl. Small-cap stocks outperformed as well and conditions are in place for the rise in small caps to continue. The rise in risk assets in recent weeks occurred alongside a marked improvement in the Citi Economic Surprise Index (Chart 1), which moved into positive territory last week for the first time since April, despite the impacts of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Chart 1S&P And 10 Year Treasury Yield Tracks Economic Surprise The lack of impact from the hurricanes on the economic data is surprising. Before Hurricane Harvey made landfall, the Atlanta Fed GDP Now reading for Q3 was 3.4%, but moved as low as 2.1% in late September as the August economic data was reported. The most recent Atlanta Fed forecast pegged Q3 GDP at 2.5%. The 60+ readings on September's manufacturing ISM composite and 70+ reading on prices were notably strong, as was the 18.6 million reading on September vehicle sales, the strongest in 12 years. That said, the impact of the storms was evident in the employment data released last week (See below). U.S. Jobs Report: All Noise, No Signal U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell 33,000 in September, which was entirely due to the hurricanes. According to the BLS, 1.47 million workers could not show up for their jobs due to the weather. Because this data series is not seasonally adjusted, one cannot simply add it back to the headline payrolls number. Unfortunately, the separate household survey does not help to shed any better light on the state of the labor market. The household survey is known to be much more volatile than the establishment survey. This was quite apparent with the 906,000 surge in jobs, which followed a 74,000 decline in the previous month. The outsized and unbelievable surge in household employment was the main reason for the decline in the jobless rate to 4.2% from 4.4%. The labor force actually grew by a hefty 575,000 and the participation rate rose to 63.1%, the highest since March 2014 (Chart 2). The 0.5% m/m gain in average hourly earnings needs to be discounted as well. Employment in the low-paying leisure and hospitality sector fell by 111,000 in September, helping to boost the aggregate average hourly wage. As these workers return to their jobs, average hourly wages will correct lower. Bottom Line: Investors should ignore the September jobs report. The 3-month average of payrolls growth from June to August was 172K. This is probably the best gauge of underlying jobs growth and this pace is above the trend growth in the labor force. To the extent that the Fed believes the tightening labor market will push inflation to its 2% target, the calculus for the December FOMC should not change after today's report. Small Caps Make A Comeback Rising prospects for tax cuts have lifted the Trump trades, including small-cap equities. We first initiated an overweight to small caps on November 14, 20161 (Chart 3). Since then, small caps have underperformed large by 162 bps, but not uniformly. The trade was successful from the start through to late January, but faded by late summer along with the prospects for Trump's tax cuts. Starting in mid-August, small cap made a comeback as odds of the tax cut troughed. Chart 2The September Jobs Report Is More Noise Than Signal Chart 3The Trump Trades Are Back On Several factors support our overweight view. According to BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy service S&P 600 valuation indicator, small caps are even more undervalued today than when we last discussed them in June2 (Chart 4). Moreover, the Cyclical Capitalization Indicator (CCI) moved sharply into positive territory following the U.S. election despite a modest dip in subsequent months (Chart 5). In addition, small cap stocks have been a reliably high-beta segment of U.S. capital markets since the middle of the last economic cycle (Chart 5, panel 2). That characteristic of small caps argues for a bullish stance given our upbeat view on growth and our overweight positions in U.S. equities versus bonds. BCA's outlook for regulation, inflation, the dollar, the Fed and the consumer also favor small over large caps. Trump has already made significant progress in slowing the pace of new regulations,3 which has long been a concern for small businesses. We expect inflation to move back to 2% in the coming quarters and then begin to climb higher in 2018. Chart 6 shows that small caps often thrive when inflation accelerates. BCA's outlook is that the dollar will see modest appreciation over the next 12 months. Small-cap stocks are less sensitive to dollar movements than large caps. Gradually rising rates will not impede small caps and credit conditions remain favorable. Finally, small caps are more closely linked to the consumer than the S&P 500, and BCA's view on household spending remains upbeat. Chart 4Small Caps Are Cheap, But Not Historically Cheap Chart 5Our CCI Supports Small Caps Chart 6Accelerating Inflation Usually Supports Small Caps Despite the upbeat prospects for small caps, some risks linger. Tighter credit conditions for consumers and businesses, an abrupt pullback in housing that would trigger a consumer retrenchment, persistent weakness in the dollar, and a "risk off" environment would see small caps underperform large caps. Bottom Line: It is too early to abandon our bullish bias toward small caps. Conditions remain in place for small caps to outpace large caps. Favorable valuation and encouraging prospects for Trump's pro-small business platform are key to BCA's view, as our favorable outlook for the U.S. consumer. Will Higher Rates And Oil Prices Crush The Consumer? Supports remain in place for continued strength in U.S. consumer spending despite rising interest rates and oil prices. That support was confirmed by September's reports on employment and vehicle sales, and August's personal income and spending data, all released in the past two weeks. However, investors should be aware of hurricane-related distortions in the August and September figures.4 Moreover, BCA's position is reinforced by elevated readings on consumer confidence and booming household net worth statistics, and record high FICO scores (Chart 7). The conditions that crushed the consumer ahead of the 2007-2008 recession are not in place and will not be for some time. Chart 8 shows that at 41%, household purchases of essentials as a percentage of disposable income are near an all-time low and have dropped by 1.3 percentage points since 2012. In contrast, spending on necessities rose by a record 3.5% in the five years ending in 2008, matching the bruising impact of higher rates, surging inflation and soaring oil prices seen by the end of 1980. Wrenching consumer-driven economic downturns ensued after both episodes. We see gradual increases ahead for both oil prices and interest rates, but nothing that would trigger the collapse of the consumer.5 Furthermore, BCA forecasts only a modest rise in inflation and an acceleration in wage growth; both will provide a boost to disposable income. Personal tax cuts as part of the plan Trump proposed last month would also enhance incomes. Chart 7Plenty Of Support For The Consumer Chart 8Consumer In Good Shape Despite Rise In Oil, Rates BCA's research shows that sustainable capital spending cycles get underway only when businesses see evidence that consumer final demand is on the upswing. The latest reading on the manufacturing ISM composite and the 60+ readings on the new orders component of ISM since February suggest that managements are starting to note the robust pace of consumer spending. Signals From Elevated ISM Readings September's numbers on the ISM manufacturing index support BCA's case for accelerating corporate profits in the coming quarters. The ISM is a good proxy for industrial production, which in turn tracks S&P 500 sales. The recent strong data on ISM suggests that IP should pick up in the next six months (Chart 9). A rollover in the 12-month change in IP would challenge our constructive stance on earnings. While a decline is possible given that the index is already lofty, the leading components of the ISM, including the new orders index and the new orders-to-inventory ratio, indicate that the ISM will remain above 50 in the months ahead (Chart 10). Chart 9Favorable Macro Backdrop For Earnings And Sales Chart 10ISM Components Suggest IP Poised To Accelerate Some investors question how long the composite and new orders indices will remain beyond 60 and what that will mean for risk assets. Additionally, the second 70+ reading on the ISM Prices index this year challenges the notion that inflation is dormant. Other investors are concerned about what will happen after these ISM components are so elevated. Others may fear that the index will soon fall below 50. We analyze the historical periods when the ISM and its sub-indexes were above the 60 threshold, and then what happens to the returns of risk assets 12 months after they fall below the 60 threshold (Chart 11A, Chart 11B and Chart 11C). Chart 11AComposite ISM And Risk Assets Chart 11BISM New Orders And Risk Assets Chart 11CISM Prices And Risk Assets Historically, the relative performance of large cap equities to Treasuries is typically poor when the ISM Manufacturing Composite Index is over 60, but investment-grade credit outperforms and both gold and oil usually gain. The performance of these assets is similar even excluding the period around the 1973 OPEC oil embargo and the 1987 stock market crash (Chart 11A and Appendix Table 1). The ISM Manufacturing Composite Index ticked up to 60.8 in September, the first 60+ reading since 2004. The indicator also reached 60 three times in the 1970s and twice in the 1980s, and it stayed above 60 on average for 8 months. The last time it breached 60, it remained at that level for 6 months (December 2003 through June 2004). That interval, along with most of the others, was accompanied by tightening monetary policy and accelerating inflation late in the latter half of economic cycles. Gold and oil perform strongly in the 12 months after ISM Composite Index goes below 60, large-cap equities barely do better than Treasuries, while investment-grade credit underperforms. Surprisingly, high-yield bonds and small-cap stocks outperform 12 months after the ISM falls back below 60, although the sample size is limited. In 1974-1975, the economy was in recession. In all but one other instance (the mid- 1980s), the economy was in a late stage of the cycle, nearing full employment and inflation was on the rise. Risk assets also are strong performers when the New Orders component of the ISM exceeds the 60 threshold (Chart 11B and Appendix Table 2). Moreover, the episodes are more numerous (14 since 1971 versus only 6 for the composite) but, on average, they persist as long as the signal from the ISM Composite. New Orders have been above 60 since February 2017 (7 months), just shy of the 46-year average (8 months). Large cap equities and credit (both investment-grade and high-yield) have outperformed Treasuries, and gold has climbed since February. This performance matches the historical pattern when the New Orders index exceeds 60. In the past 8 months, the underperformance of small caps and the drop in oil prices in that span runs counter to history. The performance of risk assets in the year after the new orders index moves below 60 is mixed, at best. In these periods, while the S&P 500 outperforms Treasuries on average, and small caps outperform large caps, credit underperforms. The big winners when the New Orders index is falling from over 60 are gold (average 14% gain) and oil (22%). Chart 11C and Appendix Table 3 shows the performance of risk assets when the ISM Prices index is greater than 70 and then 12 months after the index crosses below 70. Gold and oil are standouts in the first case, and small cap tends to outperform large. Note that 3 of these 11 episodes coincided with recessions (early 1970s, 1980 and 2008) and 1 occurred during the 1987 stock market crash. Small-cap equities continue to outperform as the Prices index fades, and returns on gold and oil are muted. High-yield bonds underperform Treasuries when the ISM Prices index dips back below 70, and the total return on investment-grade corporate struggles, but it beats Treasuries. Moreover, 3 of these 11 occurred during recessions (early 1980s, 2001, 2008-2009). Separately, there has been a tight relationship between the 12-month change in the 10-year Treasury yield and both the overall ISM, the New Orders and Prices component of the ISM in the past 25 years (Chart 12). Nonetheless, the relationship between the ISM Prices component and the 10-year Treasury has broken down since oil prices peaked in 2014. The 12-month jump in ISM Prices surge in 2016 was met with a decline in Treasury yields. Prior to that, a rise in Prices index was almost always accompanied by a move higher in bond yields. BCA's view is that the ISM manufacturing Composite will remain elevated (although not necessarily more than 60 in the months ahead), supporting our bullish stance on corporate sales and earnings. However, if we are wrong and the ISM dips below 60 and then down to 50, would that signal a downturn and concomitant selloff in risk assets? The ISM has a mixed track record as a leading indicator of recessions (Chart 13). Since 1948, the ISM has provided 9 false signals, using 3 consecutive months below 50 as the indication of an economic decline. Furthermore, 5 of the 9 examples occurred since 1985, as the U.S. economy became less reliant on manufacturing. In the 6 instances that the ISM warned of contractions, the average lead time was 4 months. In the 4 other economic slumps, the ISM moved and stayed below 50 for 3 consecutive months only after the start of recession. The lag averaged 4 months. This was the case in the 2007-2009 episode when the ISM did not send a recession signal until May 2008, 5 months after the official start of the downturn. Chart 1210 Year Treasury Vs. ISM Chart 13The Rocky Relationship Between ISM And Recessions Bottom Line: Elevated readings on ISM support BCA's view that profit growth will accelerate for a few more quarters while the recent rise in the ISM Prices index confirms the move higher in Treasury yields. Stay overweight stocks versus bonds and underweight duration. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Easier Fiscal, Tighter Money?," November 14, 2016. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Waiting For The Turn," June 26, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Still Waiting for Inflation, "August 14, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Shelter From the Storm," September 5, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "Global Debt Titanic Collides With Fed Iceberg?," February 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Appendix: Table 1 Table 2 Table 3
Highlights Slowing global money growth, export orders, and a downgrade in earnings revisions of cyclical relative to defensive equities points to a mild slowdown in non-U.S. growth. This slowdown is not worrisome, but could become so if the U.S. dollar rallies significantly. This risk should be kept in mind by investors. Short AUD/USD at 0.79 ¢. EUR/USD is trading at a premium and is over-owned. Conditions are emerging for investors to upgrade their view of the Fed relative to the ECB. EUR/USD has downside risk. Feature Chart I-1Global Growth Is Booming The world economy is on a roll. Nearly all of the world's PMI indexes are in expansionary territory, suggesting we are experiencing a rare global synchronized expansion. A key bellwether of global trade, Korean exports, are surging at a 35% annual rate, confirming that the global economy is very strong (Chart I-1). When all looks great, it is the ideal time to wonder what could go wrong. At this point, the greatest risk to this global expansion may be the dollar. A strengthening dollar would tighten global financial conditions, especially for EM borrowers, and exacerbate the impact of yellow flags that have already emerged. Yellow Flags Investors are in an ebullient mood these days, and for good reason: global growth is strong, and global policy is still very accommodative, even if some central banks have begun removing support for their economies. However, three yellow flags have emerged that in our view warrant some caution. To be clear, these are not grave signs and we do not foresee either a U.S. or a global recession until late 2019 at the earliest. With this in mind, what are the worrying signs that investors should monitor right now? The first yellow flag comes from global money supply growth. Narrow money has decelerated from a 12% annual growth rate to 9% today. Historically, this has been a leading indicator of global industrial production, global export growth and commodity prices (Chart I-2). While the surge in money growth in 2016 and 2017 was a key reason behind the rebound in global economic activity, especially outside the U.S., its recent slowdown points to an end of the economic upswing, though admittedly not toward a cataclysm. The second yellow flag comes from the U.S. ISM release. While the general tone of the report remains extremely positive, the export component has been in a downtrend since June. The key determinant of export growth for any country tends to be the vigor of its trading partners. Hence, it is not surprising that softness in the export component of the U.S. ISM manufacturing survey tends to be associated with weakening global trade and industrial activity (Chart I-3). The third yellow flag comes from earnings revisions. The earnings revision ratios of cyclical relative to defensive equities in the U.S. and globally have sharply rolled over. While still in positive territory, this development has historically been an early signal that improvements in global growth metrics are ebbing, a signal being flashed today (Chart I-4). Chart I-2Money And Global Growth: ##br##From Tailwind To Headwind Chart I-3A Blemish In An Otherwise##br## Bright Picture Chart I-4EPS Revisions: Cyclicals Have Turned ##br##Vis-A-Vis Defensives Bottom Line: The global economy is experiencing a synchronized upswing, which has left investors in an ebullient mood. However, slowing global money growth, ebbing export sentiment and weakening earnings revisions for cyclical relative to defensive equities suggest this broad-based upswing has reached its zenith. While a mild deceleration is likely to materialize soon, these indicators constitute yellow flags, not red ones. Conditions are still not in place to expect a major global growth slowdown. The Dollar Holds The Key While the factors above point to a mild slowdown, they do not yet indicate a dearth of growth that could prompt panic among investors, especially in the EM space. For this scenario to become reality, another ingredient is needed. In our view, this ingredient is a strong dollar. To begin with, the relationship between global growth and the dollar is well known in the investor community. When global growth is strong and broad-based, the dollar depreciates; when global growth is weak, the dollar appreciates (Chart I-5). The U.S. is a relatively closed economy, and is less exposed to global growth developments than the euro area, Japan or commodities producers (Chart I-6). Thus, when the global economy is in an upswing, the U.S. garners a smaller dividend than the rest of the world. Conversely, when the global economy hits a soft patch, the U.S. suffers less. Chart I-5Strong Global Growth Coincident ##br##With A Weak Dollar Chart I-6The U.S. Is Less Exposed ##br##To Global Growth Factors But the chain of causation is not only from growth to the dollar. The trend in the dollar also affects the trend in global growth. This is because in aggregate, the world remains short the dollar. According to the BIS, there is $27 trillion dollars of foreign-currency liabilities in the world, $14 trillion of which is denominated in U.S. dollars, with an extremely large proportion issued by EM borrowers. When the dollar weakens, the cost of borrowing among companies and banks that finance themselves in USD decreases, incentivizing further borrowing. This eases global liquidity conditions and decreases the cost of financing global trade, leading to increased economic activity and profits as well as expanding global capex. Meanwhile, when the dollar rises, the balance sheet of those foreign firms and governments that have borrowed in U.S. dollars becomes increasingly illiquid, resulting in strong headwinds for additional borrowing, curtailing economic activity, profits and capex. This explains why the dollar and commodities prices, the latter being extremely sensitive to growth and global capex, have displayed such a strong negative relationship over different time periods (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Rising USD Equals Declining Liquidity And Declining Commodity Prices Thanks to these dynamics, the weakness in the dollar this year has been a major boost to growth for the global economy. As Chart I-8 illustrates, the large easing in EM financial conditions was indeed related to the U.S. dollar's weakness. Therefore, as growth momentum could be peaking, a period of renewed strength in the greenback might inflict further damage to a key buttress of EM growth. Moreover, this time around, Chinese policymakers are unlikely to come to the rescue of the global economy as they did in 2015 and 2016. Back then, China was experiencing a deflationary spiral: producer prices were contracting at a 6% annual pace, profits were in free fall and outflows were growing exponentially. The People's bank of China and the central government pulled all the stops, increasing lending and fiscal expenditures and tightening capital controls. Monetary conditions eased massively (Chart I-9). Chart I-8The Falling Dollar Supported Global Growth Chart I-9Tightening Chinese Monetary Conditions Last weekend, the PBoC announced targeted cuts to reserve requirement ratios for banks extending lending to small companies. According to our China Investment Strategy sister publication, this is not a major easing.1 Instead, these are targeted measures aimed at helping small firms that are currently dependent on the predatory lending rates available in the shadow banking sector. Meanwhile, access to credit by large state-owned enterprises and the real estate sector will continue to be slowly curtailed. The mutation of deflation into inflation and the recovery of profit growth imply that China does not currently need the same shot to the arm that it did in 2015 and 2016. Thus, it is unlikely the country will initiate another round of massive credit easing that will boost investment by SOEs and the construction sector, the two main sources of capex and commodities demand. In an environment where global money growth has rolled over and where China is unlikely to press on the gas pedal as hard as it did two years ago, a strong dollar would thus have a nefarious impact on global financial conditions, global growth, and, in turn, EM currencies and commodities currencies. While we remain very negative on the yen for now, the Japanese currency could benefit from a meaningful slowdown in international growth, as such a slowdown would likely exert downward pressure on global bond yields, including in the U.S. Obviously, the rally in the USD will have to be much more pronounced than what has been experienced in the past month before its negative impact on growth begins to be felt in bond yields and the yen. Thus, we remain long USD/JPY for now. The AUD could prove to be a key victim of the developments highlighted above. The AUD is highly levered to global growth and EM financial conditions. Moreover, it is now very expensive on a long-term basis, having overshot terms of trade by a very significant margin (Chart I-10). Adding to the vulnerability in the Aussie, the Australian economy has been incapable of generating any inflationary pressures. The output gap remains very deep, the level of underemployment is still at a 37-year high, and wages continue to hover near record lows, limiting the capacity of the Reserve Bank of Australia to tilt to a hawkish stance (Chart I-11). Yet, investors expect rates to be 42 basis points higher 12 months from now. Finally, speculators are currently very long the AUD. Thus, we will use any rebound above 0.79 to short the AUD/USD, setting a limit-sell at this level with a target at 0.73. Chart I-10The AUD Is Vulnerable Chart I-11Litle Inflationary Pressures In Australia Bottom Line: While the three yellow flags highlighted do not represent a terminal danger to global growth, a stronger dollar at the hands of tightening global financial conditions, especially in EM economies, would be a much bigger threat to the global economy. We do anticipate the dollar to strengthen over the coming 12 months, but it will take a significant move before the USD puts enough of a brake on global growth to hurt global yields. We therefore remain positive on the USD/JPY. However, with this risk lurking in the background, we are implementing a short position on the AUD, a currency that is both expensive and over-owned, and underpinned by an economy full of slack. An Update On EUR/USD We continue to expect some downside to EUR/USD over the remainder of the year. As we have already highlighted, the euro has greatly overshot its implied interest rate parity (IRP) relationships. Our intermediate-term time model - an enhanced IRP model accounting for short- and long-term real rate differentials, global risk aversion, commodities prices and the trend in the pair - shows that EUR/USD remains near its largest premium to fair value since 2009. Confirming this assessment, the euro has also overshot its equilibrium implied by the level of interest rates five years out (Chart I-12). Valuations offer some insight on the potential size of the euro move, but they offer very little information in terms of timing. Instead, we should rely on technical and macro considerations. On this front, we have already highlighted that speculators are currently net long the euro by the largest margin since 2011. Philosophically, we often look at the euro as the anti-dollar, a highly liquid inverse bet on the dollar. Since EUR/USD constitutes 57.6% of the DXY, a short bet on this dollar index and a long bet on the euro are similar wagers. Currently, the sum of both bets is at a level normally followed by sharp drops in EUR/USD, suggesting that euro buying is hitting exhaustion levels (Chart 13). Meanwhile, with investors having very few short bets on the euro, especially when compared to the large stock of short bets on the DXY, a short squeeze in favor of the USD could emerge if European data disappoints relative to the U.S. (Chart I-13, bottom panel). Chart I-12Downside In EUR/USD Chart I-13Tactical Risk To EUR/USD On the macro front, a few developments have caught our eye. We are entering the window where based on historical lags, the euro area's industrial production is likely to start feeling the pain of the common currency's previous strength (Chart I-14). Compounding this worry for euro longs, euro area earnings revisions are lagging those in the U.S. by the greatest margin since 2014, suggesting the euro's strength has sapped some of the euro area's vigor and is in the process of redistributing it to the U.S. economy. Historically, this has led to a period of weakness in EUR/USD (Chart I-15). Chart I-14The Strong Euro ##br##Will Soon Be Felt Chart I-15Falling Relative EPS Revisions ##br##Equals A Weaker EUR/USD Confirming this insight are relative financial conditions. Euro area financial conditions have been tightening relative to the U.S. since the beginning of 2016 - a move that has become especially pronounced this year. The euro area's inflation outperformance vis-à-vis the U.S. this year was first and foremost a reflection of the previous easing in relative European financial conditions (Chart I-16). Thanks to these strong relative inflation dynamics, investors have brought forward the first rate hike expected from the ECB, while simultaneously removing interest rate hikes out of the U.S. OIS curve. This move has been wildly euro bullish. However, the window of opportunity for this bet is closing; the tightening in European financial conditions now points to a reversal in relative inflation, with U.S. prices set to now take the lead over the euro area. This could force a repricing of the Fed relative to the ECB, implying that monetary divergences could once again play against EUR/USD. Catalonia is not a reason to be bearish on the euro. Marko Papic, BCA's Chief Political Strategist, argues that the northeastern region is unlikely to leave Spain.2 The vast majority of Catalonia still favors remaining part of Spain (Chart I-17). Moreover, the region has received immigrants from the rest of the country for many decades, reflecting its superior economic performance. As a result, only 31% of the population speaks Catalan as a first language. In aggregate, the independentists' victory last weekend only reflects a low turnout rate, as individuals who opposed leaving Spain stayed at home, like they did in 2014. Chart I-16The Fed Will Be Repriced ##br##Against The ECB Chart I-17Will Of The People: ##br##Catalonia Will Stay In Spain Bottom Line: The euro will exhibit downside risk in the coming months. EUR/USD is trading well above its fair value implied by its IRP relationship. Additionally, euro buying has hit nosebleed levels, and the dollar is unloved. Moreover, the euro's recent strength could begin to negatively affect growth, especially as European earnings revisions have collapsed versus the U.S. Finally, financial conditions point to a fall in euro area inflation relative to the U.S., highlighting the risk that the policy path for the Fed could be upgraded against that of the ECB. Mathieu Savary, Vice President Foreign Exchange Strategy mathieu@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, titled "On A Higher Note", dated October 5, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, titled "Is King Dollar Back?", dated October 4, 2017, and Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, titled "The Geopolitical Risks For The Equity Bull Market", dated May 14, 2014 at gps.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 U.S data has been strong this week: Markit and ISM Manufacturing PMIs beat expectations at 53.1 and 60.8 respectively; ISM Prices Paid rose sharply to 71.5 from 64.0; Markit Services and ISM Non-Manufacturing PMIs also beat expectations at 55.3 and 59.8 respectively; ADP employment change and continuing and initial jobless claims also came out better than expected; The DXY has rebounded meaningfully after a string of stronger data and growing hopes on the fiscal policy front recently. Bond markets have picked up on these developments, with the 10-year yield rising 30 basis points from its bottom last month. However, stronger U.S. inflation is needed in order for the greenback to meaningfully rally. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 European data has been mixed: The latest headline and core inflation readings for the euro area were weaker than expected, at 1.5% and 1.1% respectively; German retail sales also underperformed expectations, however, German unemployment rate decreased; Euro area manufacturing PMI also underperformed, while the services PMI outperformed; Euro area producer prices beat expectations, coming in at 2.5%. With U.S. data outperforming, the euro has softened versus the greenback, but has not displayed similar movements against other currencies. While it is true that European inflation is higher than a year ago, it is still not near the ECB's target. A stronger euro would further restrict inflationary pressures, which would be a cause for concern for ECB officials. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 Japanese data has been mixed the past weeks: The jobs/applicants ratio came in at 1.52, underperforming expectations and decreasing from the previous month. Additionally, retail trade and overall housing spending yearly growth both disappointed, coming in at 1.7% and 0.6% respectively. However, on the bright side, Nikkei Manufacturing PMI outperformed expectations, coming in at 52.9. Overall, we continue to be bullish on USD/JPY, as yields in the U.S. will continue to rise vis-à-vis Japanese ones. Economic data has been tepid, and wages continue to contract or remain flat, even if some underlying pressures are slowly emerging. Furthermore we expect that the BoJ will continues its extreme measures of yield curve targeting in order to spur inflation expectations. Nevertheless, the yen could appreciate against carry currencies like the AUD or NZD if Chinese monetary conditions become tight enough. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. has been mixed: Markit services PMI outperformed expectations coming in at 53.6, and increasing from last month's reading However, Markit manufacturing PMI came in under expectations at 55.9, and decreased from last month. Moreover Construction PMI unperformed, coming in at 48.1, the lowest level since July 2016. We would lean against any further strength of the pound against the U.S. dollar. The risks associated with Brexit still looms in the background, while data has been mixed, particularly when it comes to consumption and the housing market. Additionally, the market has already fully priced a rate hike by December. Thus, it seems that any good news for the pound are already in the price, as the BoE certainly has little incentives to follow a hawkish policy beyond removing its post-Brexit emergency measures. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 Australian data was mixed: AiG Performance of Manufacturing Index decreased to 54.2 from 59.8; TD Securities Inflation came in at 2.5%, down from 2.6%; HIA New Home Sales increased by 9.1% MoM in August, up from the 15.4% contraction in July; Building permits are still contracting 15.5% annually, but better than the expected 16.2% contraction. This week, the RBA decided to leave rates unchanged at 1.5%. The monetary policy statement focused on the lack of wage pressures in the Australian economy and on the higher exchange rate, which is "expected to contribute to continued subdued price pressures in the economy", as well as "weighing on the outlook for output and employment", stating further that "an appreciating exchange rate would be expected to result in a slower pick-up in economic activity and inflation than currently forecast." Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 Last week the RBNZ decided to leave rates unchanged at 1.75%. The RBNZ continued with its dovish slant, arguing that monetary policy will remain accommodative for a considerable period. An important development, however, is that the central bank toned down its cautious tone about the kiwi. In previous instances, the RBNZ had been very aggressive in stating that the NZD was too expensive and an adjustment was needed. However, in its most recent statement the RBNZ was much less aggressive in its rhetoric, highlighting the fall in the NZD. Overall, we believe that the NZD will continue to have upside against the AUD, as domestic inflationary pressures are much stronger in New Zealand than in Australia. Meanwhile, global developments, such as a downturn in the Chinese industrial cycle would affect Australia much more than New Zealand. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Bad Breadth - July 7, 2017 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 Canadian data was mixed: Industrial product price grew at a 0.3% monthly pace, less than the expected 0.5%; Raw materials increased by 1%, above the expected 0.3%; GDP stagnated in July on a monthly basis, below the expected 0.1% growth; Merchandise trade slipped even further into a deficit from CAD 2.6 bn to CAD 3.41 bn. Furthermore, Governor Poloz's September 27 speech sent the CAD tumbling, stating that "monetary policy will be particularly data dependent" and that it could be "surprised in either direction". Probability of a hike in October and December declined from 48% to 23%, and 75% to 63%, respectively. While growth is robust, inflation has been declining since January, which may be a cautious sign for the BoC. Report Links: Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Investors - September 29, 2017 Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 Data in Switzerland has outperformed to the upside: The KOF Leading Indicator outperformed expectations, coming in at 105.8 and increasing from last month's reading. The SVME Purchasing Manager's Index also outperformed, coming in at 61.7 Finally, headline inflation also outperformed expectations, with a reading of 0.7%, increasing from 0.5% on August. This recent strength in the Swiss economy is most likely reflective of the sharp appreciation that EUR/CHF has experienced in recent months. However, despite the increase in inflation, the Swiss economy is still too weak for the SNB to stop intervening in the foreign exchange market or to remove their ultra-dovish monetary measures. Once we see both headline and core inflation climb closer to their historical averages, we will reassess this view. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 Data in Norway has been mixed: Register unemployment came in line with expectations at 2.5%, decreasing from last month's 2.7% reading. However the credit growth issued by national institutions in Norway, decreased since last month, coming in at 5.6%. Finally, both retail sales and real retail sales yearly growth came below expectations, coming in at -0.6% and 0.2% respectively. These few data points are interesting given that both retail and real retail sales growth dipped into contractionary territory. This shows that the Norwegian economy is still too weak to sustain a higher krone and higher rates. For this reason we continue to be bullish on USD/NOK. This cross is more correlated with rate differentials than with oil. Thus even if oil continues to rise, rising rates in the U.S. will still put upward pressure on USD/NOK. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 10 Charts For A Late-August Day - August 25, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 The 11-year ruling governor of the world's oldest central bank, Stefan Ingves, will now sit at the helm of the Riksbank for five more years, until 31 December 2022. While Sweden's economy is still performing above par with CPIF at 2.3%, our bullish case for the SEK is under threat by the extension of the governor's term, who introduced negative interest rates to Sweden and who is consistently vigilant over the SEK's appreciation, even threatening intervention if needed. EUR/SEK appreciated 0.6% on the news, but has since given up some those gains as economic data in Sweden rebounded sharply. The Riksbank will still likely hike, but the timing is now in question. It is likely that the tightening cycle will now coincide with the ECB's tapering program, which will limit the SEK's appreciation for now. Report Links: Updating Our Long-Term Fair Value Models - September 15, 2017 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - August 4, 2017 Who Hikes Next? - June 30, 2017 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Closed Trades
Special Report Highlights China's growth momentum is unlikely to continue to accelerate, but the downside risk is low. Some more recent developments suggest economic momentum remains fairly robust. The heated debate on a "soft or hard landing" in recent years has disproportionally diverted investors' attention to China's cyclical growth fluctuations, while some larger picture changes have gone unnoticed. The Chinese economy will undoubtedly continue to experience cyclical swings; it is equally important to keep in mind some mega trends that hold the potential to reshape the world in profound ways. Feature The Chinese economy has likely ended the third quarter on a slightly higher note, according to "nowcast" types of models using high-frequency data (Chart 1). The latest PMI surveys, focusing on both the manufacturing and service sectors, accelerated in September from the prior month, and remain comfortably in expansionary territory, heralding positive surprises in the macro numbers to be released in the coming weeks. China's mini-cycle acceleration since early last year has been fairly modest by historical standards, but it has been a key component driving synchronized improvement in global growth. Moreover, the resilience of the Chinese economy has led to a quick repricing of risk assets that were deeply depressed in previous years due to China "hard landing" concerns. Stock prices of both Chinese investable equities and the emerging market benchmark have rallied massively since the 2016 bottom. Total returns of Chinese equities and EM stocks, price appreciation and dividend payments combined, have both broken out to all-time highs (Chart 2). Chart 1Chinese Q3 GDP Should Have Remained Strong Chart 2Breakout In China And EM Equities Looking forward, Chinese growth momentum is unlikely to continue to accelerate, but the downside risk remains low in the near term, as we have argued in recent months. In fact, some more recent developments suggest economic momentum remains fairly robust. More importantly, the heated debates among investors and analysts in recent years on China's macro stability have disguised some dramatic changes in the Chinese economy, which will have a profound and long-lasting impact on the global economy and financial markets from a big-picture standpoint. Given China's rising economic significance, getting China right will become all the more important for investors going forward. Near-Term Growth Outlook Remains Solid The Chinese economy will likely continue to surprise to the upside in the coming months. First, there is little risk of aggressive policy tightening that would prematurely choke off the economy, as economic growth is within the government's target, consumer price inflation is exceedingly low and financial excesses have been reined in.1 The latest decision of the People's Bank of China (PBoC) to lower reserve requirement ratios (RRR) for banks offering loans to small-sized enterprises should not be confused as a broad attempt to boost credit and growth. The move certainly reflects the authorities' preference for offering credit to smaller private borrowers, but it also reflects the PBoC's continued fine-tuning of its liquidity management.2 The PBoC has significantly ramped up direct lending to banks since 2015 to offset the liquidity drainage from capital outflows from the country's financial sector - the pace of PBoC direct lending has slowed since early this year (Chart 3, top panel). This means that the central bank will need to resort to other tools to manage interbank liquidity should stress increase - releasing required reserves being one of them. Taken together, the PBoC's liquidity injection has almost precisely matched the liquidity withdrawal due to capital outflows, as can be seen in the bottom panel of Chart 3. The key point here is that the PBoC's latest decision is not to encourage a lending spree, but it certainly does not indicate intentions of aggressive tightening. Second, some view China's lukewarm industrial activity as a sign of weak growth momentum, and argue for a pending relapse. In fact, some sectors have been under strict government scrutiny to cut capacity and production in recent years - a key reason behind the exceptional weakness in these industries despite massive improvement in their sales, pricing power and profits. In other words, these sectors have not been responding to market signals due to government restrictions of "supply side reforms" to cut excess capacity and reduce pollution. For example, some sectors that are subject to "supply side" constraints such as coal, base metals and cement producers have chronically underperformed in recent years, and have also hurt the overall performance of the industrial sector (Chart 4). Similarly, capital spending in the mining sector, historically highly sensitive to moves in global metals prices, have continued to contract, despite the sharp increase in metals prices since 2016. Without these regulations, the performance of the industrial sector should have been a lot stronger. In addition, without aggressive expansion in the "good times," the odds of another major relapse in these highly cyclical industries when the "bad times" do come are also lower. Chart 3The PBoC Liquidity Operation Chart 4Policy Constraints Weigh Heavy On Some Sectors Third, the Chinese authorities' tightening measures on the real estate sector pose a growth risk, and should continue to be monitored; the impact is unlikely to be significant, as discussed in detail in last week's report.3 Developers have also been subject to "supply side" constraints and have not increased construction in this cycle, despite rising home prices, increasing transactions and booming profits (Chart 5). Tighter policies imposed by local governments will probably keep developers in dormancy, but a major downturn is highly unlikely, simply because there is not much excess to begin with. Finally, while China has been a key component of the synchronized global growth improvement, the country has also benefited from a pickup in global demand.4 Korean exports, a harbinger of global trade, jumped by a whopping 35% in dollar terms in September versus a year ago. It is certainly unrealistic to expect such strong momentum to last, but the benign global demand situation is unlikely to immediately falter without some sort of extreme external shock. Similarly, our model expects Chinese export growth to moderate, but there are no signs of a sharp contraction anytime soon (Chart 6). Chart 5Real Estate Investment May Surprise To The Upside Chart 6Exports: Moderating, Not Relapsing Bottom Line: China's near-term growth outlook will remain resilient, providing a supportive macro backdrop for global risk assets. The China Debate: Seven Years On Ever since the Chinese economy recovered from the aftermath of the global financial crisis, with the help of a massive government stimulus package, investors' opinions on China's macro situation have been deeply divided.5 To be sure, sensational predictions of an imminent China collapse have always existed, ever since the country's economic reform, but they were mostly rooted in ideological bashing and were largely ignored by global investors. In recent years, however, predictions of a Chinese "hard landing" have been taken much more seriously by the mainstream media, as well as investors and policymakers. Amid mounting doubts about its long term sustainability, the Chinese economy has experienced some remarkable achievements and dramatic changes in the past several years. The Chinese economy continues to gain global significance, accounting for 16% of global economic output currently versus 9% in 2010. More importantly, its contribution to global economic growth is far larger, given its faster growth rate (Chart 7). China's nominal GDP currently stands at about US$11.5 trillion, a distant second to the mighty US$19.2 trillion U.S. economy. However, 7% of nominal growth in China feasibly amounts to an increase of US$800 billion in gross output, compared with US$770 billion for the U.S., assuming the latter is to grow by 4% in nominal terms. Although China's growth rate has downshifted since the global financial crisis, the increase in the country's total output in value terms has become even greater, given the economy's much larger size. China remains the dominant factor in driving global commodities demand, especially base metals. China's base metals consumption accounts for over 50% of the global total, higher than the rest of the world combined (Chart 8). More importantly, China's base metal consumption has continued to climb in recent years, while demand from the rest of the world has stagnated. In recent years, "sluggish" Chinese metals consumption has been blamed for commodities woes by some analysts; in reality, the country has been the only source of demand increase for base metals. China's role in driving the supply/demand balance of raw materials has increased significantly since the global financial crisis. Chart 7China's Growing Significance In World Economy Chart 8China And Base Metals The country's heavy investment on infrastructure has massively changed its urban landscape, leading to a significant improvement in the country's transportation system, with massive expansion in high-speed railway, urban metro and light-rail system, and further extensions of the highway network (Chart 9). This has significantly narrowed the country's infrastructure gap with more advanced countries, facilitating both international trade and domestic demand (Chart 10). Chinese car sales have jumped from about 10 million per year in 2010 to 25 million currently, by far the largest car market in the world. Without improvement in logistical infrastructure, there is little doubt the country's growth trajectory would have faced severe bottlenecks. Chart 9Massive Expansion Of ##br##Transportation Infrastructure... Chart 10...Has Narrowed The Gap ##br##With Developed Economies Finally, the impact of Chinese consumers has become all the more visible on the global stage. Even though China still ranks as a middle-income country with a per-capita GDP of about US$8000, a fraction of the US$57,000 in the U.S., the sheer size of the Chinese population, the rapid increase in household income and the country's very high savings rate have fundamentally shifted the wealth distribution of the global population. Currently, only about 20% of the world population has a per-capita GDP higher than China, a rapid change within a short period of time (Chart 11). This dramatic shift has profoundly redefined the global economic landscape, affecting the spectrum of essentially all businesses, from manufacturers' cost structures to luxury goods markets to tourism and education to financial services. Chart 11China's Rising Income In Perspective The list can easily be extended, but the point here is that the heated debate on a "soft or hard landing" in recent years has disproportionally diverted investors' attention to China's cyclical growth fluctuations, while some larger picture changes have gone unnoticed. Of course, financial markets are an emotional discounting mechanism, and stock prices always exaggerate any subtle changes in growth fundamentals, which can in turn impact economic reality through a complex web of reflexivity relationships. Chinese equities lagged significantly behind developed markets, particularly the U.S. bourses, between 2011 and 2015, which apparently validated the bears' views. In reality, however, multiples of Chinese equities, and emerging market in general, were deeply compressed compared with their developed market peers (Chart 12). In other words, it is largely multiples compression associated with heightened risk aversion and greater risk premium that was behind the woes of Chinese and EM markets before 2015. Since 2016, China's mini-cycle upturn has progressively raised investors' risk appetite towards China and EM, lifting their multiples and prices - essentially a positive re-rating of these markets. Chart 12Positive Rerating Of China ##br##And EM Has Further To Run The debate on China's growth sustainability will likely remain firmly in place in the coming years, which will continue to create cross-currents and outsized volatility. As an investor, it is futile to argue with "Mr. Market." Even with strong convictions on the fundamental case, investors should be nimble and avoid standing in front of an oncoming train - however ill-informed the market consensus could be. For now, Chinese and EM equities are still much more attractively valued compared with the developed world, and the train of the positive re-rating of these bourses will likely have further to run. It is too soon to bet on a trend reversal. Whither China: The Big Picture Fundamentally the China debate boils down to the country's growth model, which invests a much greater share of its output than most other major economies. The "bears" conclude this amounts to capital misallocation and propose a "rebalancing" towards consumption. Some even claim China's massive savings, essential for financing domestic capital spending, are byproducts of banks' "out of thin air" money printing - to me, if "thin air" money was indeed such a magical silver bullet, the world would have solved its poverty problems a long time ago. Over the years I have argued firmly against these assertions. In economics, it is well known that a country's income level is fundamentally determined by its productivity, which is in turn determined by the level and sophistication of its capital stock. Chart 13 shows a clear positive correlation between a country's per capita output, a measure of productivity, and its per capita capital stock. In general, industrialized countries enjoy much higher levels of per capita capital stock than developing economies, leading to much higher productivity, income as well as living standards. Therefore, the industrialization process, by definition, is the process of accumulation of capital stock through investment, which has been proven by many economies that have successfully industrialized. China's growth path in the past several decades is simply repeating these success stories. As shown in Chart 14, despite some remarkable achievements, the productivity level of the average Chinese worker is still just a fraction of the level in more advanced countries. If China remains on the path of accumulation of capital stock through savings and investment, the country will continue to progress on the productivity and income ladder. If, however, it abandons its current growth model and "rebalances" towards a consumption-driven one, odds are much higher that the country will stagnate and fail to advance beyond the "middle income trap." Chart 13Productivity Is Positively ##br##Correlated With Capital Stock Chart 14China's Catchup Process ##br##Has A Lot Further To Run In my 15 years of covering China for BCA, the country has dramatically shifted beyond recognition - the pace of changes are still accelerating. Looking forward, the Chinese economy will undoubtedly continue to experience cyclical swings; it is equally important to keep in mind some mega trends that hold the potential to reshape the world in profound ways. The following are a few worth highlighting. Chart 15China's Tech Boom The first mega trend is the explosive growth of the Chinese technology sector, which will increasingly challenge players in more advanced economies. The tech boom is reflected in the dramatic expansion of e-commerce and mobile payments, spectacular price gains in the BAT giants (Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent) and surging patent applications among the corporate sector (Chart 15). With a massive and homogenous domestic market and increasingly affluent consumers, China has rapidly become the testing ground of all new high-tech sectors - from big data and artificial intelligence to industrial robotics and additive manufacturing, to genetic analysis and quantum computing - with numerous startups and venture capitalists as well as government support on basic research and development. This is bound to create exciting investment opportunities with winners and losers far beyond Chinese borders. The second major development is the "Belt & Road Initiative" (BRI), also known as "One Belt One Road," or OBOR, that links China with some less developed nations. The project, initially proposed by President Xi Jinping in 2013 but met with heavy doubts, has been quietly gaining momentum. Some commentators have viewed the BRI as an attempt by the Chinese authorities to export excess domestic industrial capacity and have tried to quantify the impact, which is shortsighted and likely useless. China's vision of the BRI is an ambitious open-ended geo-strategic, economic and social undertaking to promote globalization with distinct "Chinese characteristics." There is no doubt that BRI will face tremendous challenges, and its ultimate destiny is simply an "unknowable unknown" at the moment. However, some solid progress has been made, and foreign authorities are increasingly taking the BRI seriously. Even with limited success, the BRI holds the promise of redefining the balance of geopolitics, global trade and international finance. The role of the RMB in international finance will inevitably grow at the expense of other majors, particularly the dollar. Investors will be well served to closely follow this mega development. Finally, how China's governance and political system will evolve remains a major question mark for investors, especially from a long-term perspective. Democracy has increasingly become the norm of world politics since the early 1990s, with over half of the global population currently living in democratic regimes, while China's political system is decisively foreign (Chart 16). Investors are ideologically skeptical on the long-term sustainability of China's essentially meritocratic authoritarian regime. Investors mostly see democracy as China's ultimate future, and expect the country to progressively move in this direction, along with rising economic prosperity. In reality, however, the ruling Communist Party has tightened its grip over the country in recent years, apparently reverting the trend of political liberalization that was underway in previous years. Chart 16Is Democracy China's Future? In essence, China, with over 20% of the world population, is conducting a mega-political experiment by searching for an alternative to open democracy, the prospect of which remains unknown. The majority of the Chinese population have been content with the existing system, and have been adapting to drastic social and economic changes with ease in the past several decades. Numerous previous predictions of an imminent collapse of the Chinese regime have repeatedly proven wrong, but the underlying anxiety will remain, especially when China's economic growth further downshifts. Political and social stability is crucial for the country's continued economic development. A major social upheaval, on the other hand, would have devastating consequences, not only for China but also for the entire world. Stay tuned. Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy yanw@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Chinese Financial Tightening: Passing The Phase Of Maximum Strength," dated June 22, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report "More On The Chinese Debt Debate," dated April 20, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Chinese Real Estate: Which Way Will The Wind Blow?" dated April 20, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "China Outlook: A Mid-Year Revisit," dated July 13, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "The China Debate," dated April 14, 2010, and China Investment Strategy Weekly Report "The China Debate: Four Years On," dated April 30, 2014, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Economic Outlook: Global growth will stay strong over the next 12 months, with the U.S. surprising on the upside. Unfortunately, the global economy will succumb to a recession in 2019. Stagflation will become a major problem in the 2020s. Portfolio Strategy: We are sticking with our pro-risk stance for the time being, but are trimming our overweight recommendations to global equities and high-yield credit. Fixed Income: Maintain below benchmark duration exposure over the next 12 months. Underweight U.S., euro area, and Canadian government bonds; stay neutral the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand; overweight Japan. Equities: Favor cyclicals over defensives, but look to turn outright bearish on stocks late next year. For now, stay overweight the euro area and Japan relative to the U.S. in local-currency terms. In the EM universe, Chinese H-shares will outperform. Currencies and Commodities: While the recent dollar rebound has further to run, oil-sensitive currencies and the yuan will hold their ground against the greenback. It is too early to buy gold. Feature I. Global Macro Outlook: Reflation, Recession, And Stagflation The economic outlook over the coming years can be summarized in three words: reflation, recession, and stagflation. Reflation A Broad-Based Recovery Global growth is firing on all cylinders. The OECD estimates that all 46 of the economies that it tracks will see positive growth this year, the first time this has happened since 2007. Most leading economic indicators remain upbeat (Chart 1). This has left analysts scrambling to revise up their global GDP growth forecasts (Chart 2). Chart 1Most Leading Economic Indicators Remain Upbeat Chart 2Global Growth Has Accelerated The acceleration in global growth has occurred against the backdrop of tame inflation, which has allowed most central banks to keep interest rates at exceptionally low levels. Not surprisingly, risk assets have reacted positively. These goldilocks conditions should remain in place for the next 12 months. While most economies are growing at an above-trend pace, there is still plenty of spare capacity around the world. This means that inflation in countries such as the U.S. - where the labor market has returned to full employment - is likely to rise only gradually, as excess demand is satiated through higher imports. Such a redistribution of demand from countries with low levels of spare capacity to those with high levels is a win-win outcome for the global economy. Recession Running Out Of Room Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end. Weak productivity growth across most of the world is likely to cause bottlenecks to emerge over time, and this will cause inflation to move higher (Chart 3). Output gaps in the main developed economies would actually be higher today than at the height of the Great Recession had potential GDP grown at the rate the IMF projected back in 2008 (Chart 4). This is a testament to just how exceptionally weak potential growth has been. Chart 3Productivity Growth Has Slowed Across The Globe Chart 4Weak Supply Growth Has Narrowed Output Gaps U.S. growth will surprise to the upside over the next 12 months, leading to an unwelcome burst of inflation in late 2018 or early 2019. Financial conditions have eased sharply this year thanks to lower bond yields, narrower credit spreads, a weaker dollar, and a surging stock market. Changes in financial conditions lead growth by around 6-to-9 months, implying that U.S. growth could reach 3% early next year (Chart 5). This could take the unemployment rate down to 3.5% by end-2018, more than a full point below the Fed's estimate of full employment and even lower than the 2008 low of 3.8%. The unemployment rate could fall even further if Congress succeeds in passing legislation to cut taxes, as we expect it will. Our geopolitical team estimates that the GOP proposal would reduce federal revenues by $1.1-to-$1.2 trillion over ten years, or about 0.5% of GDP.1 In order to appease moderates, the final bill is likely to scale back the size of the tax cuts and shift more of the benefits to middle class households. Under the current proposal, the top 1% of taxpayers would receive 50% of the tax benefits (Chart 6). Our best bet is that the legislation will be enshrined into law in early 2018. Chart 5Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth Chart 6Republican Tax Would Disproportionately Benefit The Top 1% Welcome To The Steep Side Of The Phillips Curve The so-called Phillips curve, which depicts the relationship between unemployment and inflation, tends to become quite steep once unemployment falls to very low levels (Chart 7). It is easy to see why: When spare capacity is high, a modest decline in slack will still leave many workers idle. In such a setting, inflation is unlikely to rise. However, once the output gap is fully closed, any further decline in slack will cause bottlenecks to emerge, pushing wages and prices higher. The 1960s provide a useful lesson in that regard. Just like today, inflation hovered below 2% during the first half of that decade, even though unemployment was trending downward over this period. To most observers back then, the Phillips curve would have also seemed defunct. However, once the unemployment rate fell below 4%, core inflation took off, rising from 1.5% in early 1966 to nearly 4% in 1967 (Chart 8). The kink in the Phillips curve had been reached. Inflation ultimately made its way to 6% in 1970, four years before the first oil shock struck. Chart 7U.S. Economy Has Moved Into The 'Steep' Side Of The Phillips Curve Chart 8Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4% Many commentators have questioned the relevance of the sixties template on the grounds that the U.S. economy was less open to the rest of the world back then, trade unions had greater bargaining power, inflation expectations were not as well anchored, and the deflationary effects of new technologies were not as pervasive. We discussed these arguments in a report published earlier this month, concluding that they are not nearly as persuasive as one might think.2 The Difficulty Of Achieving A Soft Landing Rising inflation will compel the Fed to hike rates aggressively starting late next year in order to push the unemployment rate back towards NAIRU. A turn towards hawkishness is especially likely if Janet Yellen is replaced by someone such as former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, whom betting markets now think has a 40% chance of becoming the next Fed chair (Chart 9). The problem for whoever ends up running the Fed is that it is very difficult to raise the unemployment rate by just a little bit. Modern economies are subject to massive feedback loops. When unemployment begins rising, households lose confidence and reduce spending. This prompts firms to slow hiring, leading to even less spending. The U.S. has never averted a recession in the post-war era whenever the unemployment rate has increased by more than one-third of a percentage point (Chart 10). Chart 9Who Will The Next Fed Chair Be? Chart 10Even A Small Uptick In The Unemployment Rate Is Bad News For The Business Cycle Lofty valuations are likely to exacerbate the adverse feedback loop described above during the next downturn. As growth slows, risk asset prices will tumble. This will cause business investment spending to dry up. Given America's dominant role in global financial markets, the U.S. recession will spread like wildfire to the rest of the world. Stagflation The Doves Reassert Control The next recession will probably be more painful for Wall Street than for Main Street. Fed-induced downturns tend to be swift but short-lived. The subsequent recoveries are usually V-shaped, rather than the elongated U-shaped recoveries that follow financial crises. Nevertheless, central banks around the world will undoubtedly start slashing rates again, perhaps even restarting their QE programs. Traumatized by the Great Recession, central bankers will overreact. The hawks will be blamed for the recession and forced to turn tail. The doves will reassert control. Fiscal policy will be significantly eased. This will be particularly the case if the next recession coincides with Trump's re-election campaign, brewing populism in Europe, and the spectre of military conflict in a variety of hotspots around the planet. Structural Forces Will Boost Inflation Meanwhile, millions of baby boomers will be in the process of leaving the workforce. This will lead to slower income growth, but not to slower spending growth - spending actually rises late in life due to spiraling health care costs (Chart 11). An increase in spending relative to income tends to push up prices. A recent IMF research report estimated that population aging has been highly deflationary over the past few decades, but will be very inflationary over the coming years (Chart 12). Chart 11Savings Over The Life Cycle Chart 12Demographic Shifts: From Highly Deflationary To Highly Inflationary All this suggests that the dip in inflation during the next recession will be fleeting. As the recovery from the shallow recession unfolds, inflation will reaccelerate. Of course, at that point, central banks could step in to aggressively quell inflationary pressures. However, they are unlikely to do so. After the next recession-induced burst of fiscal stimulus, debt levels will be even higher than they are now. The temptation to inflate away this debt will intensify. And, in an environment of anemic real potential GDP growth, the means to generate inflation will become available: Central banks will simply need to keep rates below their "neutral" level. Central bankers will rationalize their actions on the grounds that higher inflation will allow them to bring real interest rates deeper into negative territory in the event of another economic downturn. A growing chorus of eminent economists has begun to argue that a 2% inflation target is too low. For example, just this week, Larry Summers stated that "I think we probably need to adjust our monetary policy framework ... to [one] that provides for higher nominal rates during normal times, so there's more room to cut rates during downturns."3 II. Financial Markets As with the economic outlook, the three words reflation, recession, and stagflation guide our views of where financial markets are heading over the coming years. We continue to maintain a pro-risk stance, but are trimming our overweight recommendation to equities and high-yield credit due to the fact that valuations have gotten stretched and we are entering the last innings of the business-cycle expansion (Table 1). Table 1BCA's Tactical Global Asset Allocation Recommendations* Equities Sticking With Bullish ... For Now Recessions and bear markets tend to go hand-in-hand (Chart 13). None of our recession timing indicators are warning of an imminent downturn, suggesting that the cyclical global equity bull market has further room to run (Chart 14). Chart 13Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Chart 14AThis Business Cycle Has Further To Run Chart 14BThis Business Cycle Has Further To Run Strong growth in corporate earnings continues to underpin the rally in equities. The MSCI All-Country World index has increased by 11.9% in the first 9 months of the year, only slightly more than the 9.1% gain in earnings. As a result, the forward P/E ratio has only risen from 15.7 at the start of the year to 16.1 (Table 2). Table 2Earnings-Backed Price Appreciation Favor Cyclicals Over Defensives Above-trend global growth should boost profits over the next 12 months. We favor cyclical sectors over defensives, and are expressing this view through our long global industrial stocks/short utilities trade recommendation. The trade is up 0.9% since we initiated it last Friday and up 2.3% since I previewed it at BCA's annual New York Investment Conference earlier the same week. Capital spending tends to accelerate in the mature phase of business-cycle expansions, as a growing number of firms realize that they have insufficient capacity to meet rising demand. Our model predicts that global capex will grow at the fastest pace in six years (Chart 15). This should benefit industrial stocks. On the flipside, rising global yields will hurt rate-sensitive utilities (Chart 16). Chart 15Global Capex On The Upswing Chart 16Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities Financials should also outperform. Banks, in particular, will benefit from steeper yield curves, faster credit growth, and ongoing declines in nonperforming loans. Energy stocks are also attractive. As discussed below, we continue to maintain a generally upbeat view on the direction of oil prices. Prefer DM Over EM, Europe And Japan Over The U.S. While it is a close call, we see more upside for DM than EM stocks, as the former are less vulnerable to a dollar rebound and an increasingly hawkish Fed. Emerging market equities have had a good run over the past year, and are due for a breather. Our favorite EM equity idea for the fourth quarter is to be long Chinese H-shares. H-shares are heavily tilted toward financials and deep cyclicals, two sectors that we like. They also trade at a mere seven-times forward earnings and one-times book value (Chart 17). Within the DM space, European and Japanese equities should outperform U.S. stocks in currency-hedged terms. The sector composition of both the European and Japanese market is tilted toward stocks that will gain the most from strong global growth and increased capital spending. As our European strategists have documented, the European stock market is dominated by large multinationals whose fortunes are tied more to the global economy than to domestic prospects. This is largely true for the Japanese stock market as well. If our prediction for a somewhat weaker euro and yen comes to pass, profits in both regions will benefit from the currency translation effect. Valuations in Europe and Japan are also generally more attractive than in the U.S, even if one adjusts for different sector weights (Chart 18). Chart 17Chinese H-Shares: A Valuation Snapshot Chart 18U.S. Stocks Look Pricey Small Cap Value Trumps Large Cap Growth Style-wise, we prefer small cap value over large cap growth. Value stocks generally do better in environments where cyclicals are outperforming defensives, while small caps tend to be high-beta bets on global growth (Chart 19). U.S. small caps will disproportionately benefit from cuts to statutory corporate taxes, since smaller companies typically have less ability to game the tax code in their favor. Timing The Next Bear Market As one looks beyond the next 12 months, the skies begin to darken for global equities. The stock market usually sniffs out recessions before they happen, but the lead time is quite variable and generally not that long (Table 3). For example, the S&P 500 peaked only two months before the start of the Great Recession in December 2007. Chart 19Favor Cyclicals And Value Plays Table 3Stocks And Recessions: Case-By-Case Chart 20Stagflation Was Devastating For Stocks Stagflation Is Not A Stock-Friendly Environment If the next recession begins in the second half of 2019, global equities will probably peak earlier that year or in late 2018. Given the starting point for valuations, U.S. equities are likely to fall 20%-to-30% peak-to-trough. While other global bourses are generally not as expensive, their higher-beta nature means that they will probably face similar if not worse declines. The fact that correlations tend to rise during risk-off episodes will only add to the bloodshed. Stocks And Stagflation If the experience of the 1970s is any guide, equities perform poorly in stagflationary environments (Chart 20). Investors tend to see stocks as a riskier substitute for bonds. When nominal bond yields rise, the dividend yield offered by stocks becomes less attractive. In theory, the increase in the nominal value of corporate net worth resulting from higher inflation should generate enough capital gains over time to compensate for the wider gap between dividend yields and bond yields. In practice, due to "money illusion" and other considerations, that does not fully occur, requiring that stocks become cheaper so that their expected return can rise. The Long-Term Outlook For Profit Margins A complicating factor going into the next decade will be what happens to profit margins. S&P 500 operating margins are close to their all-time highs (Chart 21). While margins will undoubtedly fall during the next recession, their subsequent recovery is likely to be encumbered by a number of shifting structural forces. A slew of labor-saving technological innovations depressed labor's share of income over the past few decades. So did the entry of over one billion new workers into the global labor force following the collapse of the Berlin Wall and China's transition to a capitalist economy. The fixation of central banks on bringing down inflation may have led to higher unemployment than what would otherwise have been the case, thereby undermining the bargaining power of workers. All this may change during the next decade. China's labor force has peaked and is on track to decline by over 400 million workers by the end of the century - a larger decline than the entire U.S. population (Chart 22). A shift towards persistently more expansionary monetary policy could also keep the labor market fairly tight. Chart 21U.S. Profit Margins Are Close To All-Time Highs Chart 22China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers Technological innovation will persist, but the firms that benefit from it are likely to attract more scrutiny from regulators. Republican voters - the traditional defenders of corporate America's God-given right to make a buck - are growing increasingly wary of big business. Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the rest of the corporate establishment tend to be liberal on social issues and conservative on economic ones. Very few voters actually share this configuration of views (Chart 23). The Democratic Party's "Better Deal" moves it to the left on many economic issues. This runs the risk of leaving the U.S. without any major party actively pushing a pro-business agenda. That can't be good for profit margins. Bottom Line: Investors should stay overweight global equities, but trim exposure from moderate overweight to small overweight due to rising business-cycle risk, and look to get outright bearish late next year. The long-term outlook for equities is poor, especially in the U.S. where valuations are highly stretched. Chart 24 presents a stylized sketch of how we think the major stock market indices will evolve over the coming years. Chart 23An Absence Of Libertarians Chart 24Market Outlook: Equities Fixed Income Above-trend GDP growth and rising inflation are likely to push up long-term bond yields in most economies over the next few quarters, as flagged by our Central Bank Monitors (Chart 25). Bond yields will fall during the next recession and then begin to inexorably rise higher as stagflationary forces intensify (Chart 26). Looking out over the next 12 months, our regional allocation recommendations are as follows: Chart 25Our Central Bank Monitors Point To Growing Pressures To Tighten Chart 26Market Outlook: Bonds Underweight The U.S., Euro Area, And Canada Chart 27Canada Enjoys Robust Growth We remain underweight U.S. Treasurys in a global fixed-income portfolio. The market is pricing in only 44 basis points in Fed hikes between now and the end of next year, well below the 100 basis points of hikes implied by the dots in the Summary of Economic Projections. The U.S. yield curve has flattened since the start of the year. This should change over the next 12 months, as inflation expectations rebound from currently depressed levels. The yield curve in the euro area should steepen more than in the U.S., since the ECB has pledged not to raise rates until well after its asset purchase program is complete - something that is unlikely to happen until the end of next year. This implies that the 2-year spread between the two regions will widen in favor of the U.S., which should be bullish for the dollar. Canadian bond yields are likely to rise further (Chart 27). The unemployment rate has fallen to a nine-year low and the Bank of Canada expects the output gap to be fully closed by the end of this year. The economy grew by 3.7% year-over-year in the second quarter, well above the BoC's estimate of potential real GDP growth of 1.5%. The Bank's most recent Business Outlook Survey points to continued robust growth ahead. The bubbly housing market remains a concern, but delaying withdrawal of monetary accommodation risks exacerbating the problem. Neutral On Gilts And Aussie And Kiwi Bonds In contrast to most other developed economies, leading indicators point to slower U.K. growth in the months ahead (Chart 28). This undoubtedly reflects the ongoing uncertainty over Brexit negotiations, which are likely to drag on for quite some time. Core inflation has surged to 2.7% on the back of the sharp depreciation of the pound, but market expectations suggest that it is about to roll over. Nevertheless, with 10-year gilts fetching just 1.35%, the downside for yields is limited. The cheap pound should also prop up exports, partly offsetting the impact of diminished market access to the rest of the EU. The unemployment rate stands at 4.3%, slightly below the Bank of England's estimate of NAIRU. One way or another, the uncertainty over Brexit will fade, allowing gilt yields to move higher. As with gilts, the outlook for Australian and New Zealand bonds is mixed. Strong global growth should boost commodity prices. This will help the Australian economy. The unemployment rate in Australia has fallen to 5.6%, but involuntary part-time employment is high and wage growth has been stagnant. Industrial capacity utilization remains low, as reflected in a fairly large output gap (Chart 29). The market expects the RBA to deliver 38 basis points in rate hikes over the next 12 months. We think that's about right. New Zealand's 10-year yield stands at a relatively generous 2.96%, which makes it difficult to be too bearish on kiwi bonds. However, we do not see much scope for yields to fall from current levels. Nominal GDP is growing at over 5% and retail sales are expanding at nearly 7% (Chart 30). The terms of trade have risen to their highest level since the 1970s. The output gap is now fully closed and core inflation is edging higher. Despite this good news, the policy rate remains at a record low of 1.75%. We concur with market expectations that the RBNZ will start raising rates next year. Chart 28U.K. Growth Is Slowing Chart 29There Is Still Slack In The Australian Economy Chart 30New Zealand: Upbeat Indicators Overweight JGBs CPI swaps predict that inflation in Japan will average only 0.5% over the next twenty years. As we argued last week, this is far too low.4 The secular drivers of deflation are fading and inflation will begin to surprise to the upside over the coming years (Chart 31). However, the path between here and there will be a choppy one. Considering that deflationary expectations remain deeply entrenched, the Bank of Japan is unlikely to abandon its yield curve targeting regime for at least the next few years. As government bond yields rise elsewhere in the world, 10-year JGBs will be the default winners. Investors thinking of going short Japanese government bonds should focus on 20-year or 30-year maturities, which are not subject to the BoJ's cap. Credit: Still Overweight, But Trimming Back Exposure High-yield credit spreads have fallen back near their post-recession lows after widening in the wake of the global manufacturing recession (Chart 32). We see little scope for further spread compression. Our U.S. Corporate Health Monitor remains in deteriorating territory (Chart 33), and higher Treasury yields will put downward pressure on corporate bond prices even if spreads remain constant. Nevertheless, the default-adjusted spread on U.S. high-yield debt of 212 basis points is still large enough to warrant a modest overweight to credit, especially since banks have started to loosen lending standards again. Chart 31Japan: Fading Deflationary Forces Chart 32High-Yield Spreads Have Narrowed Chart 33U.S. Corporate Health Continues To Deteriorate Our Global Fixed Income Strategists prefer U.S. over European credit, given that spreads are lower in Europe, and the tapering of ECB asset purchases could reduce the demand for spread product. Currencies And Commodities The Dollar: Comeback Kid? Charts 34 and 35 show our expectations about the future path of the major currencies and commodities. Chart 34Market Outlook: Currencies Chart 35Market Outlook: Commodities BCA's Global Investment Strategy service went long the dollar in October 2014. We reiterated our bullish stance before the U.S. presidential elections, controversially arguing that "Trump Will Win And The Dollar Will Rally."5 Unfortunately, we remained long the dollar over the course of this year, which turned out to be a mistake. Strong growth abroad, weaker-than-expected inflation readings in the U.S., and the fizzling of the "Trump Trade" all contributed to dollar weakness. Technicals also played a role. Sentiment was extremely bullish towards the dollar at the start of the year, but extremely bearish towards the euro (Chart 36). The reversal of these technical trends helps explain why the euro appreciated a lot more than what one would have expected based simply on changes in interest rate differentials (Chart 37). Chart 36Euro: Long Positions Are Getting Stretched Chart 37The Euro Has Overshot Interest Rate Spreads Of course, if the spread between U.S. and euro area interest rates continues to narrow, it is likely that EUR/USD will strengthen. We are skeptical that it will. For one thing, financial conditions have eased sharply in the U.S. since the start of the year, but have tightened in the euro area (Chart 38). This suggests that U.S. growth will surprise on the upside whereas euro area growth could begin to disappoint. Chart 38U.S. Versus Euro Area Diverging Financial Conditions The five-year, five-year forward OIS spread between the two regions stands at 87 basis points in nominal terms, and 25 basis points in real terms. The five-year forward spread is even lower if one calculates a GDP-weighted bond yield for the euro area rather than looking at the expected path of interbank rates. Such a small spread is inconsistent with the fact that the neutral rate is substantially higher in the U.S.6 We expect EUR/USD to fall to $1.15 by the end of 2017, and potentially decline further in 2018 as the Fed picks up the pace of rate hikes. The dollar is also likely to strengthen against the yen, as Treasury yields rise relative to JGB yields. We see less downside for the British pound and the Swedish krona against the greenback. This is reflected in our long GBP/EUR and long SEK/CHF trade recommendations, both of which remain in the black. Upside For Oil-Sensitive Currencies Our energy strategists still see further upside for crude oil prices, owing to favorable supply and demand conditions. They point to the fact that official forecasts by the EIA have consistently underestimated oil demand. They also note that compliance with OPEC 2.0 production cuts has been remarkably good, and that estimates of how much new shale output will hit the market over the next 12 months are too optimistic. Additionally, they believe that the decline in production from conventional oil fields around the world - especially offshore fields, where there has been a dearth of new investment in recent years - could be larger than expected.7 Geopolitical risks in Iraq, Libya, and Venezuela could also adversely affect supply. Firmer demand and lackluster supply will lead to further drawdowns in OECD oil inventories, which should be supportive of prices (Chart 39). We recently took profits of 13.8% on our recommendation to go long the December-2017 Brent oil futures contract, but are maintaining exposure to oil through our long CAD/EUR and RUB/EUR positions, as well as through our bias towards cyclical equities. Resilient Chinese Economy Should Support Metal Prices And The RMB Recent Chinese data have been on the soft side, giving rise to fears that the economy is heading towards a major slowdown. We are more optimistic. While growth has clearly slowed since the start of the year, it remains at an above-trend pace, as evidenced by numerous real-time measures of economic activity (Chart 40). Chart 39Falling Oil Inventories Should Lead To Higher Crude Prices Chart 40Chinese Economy: No Need To Be Pessimistic Even the housing market has managed to stay resilient, despite widespread predictions of imminent doom (Chart 41). The share of households planning to buy a new home remains close to all-time highs. The amount of land purchased by developers - a good leading indicator for housing starts - is accelerating. Reflecting these developments, property stocks are surging. Financial conditions have tightened, but so far this has largely bypassed the real economy. In fact, long-term bank lending to nonfinancial institutions has accelerated since the start of the year (Chart 42). The recently announced cuts to reserve requirements for small business loans should facilitate this trend. Chart 41Chinese Housing Market Remains Resilient Chart 42Credit To Real Economy And Profit Rebound Bode Well For Capex Meanwhile, industrial profits have rebounded, as rampant producer price deflation last year has given way to modest price gains this year. Increased retained earnings will give Chinese companies the wherewithal to spend more on capital equipment. A recovery in global trade should also help stoke export growth. (Chart 43). Despite strengthening this year, our indicators suggest the yuan is still in undervalued territory (Chart 44). Buoyant economic growth should alleviate capital flight and reduce the pressure on the authorities to engineer a further depreciation of the currency. This, in turn, should help support metal prices and other EM currencies, even in a setting where the dollar remains well bid. Chart 43Positive Global Trade Momentum: A Tailwind For Chinese Exports Chart 44The Chinese Yuan Is Undervalued Chart 45Gold: Waiting For Drivers Of Sustained Price Appreciation Buy Gold ... But Not Yet Lastly, a few words on gold. Gold does well in situations where real rates are falling and the dollar is weakening (Chart 45). That's not the environment we find ourselves in today. Gold will have its day in the sun, but probably not before the stagflationary era begins in earnest after the next recession. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 This revenue loss is measured against a baseline where a number of tax breaks, which are currently set to expire, are extended. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Is King Dollar Back?" dated October 4, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?" dated September 22, 2017. 3 Summers, Lawrence, H. (@LHSummers). "Great piece by @jasonfurman in today's @WSJ: The U.S. can no longer afford deficit-increasing tax cuts." 01 Oct 2017. Tweet. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Three Tantalizing Trades," dated September 29, 2017. 5 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Three (New) Controversial Calls," dated September 30, 2016. 6 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Bank Showdown," dated September 8, 2017. 7 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy, "OPEC 2.0 Will Extend Cuts to June 2018," dated September 21, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Either China's growth will slump soon, capping budding inflationary pressures, or policymakers will have to hike interest rates meaningfully to tackle inflation. If the PBoC drags its feet and does not hike interest rates amid rising inflation, the RMB will come under major selling pressure. EM/China corporate profits have expanded predominantly due to price increases. However, rapid price increases warrant higher interest rates. The latter is a formidable risk to share prices. The U.S. dollar has made a major bottom. Stay short select EM currencies. The EM equity rally momentum remains strong but the risk-reward is quite unfavorable. We expect the external backdrop - metals prices and portfolio flows to EM - to deteriorate inhibiting the current easing cycle in Peru. Stay underweight this bourse within the EM universe (page 13). Feature A key question for investors at the current juncture is whether the global economic backdrop is moving toward inflation or deflation - or whether it will remain in its present "goldilocks" state. One can cite numerous examples that support each of the three scenarios. Proponents of deflation cite low consumer price inflation in the U.S., euro area and Japan, as well as very weak money growth in China and the U.S. as being leading indicators of budding deflationary pressures. Advocates of goldilocks - improving growth with low inflation - point to robust global trade and low consumer price inflation, as well as benign financial market dynamics in the form of higher share prices and low bond yields. Last but not least, inflationists can cite very tight labor markets among advanced economies as well as rising core and services consumer price inflation rates in China (Chart I-1). Chart I-1China: Inflation Is Grinding Higher At BCA's annual conference in New York held last week, the broad consensus was that there is a lack of considerable inflationary pressures worldwide amid improving global growth. This is consistent with the goldilocks outcome currently priced by the financial markets - i.e., a combination of robust growth and low inflation. Given the current pricing in financial markets, one economic variable that could disturb benign global financial dynamics is inflation. This report examines inflationary dynamics in China and briefly touches on the U.S. and euro area inflation outlooks. Our take is as follows: Unless China's money and credit growth slow further and generate another deflationary slump in China and world trade, the odds are that the balance both globally and within China will tilt toward inflation in the next 12 months. To be clear, our main theme remains that a material slowdown in China's growth will dampen China/EM growth, derail the EM corporate profit recovery and cap inflationary pressures in China, at least. Therefore, to some extent, this report is counter-factual - it examines what may happen if a meaningful growth deceleration in China does not transpire. Our analysis also addresses the question of what may happen if policymakers in China allow money/credit to accelerate again, without permitting the economy to slow too much. The short response: Inflation is already slowly but surely rising in China and it will soon become a constraint, limiting Chinese policymakers' options. China/Asia Recovery: Prices Or Volumes? China's industrial revival, as well as Asia's export recovery over the past 12-18 months, has largely been due to price increases amid modest volume growth. In particular: China's manufacturing production volume growth has not improved at all, but manufacturing producer prices have surged, producing substantial recovery in nominal output growth (Chart I-2). This is strictly within manufacturing, and does not include mining and ferrous metal production, where output cuts have led to surging prices for raw materials. In brief, one can observe higher inflation beyond the steel and coal industries. Furthermore, producer price inflation has improved for consumer goods (Chart I-3, top panel), and for the first time in 17 years ex-factory producer price deflation has ended in durable consumer goods as well as in electronics goods and communication equipment (Chart I-3, middle and bottom panels). Chart I-2China's Industrial Recovery: Surging ##br##Prices Amid Subdued Volume Growth Chart I-3China: Producer Price ##br##Inflation Is Broad-Based Notably, China's core (ex-food and energy) consumer price inflation has moved above 2%, and consumer services price inflation has risen to 3% (Chart I-1 on page 1). Importantly, these consumer inflation measures have risen, even though food prices are deflating in China and energy prices are stable. This entails that consumer price inflation pressures are genuine and reasonably broad-based. In Asian trade, the dichotomy between prices and volumes is especially apparent in the case of Korea's exports. The U.S. dollar value of Korean exports has mushroomed, but there has been only modest revival in export volumes (Chart I-4). Remarkably, both the 2014-'15 slump and the 2016-'17 recovery in Korean exports were largely due to prices, not volumes. The latter have been expanding modestly in recent years, while prices crashed in 2013-'15 and surged in 2016-'17. Finally, Korean and Taiwanese export prices as well as U.S. import prices from Asia have risen in the past 12-18 months, following years of deflation (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Korean Export Recovery: Prices Versus Volumes Chart I-5Asian Export Prices: A Reversal? Beyond higher prices for steel and other commodities, Korea's export prices are climbing because of skyrocketing DRAM semiconductor prices (Chart I-6). Price changes are much more important to corporate profits than volume changes. For example, a 5% rise in prices boosts corporate profits by much more than a 5% gain in output volume. By the same token, profits decline more when prices drop by 2% than when volumes fall by 2%. We discussed this phenomenon and illustrated an example in our January 28, 2016 report.1 Rising prices across various commodities and manufactured goods have allowed Chinese and Asian companies to deliver strong profits in the past 12 months. China's industrial profits have ballooned, even though output volume growth has been modest. On the whole, the enormous money/credit injection in China in the past two years has hindered lingering price deflation and led to rising prices for various goods and services. Chart I-7 illustrates that the recovery in corporate pricing power and, hence, mushrooming industrial corporate earnings can be attributed to the mainland's credit/money impulses. Chart I-6DRAM Semi Price Has ##br##Surged 4-Fold In Last 12 Months Chart I-7China: A Peak In Producer ##br##Prices And Industrial Profits? If pricing power deteriorates, as the money/credit impulse is signaling, corporate earnings will be at risk. In such a scenario, inflation will not be a problem, as deflationary pressures will resurface. However, corporate profits will shrink. Bottom Line: EM/China corporate profits have expanded predominantly due to price increases. Investors have celebrated it by flocking into EM/Chinese stocks. However, rapid price increases warrant higher interest rates. The latter is a formidable risk to share prices. Barring a material growth deceleration in China, which is our baseline view, odds are that inflation will rise further. Why Now? Inflation is rising in China because of rampant money/credit creation complemented with a weak productivity growth rate. In addition, policymakers have engineered a reversal in raw materials price deflation since early 2016. It is impossible to know if the Chinese economy has reached a point where growth rates of 6-6.5% and above will lead to inflation. It is hard to estimate potential GDP growth rates and output gaps for advanced countries, but it is practically impossible to do so in the case of China. Its economy has undergone multiple dramatic structural transformations in the past 30 years, changes that continue today. That said, it is possible to argue that China may have reached a point where further rampant money and credit creation leads to higher inflation. The key thesis is that productivity growth has slowed because of the following: Channeling credit to SOEs - which often misallocate capital - and to property markets does not boost productivity. Infrastructure projects will take years to produce productivity gains, even if they are well thought out. Chart I-8 illustrates that in recent years an increasing share of investment has been on structures and installations rather than equipment and new technologies. Investment in structures does not boost productivity as much as equipment purchases. Meanwhile, private capital spending has been in the doldrums over the past four years, as has been the case for manufacturing investment (Chart I-9). This argues for less efficiency/productivity and, thereby, diminished potential growth. Chart I-8Unfavorable Mix For Productivity Growth Chart I-9Private And Manufacturing Capex Remain Weak Historically, it was private investment and manufacturing capacity expansion that fostered productivity gains in China. Private projects are often more efficient than public investment, and it is much easier to achieve higher productivity in manufacturing than in the service sector. This is not to argue that there are no innovation and rapid technological changes in China. A lot of innovation and technological advancement is happening but it might not be sufficient to boost productivity growth above 6% (Chart I-10). China's extremely fast productivity gains in the past 20 years have largely been due to rapid expansion of manufacturing and construction. Manufacturing cannot rise fast because it is hard for China to gain more market share in global trade without causing political backslashes. In turn, construction has been driven by excessive credit expansion and property market speculation and policymakers want to reduce this. It is imperative to understand that in any country productivity is much lower in the service sector than in manufacturing and construction. A shift away from manufacturing and construction toward services will surely lead to much lower productivity and, hence, potential economic growth. If policymakers allow/encourage rapid money/credit expansion to achieve growth rates above 6-6.5% or so, the outcome will be inflation. Implications For Chinese Policymakers If economic growth does not slow, odds are that inflation will continue to rise in China due to a lower potential GDP growth rate. As such, policymakers will have to tackle inflation by raising interest rates. The deposit rate in China is at 1.5%, and is presently negative when deflated by core consumer price inflation (Chart I-11). This is occurring for the first time in ten years. Chart I-10Potential Growth = Labor Force + ##br##Productivity Growth Chart I-11China: Deposit Rate In ##br##Real Terms Is Negative If inflationary pressures continue building up and policymakers do not hike interest rates, households will become even more dissatisfied by negative deposit rates and opt for converting their RMB deposits into foreign currency, or buying real estate. Both scenarios will eventually lead to financial instability, which policymakers are trying to avoid. Chart I-12 demonstrates that the current level of foreign exchange reserves of US$ 3.3 trillion is equal to only 34% of household deposits and 15% of total (corporate and household) deposits, and 10% of our broad M3 money measure. In brief, the failure to proactively hike deposit rates will likely lead to capital flight. Policymakers realize that the Chinese banking system has created so much money that even the sheer size of foreign currency reserves is insufficient to defend the currency if and when households and companies choose to convert their liquid savings into foreign currency. This argues for higher interest rates in China, unless growth downshifts very soon and caps inflation. Bottom Line: Either China's growth will slump soon, capping budding inflationary pressures, or policymakers will have to hike interest rates meaningfully to avoid another run on the exchange rate. What About DM And Non-Asian EM? In the majority of non-Asian EM economies, inflation is either muted or under control. The exceptions are Turkey and central European economies. We have discussed the inflation outbreak in central Europe in detail in past reports (also see Chart I-13 below), and will be revisiting Turkey next week.2 Chart I-12Too Much Money Has Been Created Chart I-13Inflation Outbreak In Central Europe The basis is that there has been little recovery in Latin American economies as well as Russia and South Africa for inflationary pressures to transpire. While some may be prone to structural inflation, cyclical business conditions are still too weak to warrant rising pricing power. In the Euro Area, investors should closely monitor German wage dynamics. Manufacturing wages and core consumer price inflation in central Europe are ramping up (Chart I-13). If and when labor shortages and rising wages in central Europe discourage German manufacturing companies from relocating/outsourcing production to the former, it will put more pressure on the already very tight German labor market and will lead to higher wages. As a result, genuine inflation in the largest European economy will heighten. In the U.S., the tight labor market and vibrant growth argue for higher inflation ahead. The Trump administration's proposed tax cuts amid robust growth will boost demand and rekindle inflation. Bottom Line: Inflation expectations are very depressed worldwide, and it will not take much in the way of upward inflation surprises to re-price interest rate expectations and, consequently, financial assets. Financial Markets Ramifications The Foreign Exchange Market: The U.S. dollar has probably made a major bottom and will stage a multi-month rally (Chart I-14). Chart I-14Will The Greenback Find ##br##Support At Current Levels? The Federal Reserve will be the first central bank to hike interest rates if global inflation or inflation expectations rise. In turn, the European Central Bank and the People's Bank of China will likely move slower in tightening policy. Such a proactive policy stance of the Fed, especially relative to its peers, will benefit the greenback. Furthermore, the potential appointment of Kevin Warsh as Fed Chairman could lead to higher interest rate expectations in the U.S., and will be currency bullish. In short, the potential mix of tight monetary policies and easy fiscal policies is bullish for the dollar. In the interim, U.S. bond yields are likely to move higher. This is true in the near term, even if Chinese growth disappoints. It will take time until China's growth deceleration caps the upside in U.S./global bond yields. Consistent with our U.S. dollar view, we believe commodities prices have reached a major peak. In sum, the path of least resistance for the U.S. dollar is up. Stay long the U.S. dollar versus a basket of EM currencies: ZAR, TRY, MYR, IDR, BRL and CLP. Local Currency Bonds: As and when EM currencies depreciate versus the greenback and U.S. bond yields grind higher, EM high-yielding local currency bonds could sell off. Chart I-15 reveals that the spread between the EM-GBI local currency benchmark yield and five-year U.S. Treasurys has fallen to a 10-year low. The risk-reward is not attractive for U.S. dollar- and euro-based investors. EM credit versus U.S. investment grade bonds. On August 16, 2017, we advised shifting our underweight EM sovereign bonds recommendation away from U.S. high yield to U.S. investment grade corporate credit. This strategy remains intact. This is consistent with EM currencies depreciating versus the U.S. dollar, U.S. bond yields moving higher and commodities prices softening. Continue underweighting EM stocks versus DM: A stronger U.S. dollar and rising U.S. bond yields will reverse EM equities' relative outperformance versus DM. In fact, manufacturing PMIs certify that EM manufacturing growth remains subdued relative to DM (Chart I-16). Chart I-15EM Local Currency Bonds: Little Yield Advantage Chart I-16EM Equities Versus DM: A Sign Of Reversal? If this coincides with inflation or growth concerns in China, it will create a perfect storm for all EM risk assets. As to EM stocks' absolute performance, we are approaching a major top, even though the exact timing of a major relapse is uncertain. Flows into EM equities remain robust, but they will reverse if one or more of the following transpires: rising U.S. interest rate expectations, a stronger U.S. dollar, high and rising inflation in China and policy tightening, or the opposite - an imminent growth slump in China and a relapse in commodities prices. All in all, the EM equity rally momentum remains strong but the risk-reward is quite unfavorable. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Peru: External Backdrop Holds The Key The external environment has been and will remain key to the performance of Peruvian financial markets. The Peruvian bourse has rallied massively, outperforming the EM equity benchmark over the past year, even as domestic demand in Peru has been weakening. Despite stronger global growth and higher commodities prices, GDP growth along with consumer and capital growth have not recovered at all (Chart II-1). Meanwhile, bank loan growth remains very weak (Chart II-2). Chart II-1Peru: Weak Domestic Demand... Chart II-2...Corroborated By Weak Credit Growth If metals prices stay firm and strong capital flows in EM persist, Peru's currency will remain under appreciation pressure. This will provide the central bank with more room to ease policy by cutting interest rates and adding liquidity to the banking system as it accumulates foreign exchange reserves (Chart II-3). Continued policy easing by the central bank will in turn revive bank loan growth, and the economy will recover. Chart II-3FX Reserve Accumulation = Liquidity Easing Our baseline scenario, however, is that industrial metals prices in general and copper prices in particular will relapse materially in the next 12 months. Furthermore, odds are that U.S. bond yields will drift higher and the U.S. dollar will strengthen (as discussed on pages 11-12). Under such a scenario: The Peruvian sol would come under depreciation pressure if and when metals prices relapse (Chart II-4). With precious and industrial metals representing 60% of total exports, a drop in metals prices will lead to considerable deterioration in Peru's trade balance and FDI inflows will slump. The central bank is committed to maintaining a stable exchange rate due to high foreigner ownership of government local currency bonds and a still-partially dollarized economy. Hence, if the currency comes under attack, the central bank will defend the sol by selling its international reserves, which will deplete local currency liquidity (Chart II-3). Consequently, local rates will rise and banks will curtail bank loan growth, which in turn will preclude any recovery in domestic demand. Overall, the external environment and its impact on the exchange rate holds the key for a domestic-led recovery. A relapse in industrial metals and copper prices and ensuing depreciation pressure on the currency will undo the recent loosening in monetary policy and stall a potential domestic demand recovery. In terms of financial markets strategy, we recommend the following: Despite domestic demand weakness, the Peruvian equity market has been on a tear, led by banking and mining stocks. Given our negative view on industrial metals and copper prices, we recommend staying underweight Peruvian equities relative to the EM benchmark (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Terms Of Trade Dictate The Currency Chart II-5Has Peru's Relative Equity Performance Peaked? With respect to our absolute call on bank stocks and our relative trade versus Colombian banks, we recommend closing both trades with large losses. Finally, we recommend being long Peru credit relative to Brazilian sovereign credit. Public debt burden is much lower in Peru (24% of GDP) than in Brazil (74% of GDP). Andrija Vesic, Research Assistant andrijav@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report "Corporate Profits: Recession Is Bad, Deflation Is Worse," dated January 28, 2016, link available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report "Central Europe: Beware Of An Inflation Outbreak," dated June 21, 2017, and Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, dated September 6, 2017; pages 15-18; links are available on page 18. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Oil Breakout: Bond markets have been slow to discount the impact of higher oil prices on global inflation, which should lead to steeper yield curves and additional increases in inflation expectations. Trump Trade: The proposed U.S. tax cut plan will result in wider budget deficits and, potentially, faster U.S. inflation with the U.S. economy already near full employment. The Fed is likely to respond to this with even tighter monetary policy, although not by enough to flatten the Treasury curve by as much as is currently discounted. ECB Taper: The ECB will announce a slower pace of asset purchases at the policy meeting later this month, which should bear-steepen European yield curves via widening term premia on longer-dated debt. Feature A More "Normal" Bond Market Chart of the WeekLike Deja Vu All Over Again Global bond yields have bounced very sharply off the September lows. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield hit a 3-month intraday high of 2.37% yesterday, while the 10-year German Bund yield touched 0.5% last week. Bond markets have returned to focusing on traditional fundamentals, like growth and inflation, after spending a few weeks worrying about nuclear tensions with North Korea and other political matters. On that note, the global economic news continues to point towards continued solid growth, rising inflation pressures and, in response, less accommodative monetary policy. There is scope for additional increases in bond yields, as markets are still pricing in too much pessimism on inflation and too little hawkishness from central bankers. The latter is especially true in the U.S. where the Federal Reserve is sticking with its plans to deliver another 100bps of rate hikes by the end of 2018 if its growth and inflation forecasts are realized. The odds of that happening would increase substantially if the Trump Administration can successfully deliver tax cuts, which would represent a very rare occurrence of a fiscal stimulus coming at a time of full employment in the U.S. The announcement last week of the Trump tax cut proposals did send a whiff of the old "Trump trade" dynamic through financial markets. The U.S. Treasury curve bear-steepened, the U.S. dollar rallied, inflation expectations rose and the S&P 500 blasted through the 2500 level to hit a new all-time high. Stocks of companies that pay higher tax rates outperformed, just like they did after the election of President Trump nearly one year ago (Chart of the Week). Add in some additional reflationary pressure from Brent oil prices approaching $60/bbl, and it is no surprise that yield curves in most Developed Markets (not just the U.S.) steepened. With this reflationary backdrop, amid tight labor markets and a solid pace of coordinated global growth, we continue to recommend fixed income investors maintain a defensive duration posture, while favoring spread product over government bonds. Yields will continue to rise in the next 6-12 months, but led more by the long-end initially. In particular, we expect government bond yield curves to extend the recent trend of bear-steepening, for three reasons: rising inflation expectations, increased optimism on U.S. fiscal policy and what it means for the Fed, and the upcoming announcement of a tapering of bond purchases by the European Central Bank (ECB). Are Bond Investors Too Complacent On The Inflationary Impact Of Higher Oil Prices? We have received a surprisingly small amount of criticism from the BCA client base about our bearish strategic view on global government bonds in recent months. Perhaps that is because our clients also have a negative opinion on duration risk. At our annual investment conference in New York last week, we conducted polls which showed that a majority of the attendees expect the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield to rise to between 2.5% & 3% by this time next year. At the same time, only 1 in 4 respondents felt that being short duration in U.S. Treasuries was the "contrarian" trade that was most likely to succeed over next 12 months - perhaps because betting on higher yields is not really a contrarian opinion right now! Yet we wonder how aggressively investors in aggregate, and not just BCA clients, are positioned for a rising yield environment. The market is only discounting 40bps of Fed rate hikes over the next twelve months, even as the U.S. economic data flow continues to improve and the Trump Trade is coming back in style (Chart 2). Survey data shows that professional bond managers are running only small duration underweights, yet speculators are still running very net long positions in Treasury futures. In other Developed Markets, there are not a lot of rate hikes priced outside of Canada - where the central bank actually is tightening policy - despite our Central Bank Monitors all calling for policymakers to become less dovish, if not more outright hawkish, as we discussed last week.1 In their defense, bond investors have had a lot of non-economic factors to digest in the past couple of months - not the least of which is judging how much of an "apocalypse premium" to price into bond yields given the nuclear saber rattling between D.C. and Pyongyang. Yet when stepping back away from the headlines and tweets, bond markets have been noting the implications of rising oil prices in a typical manner - higher inflation expectations and steeper yield curves. Oil prices have risen over $10/bbl since the June lows, led by a combination of rising demand on the back of an expanding global economy and a diminished supply response that has seen excessive inventories start to be wound down (Chart 3). BCA's commodity strategists have been expecting such a move to unfold, and prices have already risen into the $55-60/bbl range (on Brent crude) that they were calling for towards year-end. While a move beyond $60/bbl is not currently expected, any additional upside surprises in global growth can only tighten the supply/demand balance in an oil-bullish direction. At a minimum, oil prices can consolidate recent gains, providing a floor to inflation expectations. Already, the breakeven rate on 10-year TIPS in the U.S. have risen 18bps off the June lows, which has prevented the slope of the Treasury curve from flattening even as the 2-year Treasury yield hit an 9-year high last week (Chart 4). We expect to see more bear-steepening of the Treasury curve in the next few months as realized inflation rates begin to grind higher and the Fed will be relatively slow to respond - they'll need to see the inflation pick up first before delivering more rate hikes. This will result in higher market-based inflation expectations (i.e. wider TIPS breakevens) as investors price in a greater chance that inflation will sustainably return to the Fed's 2% target. While oil is not the only factor that matters for U.S. inflation, it is a lot harder for investors to believe that core PCE inflation can rise to 2% without higher oil prices. Chart 2A Revival Of The Trump Trade? Chart 3A Bullish Supply/Demand Backdrop For Oil Chart 4Oil Vs. The U.S. Yield Curve A similar dynamic is taking place in other countries. Inflation expectations (linkers or CPI swaps) are rising alongside rising energy prices in the Euro Area (Chart 5), U.K. (Chart 6), Canada (Chart 7) and Australia (Chart 8). The moves in expectations are largest in countries experiencing stronger growth (the Euro Area and Canada), and more modest where growth is mixed (the U.K.) and where realized inflation is still very low (Australia). Yield curves have generally steepened in response to the reflationary rise in oil prices except for Canada, where the central bank has already delivered two surprise rate hikes over the summer and markets have priced in nearly three more hikes over the next year. Yet even there, global reflation will put steepening pressure on the Canadian yield curve without additional hawkishness from the Bank of Canada. Chart 5Oil Vs. The German Yield Curve Chart 6Oil Vs. The U.K. Yield Curve Chart 7Oil Vs. The Canada Yield Curve Chart 8Oil Vs. The Australia Yield Curve Japan, as always, remains the outlier to global trends. While oil prices have been rising even in yen terms, inflation expectations have remained subdued and the JGB yield curve has stayed flat (Chart 9). With the Bank of Japan targeting a 0% yield on the benchmark 10-year JGB as part of its current monetary policy framework, the link between energy prices, inflation expectations and the slope of the yield curve will remain broken in Japan. This makes JGBs a very low-beta government bond market, and we continue to recommend an overweight stance on Japan given our bias toward a defensive portfolio duration posture. Chart 9Oil Vs. The Japan Yield Curve Net-net, we see oil as continuing to provide a steepening, reflationary bias to global bond yields in the next few months, as the impact of the rise in energy prices feeds through into faster rates of headline inflation. How central banks respond will determine what curves do beyond that but, for now, the bias is towards steeper curves. Bottom Line: Bond markets have been slow to discount the impact of higher oil prices on global inflation, which should lead to steeper yield curves and additional increases in inflation expectations. How Will The Trump Tax Plan Impact The Treasury Curve? Ask The Fed Another factor that will put steepening pressure on global yield curves, especially in the U.S., is the likelihood of the Trump fiscal stimulus coming to fruition. The White House has chosen to refocus its policy efforts on getting aggressive tax cuts implemented. This is low-hanging fruit for a president that needs a legislative victory after fighting a losing battle on health care reform. Last week, the latest Trump tax plan was unveiled, which is centered on delivering large cuts on corporate taxes, reducing the number of personal income tax brackets, eliminating many large tax deductions, allowing companies to fully expense investment spending at an accelerated rate, and introducing a territorial tax system that would exempt U.S. corporate taxes on the foreign earnings of U.S. companies. The Tax Policy Center unveiled its initial assessment of the Trump tax plan last Friday, which is expected to reduce U.S. federal tax revenue by $2.4 trillion over the next ten years and another $3.2 trillion in the following decade.2 The White House is betting on so-called "dynamic scoring" of the tax plan to recoup some of that lost revenue via higher economic growth, although that is filled with unrealistic expectations to prevent an unwanted surge in federal deficits. More likely, the Trump plan would result in a major increase in federal budget deficits over the next decade, similar to the levels estimated by Moody's last year in its own analysis of the Trump fiscal platform.3 In Chart 10, we show how periods of widening federal budget deficits typically coincide with periods of U.S. Treasury curve steepening. Usually, this is merely the business cycle at work, with deficits widening during economic downturns as tax revenues plunge and counter-cyclical government expenditure increases. What is also at work is the monetary policy cycle, with the Fed delivering rate cuts during recessions when the output gap is widening and inflation pressures are diminishing, thus bull-steepening the yield curve. Chart 10Forwards Pricing Too Much UST Curve Flattening Yet the current Trump tax proposal comes at a time when the U.S. economy is operating close to full employment with the output gap essentially closed (middle panel). This means that any impetus to U.S. economic growth from the fiscal easing can cause inflation pressures to build up in a manner different than typical periods of widening budget deficits. This should initially impart steepening pressures on the Treasury curve, but in a bearish fashion via higher longer-term inflation expectations. However, the eventual path for the Treasury curve will be determined by how much the Fed responds to the fiscal easing via tighter monetary policy. Typically, the slope of the Treasury curve is highly negatively correlated to the real fed funds rate (adjusted by headline inflation), with a higher real rate coinciding with a flatter curve and vice versa (bottom panel). Right now, the market is discounting only a modest rise in real U.S. policy rates, looking at the difference between forward Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rates and forward CPI swap rates. That market-implied "real rate" is expected to stay in a modest range between 0% and 1% until well into the next decade. The Fed is also forecasting a rise in the real funds rate to 0.75%, but over a much faster time horizon - within two years - than the market. This is in the context of U.S. core inflation sustainably returning to the Fed's 2% target, which will allow the Fed to eventually raise rates to its current "terminal" rate projection of 2.75%. Thus, when simply eyeballing the relationship between real rates and the slope of the curve in Chart 10, the risk is that real rates will be higher than the market expects over time, and the Treasury curve will be flatter, all else equal. Yet when looking at the slope of the Treasury curve that is currently priced into the forwards, as shown in the bottom panel of Chart 10, a substantial flattening is already discounted over the next decade. Admittedly, the correlation between the real funds rate and the slope of the curve has changed over past decades, and the curve can likely be flatter for a lower level of real yields than in years past. Yet, even allowing for that, the market does seem to be discounting a very aggressive rise in real interest rates over the coming decade - one that is unlikely to be realized unless the Fed delivers a much higher path of interest rates then they are currently projecting. Which brings us back to the Trump fiscal stimulus. If the corporate tax cuts do provide a boost to economic growth next year via increased investment spending and hiring activity, in a way that also overheats the U.S. economy and boosts core inflation, then the Fed may be forced to raise rates at a faster pace than planned. This would result in a much flatter yield curve and would raise the risks of a recession in 2019, which is a scenario we think is highly plausible, especially if there is a change at the top of the FOMC. Late last week, it was revealed that President Trump had interviewed several candidates for the position of Fed Chair. Former Fed governor Kevin Warsh and current governor Jerome Powell were the names that caught the market's attention. Warsh has been a vocal critic of the Fed's slow unwind from the unusual post-crisis monetary policies, and is thus considered a monetary hawk who would want to raise rates higher, and faster, than the current FOMC. Powell is more pragmatic and would likely maintain the status quo at the Fed. The possibility of a more hawkish Fed chair has shown up in online prediction markets, where the "prices" of candidates that are perceived to be more hawkish (Warsh, John Taylor) rose while the prices of the more dovish candidates (Janet Yellen, Gary Cohn) fell (Chart 11). Right now, the online punters have Warsh in the lead, but the intraday "trading" has been volatile. The intersection of U.S. fiscal policy and monetary policy will be critical to determine the future path of U.S. bond yields over the next year. Right now, it appears that there is too much flattening priced into the Treasury curve relative to the expected path of the funds rate and inflation, as the Fed is unlikely to raise real rates much beyond their current projections. That could change if the Trump tax cuts can deliver a faster pace of productivity growth and higher equilibrium real interest rates. Although the post-war history of the U.S. shows that tax cuts by themselves do not raise the potential growth rate of the economy unless they lead to a major increase in investment spending, and even then the impact takes years to be seen (Chart 12). Chart 11Will The Next Fed Chair Be A Hawk? Chart 12Tax Cuts Do Not Always Boost Growth For now, we think it makes more sense to bet against the substantial flattening in the forwards by positioning for a steeper Treasury curve. Bottom Line: The proposed U.S. tax cut plan will result in wider budget deficits and, potentially, faster U.S. inflation with the U.S. economy already near full employment. The Fed is likely to respond to this with even tighter monetary policy, although not by enough to flatten the Treasury curve by as much as is currently discounted. ECB Tapering: Steepening Yield Curves Through The Term Premium The other major factor that should steepen global yield curves in the next several months is the expectation of a change in policy from the ECB. The central bank has been gently preparing the market since the early summer for a shift to a less accommodative policy stance, in response to robust economic growth and slowly rising core inflation (Chart 13). A decision on the changes to the asset purchase program will take place at the October 26th ECB policy meeting. This will involve a reduction in the monthly pace of bond buying and, likely, some guidance as to when the asset purchase program will end. A change in short-term interest rates is highly unlikely before the bond purchases have been fully tapered, as this would go against the current forward guidance from the ECB that states that interest rates will remain at low levels well after the purchases have stopped. As we have discussed throughout this year, we see the ECB having no choice but to begin tapering its asset purchase program. The deflationary tail risks from 2014/15 have faded and, perhaps more importantly, the ECB is running into operational constraints on which bonds it can continue to buy. A likely outcome will be an announcement that the pace of bond buying will slow from the current €60bn/month to least ½ of that pace starting in January 2018. At mid-year, the policy will likely be reevaluated and, if the economy has not slowed materially and/or inflation rolled over, a full tapering of the bond buying would be announced, ending at the end of 2018 or in the first quarter of 2019. A rate hike would not take place until late 2019, which is where the market is currently priced. In the absence of rate hikes, most of the impact on Euro Area bond yields from the tapering will come from a widening of the term premium on longer-maturity bonds. If the pace of growth slows to zero, this could result in the benchmark 10-year German Bund yield returning all the way back to 1% (bottom two panels). This would still be a very low yield by historical standards, in line with structurally lower growth rates and high government debt levels in Europe. But the path to that 1% yield would be very damaging for bond returns as Euro Area yield curves bear-steepen. While the link between our estimates of the term premiums in the major developed markets is not airtight, there has been a loose correlation between them during the post-crisis "quantitative easing" era (Chart 14). If recent history is any guide, a slower pace of ECB bond buying should coincide with steeper global yield curves, all else equal. All else is likely NOT equal, as an unruly response of risk assets and currency markets to a tapering could alter the likely path of growth and inflation expectations and, eventually, interest rates. But, at this moment, an ECB taper is more likely to result in steeper global yield curves. Chart 13An ECB Taper Will Result In##BR##Higher Term Premia In Europe... Chart 14...And Perhaps In Other##BR##Bond Markets, As Well Bottom Line: The ECB will announce a slower pace of asset purchases at the policy meeting later this month, which should bear-steepen European yield curves via widening term premia on longer-dated debt. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "BCA Central Bank Monitor Chartbook: The Less Dovish Rhetoric Is Justified", dated September 26th 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/sites/default/files/publication/144971/a_preliminary_analysis_of_the_unified_framework_0.pdf 3 https://www.economy.com/mark-zandi/documents/2016-06-17-Trumps-Economic-Policies.pdf Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Oil prices have hit our target, but more upside is likely. President Trump's tax proposal has arrived and the Trump trades have responded. Surging M&A activity is not a sign of a market top. The supports are all in place for a robust period of U.S. capital spending. We expect another solid earnings season in Q3, with little impact from the hurricanes. Feature The S&P 500, Treasury yields and the dollar all rose last week, with the S&P hitting a new all-time high, even as 10-year Treasury yields hit a 2-month high. The sweet spot for risk assets has been extended by the rise in oil prices and rising prospects for tax cuts in the U.S. M&A activity will continue, which is market bullish because it has not yet reached frothy levels. Moreover, capex is blasting off, which will give growth (and EPS) another boost. The downtrends in both Treasury yields and the dollar this year are over, and they both have more upside given that economic growth and underlying inflation are both improving. Moreover, the FOMC is still in a position to deliver on a December rate hike with 2-3 additional hikes in 2018, which will be a wake-up call for bonds and will reverse this year's dollar weakness. More Upside In Oil Prices Last week, both Brent ($57.50/bbl) and WTI ($51.60/bbl) hit the midpoints of the ranges set by our commodity and energy strategists earlier this year. This milestone provides us with an opportunity to revisit BCA's stance on the oil market. OPEC's deal to cut production will be extended to at least June 2018. Based on BCA's latest assessment of the global oil market,1 OPEC 2.0 will fall short of reducing visible inventories to their 5-year average if the coalition's production cut agreement expires which was initially agreed upon in March 2018. Extending OPEC 2.0's cuts through December 2018 would nudge OECD commercial inventories closer to levels originally targeted by OPEC 2.0 at the end of last year (Chart 1). Therefore, in 2018 we expect WTI to average slightly less than $57.50/bbl and Brent to average just under $59/bbl. Accordingly, there is a higher risk that prices will exceed the upper end of our WTI range ($45/bbl to $65/bbl) with greater frequency next year. Furthermore, BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy team has raised its global oil demand forecasts for both 2017 and 2018; increased demand will support prices in the next 12 months (Chart 2). Chart 1OPEC 2.0 Needs To Extend Cuts,##BR##To Reduce Global Inventories Chart 2Base Case For BCA Oil Supply-Demand Balances##BR##Reflects June 2018 Expiry Of OPEC 2.0 Cuts Geopolitical risks in Iraq and an escalation in supply disruptions add to BCA's bullish view. The Kurd's vote for independence from Iraq last week will elevate tensions in the region and could trigger a civil war. If a war breaks out over Kirkuk, it will lead to production cuts. Furthermore, civil war in Iraq would reduce the flow of FDI into Iraq's oil infrastructure, further crimping output. Moreover, Russia, which supports the Kurd's fight, would also benefit from high oil prices. Oil production wildcards in 2017 mostly favored more oil output. However, in 2018, supply disruptions will curtail global oil output. Bottom Line: Additional supply cuts, higher demand, elevated tensions in Iraq and a normal spate of supply disruptions, all suggest that there is upside risk to our $45-$65 stance on WTI. A risk to this forecast is a sharply higher dollar linked to expansionary fiscal policy. Tax Cuts Imminent Chart 3Trump Trades Making A Comeback As BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service predicted last month, President Trump's long-awaited tax plan will likely be enacted in Q1 2018. Trump and the Republicans in Congress, still desperate for a legislative win after again failing to repeal and replace Obamacare, introduced the proposal last week. However, the plan must clear several hurdles before it becomes law. First, the proposals may run afoul of both deficit hawks and moderates in the Congress' Republican caucus. The initial framework has tax decreases, but no revenue or spending offsets. The implication is that the package would blow out the deficit, alienating the fiscal conservatives. Moderates may not like the lack of cuts for the middle class. Democrats have not yet had their say. The CBO still must score the legislation, and even with dynamic scoring2 which counts on stronger economic growth to boost revenues and reduce outlays for automatic stabilizers and some social programs, it will add to the deficit. This may also cause an uproar in Congress. Nonetheless, on a positive note, Trump has the support of the influential House Ways and Means Committee, as well as the Senate Finance Committee. This was not the case with the Obamacare repeal and replace when the President and his GOP allies were at odds. First and foremost, the GOP-led Congress needs to pass a budget resolution, expected by the end of October. Congress considers the President's request as it formulates a budget resolution, which both houses of Congress must pass. Bottom Line: Investors should watch the response of Congressional Republicans to Trump's tax proposals. A lukewarm reception would indicate that investors' renewed optimism may be premature. The Trump trades have made a comeback in the past two weeks and will continue to be profitable if the current proposal (or something similar) is signed into law in Q1 2018 (Chart 3). If Trump and the GOP could extend the tax cuts into broader tax reform, it would provide a lift to corporate M&A activity. Little Froth From M&A Market U.S. merger and acquisition (M&A) volume peaked along with U.S. equity prices in the late 1990s and mid-2000s, but another top in the current deal market does not signal a top in equity prices. Deal volume (in dollars) and relative to market cap peaked in 1999, again in 2007, and more recently in mid-2015, before a 13% pullback in the S&P 500 in late 2015 and early 2016 (Chart 4). Although not shown on the chart, deal volume surpassed its late 1980s' pinnacle in 1995, five years before equity markets reached record highs in 2000. Through August, corporate takeovers relative to GDP matched those prior heights, but remained below the 1999, 2007 and 2015 tops as a percentage of market cap. Furthermore, global or cross-border M&A, a better indicator of market zest than U.S.-only activity, has not eclipsed the peaks in 2007. Measured against both global GDP and market cap, worldwide corporate combinations are below their 2015 zenith and well below the 2007 peak. At just 7% in 2016, the GDP-based metric was significantly under the mid-2000s pinnacle of 10%. That said, it is difficult to analyze this in context as the time series does not reach back to the late 1990s, which were the boom years for M&A. Bottom Line: Booming M&A activity is not a sign of froth in equity markets but it is a sign that animal spirts are stirring. Overall net equity withdrawal (which includes the net impact of IPOs, share buybacks, and M&A) has not been out of line with previous economic expansions (Chart 5). Stay overweight stocks versus bonds. The uptrend in capital spending is another sign of a shift in animal spirits. Chart 4Roaring M&A Volume Not##BR##A Sign Of A Market Peak Chart 5Comparison Of Corporate Outlays Across Four Economic Expansion Phases Capital Spending Blasting Off The capital spending outlook remains bright despite the recent loss of momentum in industrial production, as indicated by BCA's aggregate for IP in the advanced economies (Chart 6). This is disconcerting because global and regional industrial production are important indicators of both economic growth and corporate earnings. The recent softening is due to a few factors. Much of it is linked to weakness in the U.S. where hurricanes affected the August figures. However, most of our leading indicators remain constructive. Chart 7 presents simple models for real GDP growth for the G4 economies based on our household and capital spending indicators. Real GDP growth will continue to accelerate for the G4 economies, according to the model. BCA's aggregate consumer indicator for the G4 appears to have peaked, but the capex indicator is blasting off. The bullish capital spending reading is unanimous across the major economies. Robust capital goods imports for our 20-country aggregate supports the view that "animal spirits" are stirring in boardrooms in the advanced economies. These imports and BCA's capital spending indicators suggest that the small pullback in advanced-economy industrial production will not last, purchasing managers' indexes will remain elevated, and the acceleration in global export activity is only starting (Chart 7). Despite the lack of progress in Washington on repealing Obamacare and enacting tax cuts, even the U.S. small business sector has shifted into a higher gear in terms of hiring and capital spending, according to the NFIB survey (not shown). Moreover, both BCA's real and nominal U.S. capex models, driven by sturdy capital goods orders, elevated ISM readings and surging sentiment on capex, point to strong business spending in the next few quarters (Chart 8). Chart 6Animal Spirits Are Stirring... Chart 7...Contributing To Stronger G4 Economic Growth Chart 8Prospects For U.S. Capex Are Good Bottom Line: Business capital spending remains sturdy and it will lift overall GDP in 2H despite the recent severe weather. BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy strategists note3 that U.S. industrial machinery manufacturers should be particularly well positioned to see earnings growth outpace the rest of the S&P 500. Stay overweight industrials. Moreover, above-potential GDP growth will keep the Fed on track for gradual tightening this year, and supports BCA's position of stocks over bonds. Stout capital spending will be a theme as the Q3 earnings season unfolds in the next six weeks. Will Hurricanes Impact Q3 Earnings? Chart 9Strong EPS Growth Ahead,##BR##Will Start To Slow Soon The Q3 earnings season will be above average and the BCA Earnings model predicts EPS growth will hit roughly 20% later this year on a 4-quarter moving total basis, before moderating in 2018 (Chart 9). The consensus anticipates a 6% year-over-year increase in EPS in Q3 2017 versus Q3 2016, and 12% for 2017. Energy and technology will likely lead the way in earnings growth in Q3, and utilities and telecom will again be the laggards. The favorable profit picture for Q3 and the rest of the year partly reflects the rebound in oil prices, which are expected to swell the energy sector's EPS by 134%. The positive picture also mirrors the sweet spot of rising top-line growth and still muted labor costs, which are driving a countercyclical rally in profit margins. Investors and corporate executives will focus in Q3 on the improving economic conditions in Europe and the EM, the U.S. dollar, the sustainability of margins, and the impact of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. President Trump's tax proposal will also be vetted during conference call Q&A's, as investors drill managements on the implications of tax cuts on their operations. Rising interest rates may also demand attention from some analysts because the 10-year Treasury yield in Q3 2017 was 45 bps above Q2 2016 and rose sharply in the final weeks of the third quarter. Guidance from CEOs and CFOs on trends in Q4 2017 and beyond are more important than the actual Q3 results (Chart 10). Investors should guard against managements' over-optimism because earnings growth forecasts almost always move lower over time. Chart 10Unusual Stability In '17 And '18 EPS Estimates In Q3, as in Q2, firms with elevated overseas sales should benefit from the improved growth profile in Europe, Japan and the EM. Global GDP growth projections for this year and next have steadily perked up, in sharp contrast with prior years when forecasters have relentlessly lowered GDP estimates. The U.S. dollar, which has been only a small drag on EPS in recent quarters, should become a modest plus in Q3; the dollar is down by 3% versus a year ago against a broad basket of currencies. Moreover, in the most recent Beige Book (September 6), mentions of a "strong dollar" declined by 4% compared with a year ago, indicating that the stronger currency has faded as a primary concern of managements in recent months. Nonetheless, BCA's view is that the dollar will appreciate by another 10% in the next 12-18 months. The appreciation would trim EPS growth by roughly 2.5 percentage points, although most of this would occur next year due to lagged effects. Another up leg in the dollar, on its own, should not provide a substantial headwind for the stock market. Indeed, the dollar would only climb in the context of robust U.S. economic growth and an expanding corporate top line. The timely enactment of Trump's tax proposal would boost the greenback. Investors are skeptical that margins can advance in Q3 for the fifth consecutive quarter. BCA's view is that we are in a temporary sweet spot for margins, which should continue for the next quarter or two, but the secular "mean reversion" of margins will resume beyond that time. The effect of Harvey and Irma on Q3 results will be muted for the S&P 500 and most sectors, but several weather-sensitive industries (insurance, airlines, chemicals, refining, leisure, etc.) will see significant disruptions. Charts 11A and 11B show that the impact of major hurricanes does not alter the pre-landfall trajectory of S&P 500 earnings forecasts. Earnings estimates for the energy, industrial and utilities sectors (relative to the S&P) tend to move higher after storms, while relative EPS growth in the materials and staples sectors lag behind. Chart 11AImpact Of Major Hurricanes##BR##On Forward EPS Estimates... Chart 11B...Is Muted For S&P 500##BR##And Most Sectors Bottom Line: Look for another solid performance for earnings and margins in Q3 and the rest of 2017, supporting our stocks-over-bonds stance for this year. However, it may be tougher sledding in 2018 when earnings growth begins to moderate and margins begin to "mean revert". Higher inflation, a more active Fed and a stronger dollar will be headwinds for earnings starting in the early part of 2018. FOMC Unified Yet Divided Chart 12Recent Inflation Readings##BR##Challenge The Fed's View U.S. inflation is likely to trend higher over the coming months as a variety of one-off factors that depressed inflation earlier this year fall out of the equation. That said, the August PCE deflator challenges that view (Chart 12). Core PCE inflation slowed further to 1.3%, down from 1.4% last month. In fact, core PCE inflation of 1.3% is at the exact same level as when the Fed delivered its first rate hike in December 2015. Moreover, the diffusion index dipped back to zero, implying the price weakness was widespread. The rollover in the PCE this year is consistent with the soft CPI readings. However, Fed officials highlight the trend in underlying inflation (Chart 12, panel 4) as they make the case for gradual rate hikes. Risk assets are unlikely to suffer if inflation rises towards the Fed's target against the backdrop of stronger growth. However, if inflation moves above the Fed's target due to brewing supply bottlenecks, the Fed will have little choice but to pick up the pace of rate hikes. This could unsettle markets and sow the seeds for the next recession, which we tentatively expect to occur in the second half of 2019. The market is pricing in only 42 basis points of hikes between now and the end of next year. FOMC voting members agree that the path for the normalization of monetary policy should be gradual. However, the path of inflation has provoked squabbling in the past month (Diagram 1) in the Fed and regional branches. Even though the Fed is path-dependent rather than data-dependent, the consensus remains that low inflation is due to temporary factors and higher consumer prices should soon rebound, justifying a December 2017 rate hike. FRBNY President William Dudley remains committed to further gradual rate hikes, although he has been recently surprised by the shortfall of inflation from the FOMC's 2% long-run objective. Fed Chair Janet Yellen confidently backed Dudley's optimism, stating that "low inflation likely reflects factors whose influence should fade over time." But she also struck a cautious tone by highlighting the risks around the uncertainty for the inflation outlook. Yellen even conceded that the Fed would not rule out pausing its gradual rate hike cycle given that they "may have misjudged the strength of the labor market, the degree to which longer-run inflation expectations are consistent with the inflation objective, or even fundamental forces driving inflation". Diagram 1Unified On Gradual Path But Divided On Inflation Path To manage risks, Chair Yellen offered a prescription of scenarios to strengthen the case for a gradual path: "Moving too quickly risks over adjusting policy to head off projected developments that may not come to pass. A gradual approach is particularly appropriate in light of subdued inflation and a low neutral real interest rate, which imply that the FOMC will have only limited scope to cut the federal funds rate should the economy be hit with an adverse shock. But we should also be wary of moving too gradually. Without further modest increases in the federal funds rate over time, there is a risk that the labor market could eventually become overheated, potentially creating an inflationary problem down the road that might be difficult to overcome without triggering a recession." In contrast, dovish FOMC members are apprehensive about the outlook for higher inflation. Governor Lael Brainard, known for her influence on the consensus at the FOMC, needs more confirmation that inflation is moving towards the 2% objective. FRB Chicago President Charles Evans, a dove, but mostly in line with the FOMC consensus, also is skeptical about inflation overshooting its 2% target and is worried about a potential policy mistake. Even FRB Minneapolis President Kashkari, the most dovish and a known dissenter, does not see inflation spiraling out of control given that the economy is unlikely to overheat anytime soon. Not surprising, FOMC hawks Esther George (Kansas City) and Patrick Harker (Philadelphia) noted in speeches late last week that policy was still accommodative and that gradual rate hikes are in order. Ultimately, a pickup in inflation is required to convince the doves at the Fed that even gradual rate hikes are required. BCA's stance is that inflation will pick up over the next year as the unemployment rate falls further and the output gap closes. Bottom Line: The Fed is likely to raise rates in December and three or four more times in 2018. We recommend investors remain underweight duration. Nonetheless, the Treasury market remains unconvinced about the Fed's view on rates and inflation. The implication for investors is that although 10-year Treasury bond yields have risen sharply in recent weeks, we see more upside in yields. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Jizel Georges, Senior Analyst jizelg@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "OPEC 2.0 Will Extend Cuts To June 2018," September 21, 2017. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Reconciliation And The Markets - Warning: This Report May Put You To Sleep," May 31, 2017. Available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Research's U.S. Equity Strategy Insight "Accelerating Global Manufacturing Means More Machines", dated September 22, 2017. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Recommendation Allocation The global growth outlook remains strong, with corporate earnings likely to beat expectations for a couple more quarters. Inflation and Fed policy are key to asset allocation. We expect inflation to recover, which will push up interest rates and the dollar. But uncertainty is rising too: for example the composition of the FOMC next year, Chinese policy post the Party Congress, Geopolitics. We keep our pro-risk tilts, particularly overweights in euro area and Japanese equities, U.S. high-yield bonds, private equity, and cyclical sectors. But we reduce portfolio risk by bringing some allocations closer to benchmark, for example downgrading U.S. equities to neutral and reducing the underweight in EM. Feature Overview Growth Is Picking Up - But So Is Uncertainty The outlook for global economic growth remains almost unarguably positive (Chart 1). The key for asset allocation, then, comes down to whether inflation in the U.S. will rebound, and whether therefore the Fed will continue to tighten monetary policy in line with its current projections. This would likely cause long-term interest rates to rise and the dollar to appreciate, which would be positive for developed market equities and credit, but negative for government bonds, emerging market equities and commodities. This scenario has been our expectation - and the basis of our recommendations - for some time, and it remains so. In September, the market started coming around to our view - after months of pricing in that inflation would stay sluggish (which, therefore, had caused the euro and yen, government bonds, EM equities and commodities to perform well). In just a couple of weeks, the futures-market-priced probability of a December Fed hike has moved from 31% to 75%. This was triggered by little more than stabilization of core CPI (Chart 2), due mainly to shelter inflation, which anyway has a low weight in the core PCE inflation data that the Fed most closely watches. To us, this demonstrates just how sensitive the market is to any slight pickup in inflation, due to the fact that its expectations of Fed rate hikes over the next 12 months are so far below what the FOMC is signaling (Chart 3). Chart 1Lead Indicators Looking Good Chart 2Is The Softness In Inflation Over? Chart 3The Market Still Doesn't Believe The Fed However, a risk to BCA's view is that the Fed turns dovish. Even Janet Yellen, in the press conference after the FOMC meeting on 20 September, admitted that the Fed needs "to figure out whether the factors that have lowered inflation are likely to prove persistent". If they do, she said, "it would require an alteration of monetary policy." FOMC member (and notable dove) Lael Brainard, in an important speech earlier in September, laid out the argument that, since inflation has missed the Fed's 2% target for five years, inflation expectations have been damaged (Chart 4) and that only a period during which inflation overshot could repair them. With Yellen's term due to expire next February and four other vacancies on the FOMC, personnel changes could significantly change the Fed's direction. Online prediction sites give a somewhat high probability to President Trump's replacing Yellen, with (the rather more hawkish) Kevin Warsh, a Fed governor in 2006-11 (Chart 5). However, presidents tend to like loose monetary policy - President Trump has said as much himself - which raises the possibility of his trying to steer the Fed in a direction that is more tolerant of rising inflation. A possible scenario, then, is of an accommodative Fed which allows equities markets to have a final meltup for this cycle, similar to 1999. Chart 4Have Inflation Expectations Been Damaged? Chart 5Who Will Trump Choose To Lead The Fed? Another current source of uncertainty is China. Money supply growth there has slowed sharply this year, after being pushed upwards by the government's reflationary policies in late 2015. This historically has been a good lead indicator of growth and, indeed, many cyclical indicators have surprised to the downside recently (Chart 6). It is also hard to predict whether, after October's five-yearly Communist Party congress, newly re-elected President Xi Jinping will move ahead with implementing structural reforms, even at the expense of a short-term slowdown of growth.1 We continue to think that risk assets have further upside for this cycle. Growth is likely to remain strong, the probability of a U.S. tax cut is rising, and corporate earnings should surprise to the upside for another couple of quarters (Q3 S&P500 EPS consensus forecasts remain cautious at 5% YoY, versus our model which suggests double-digit growth). Nonetheless, the cycle is now mature, global equities have already produced a total return of almost 40% since their recent bottom in February last year, and valuations in almost every asset class are stretched (Chart 7). Moreover, geopolitical risks - such as that from North Korean missiles - will not disappear quickly. We continue to pencil in the possibility of a recession in 2019 or 2020, caused by a sharp rise in inflation, especially in the U.S., which the Fed - whoever is running it - would have to stamp on by raising rates above the equilibrium level. Chart 6Is A Downturn Coming In China? Chart 7Nothing Looks Cheap Therefore, on the 12-month horizon we continue to recommend pro-risk and pro-cyclical positioning, for example an overweight in equities versus fixed income. However, given the rising uncertainty, we are reducing the scale of our bets a little and so, for example among our equity country and regional recommendations, move a little closer to benchmark by lowering the U.S. to neutral and reducing the degree of our underweight in EM. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com What Our Clients Are Asking How worried should we be about North Korea? Chart 8Threats - But Eventually A Diplomatic Solution President Obama reportedly warned President Trump just prior to inauguration that North Korea would be his biggest headache. After 15 missile launches and a nuclear test this year (Chart 8, panel 1), investors are beginning to think the same. How big is the risk that the tension turns into warfare? BCA's Geopolitical strategists have written about the subject extensively.2 They conclude that military action is unlikely. An U.S. attack on North Korean missile or nuclear sites would simply provoke an attack with conventional weapons on Seoul, which is only 50 km from the border. Kim Jong-un undoubtedly knows that if he were to attack Guam or Japan, his country would be wiped out. In the end, then, a diplomatic solution is likely - but this will only be achieved after tension has risen sufficiently to force the two sides to the negotiating table. The analogy is Iran in 2012-15, where sanctions finally forced it to agree to a 10-year freeze in its nuclear plans. For the moment, sanctions seem unlikely to bite. North Korea's trade with China is not yet notably slowing (Chart 8, panel 2) and its GDP growth actually accelerated last year, albeit from stagnating levels, according to estimates from the Bank of Korea (Chart 8, panel 3). So the cycle of new threats and tougher sanctions will continue for a while. Historically, North Korean provocations caused related markets (such as South Korea stocks) to fall sharply for a few days, but this always represented a buying opportunity (Chart 8, panel 4). Given the likelihood of a diplomatic outcome, we think this remains a good rule of thumb. What will happen after China's 19th Party Congress, and will there be a slowdown in the economy? China's twice-a-decade National Party Congress will be held October 18-25. The outcome of the meeting could have important economic and market consequences. The key purpose of the Congress is to rotate China's political leaders. The 19th Party Congress is crucial because it marks the passing of a generation: President Xi Jinping will receive a second five-year term, but is predicted to consolidate his power by placing a younger generation of leaders who support his structural reforms into key positions. When Xi came to power, his reform agenda included de-emphasizing GDP targets; injecting private capital, competition and market discipline into the state-owned corporate sector; and fighting pollution. This agenda has since been compromised, with Xi reverting to infrastructure spending and credit growth to avoid painful adjustments. However, recently, there have been signs of a pullback in reflationary policies (Chart 9). Financial tightening is a key to reviving reform. Tighter controls on banks and leverage will translate into greater market discipline, and will put pressure on the sector most in need of change: SOEs. During the twice-a-decade National Financial Work Conference In late July, Yang Weimin, a key economic policymaker who is close to Xi, said, "The nation can't let leverage rise for the purpose of boosting economic expansion," signaling that the administration is willing to tackle difficult reform issues. He also mentioned the potential risks in the economy such as shadow banking, property bubbles, high leverage in SOEs, and local government debt, adding that the nation should set out its priorities and tackle them. Though it is impossible to predict the precise outcome of the Congress, the leadership reshuffle is likely to benefit Xi's reform agenda. The new leadership is likely to work on rebalancing growth toward consumption and services while encouraging private entrepreneurship and cutting back state-owned enterprises and, most importantly, deleveraging corporate debt. If China's credit impulse rolls over, the recent improvement in industrial profits and domestic demand will come under threat (Chart 9). As a result, China's cyclical growth is set to slow in 2018 as Xi reboots reform. Although economic risks will rise as the reform takes place, we still believe China H shares are attractive relative to other EM markets. In the long run, Xi's renewed reform drive should help China to get out of the "middle income trap'', which could help Chinese stocks to outperform EMs such as South Africa, Turkey and Brazil, where reforms are absent.3 Are Indian equities still a buy? In the three years since Prime Minister Narendra Modi's election, Indian stock prices have outperformed their emerging market peers by more than 20%. But the underlying growth dynamics do not justify this performance. We are turning cautious on India and downgrade Indian equities to neutral for the following reasons. India's GDP growth rate fell to a three-year low of 5.7% yoy in the April-June quarter. The administration's "Make In India" campaign is having limited impact, as seen in the near-zero growth of the manufacturing sector. Capital spending by firms has been dismal, further weighing on the outlook for productivity. Increasing layoffs and business shutdowns have produced considerable slack in the economy. Non-performing loans in the banking system have reached 11.8% of assets. As a result, credit growth to business has fallen almost to zero. This has slowed infrastructure development, as seen in the high level of stalled capital projects. The Reserve Bank of India has only just started the process of pushing banks to raise provisioning for distressed assets. The negative impact of last year's demonetization program is finally showing through. Less than 10% of Indians have ever used non-cash payment methods, and so demand for cyclical goods is slowing. Finally, Indian stocks have risen significantly in recent years, making them expensive relative to EM peers. In addition, profit growth has slowed, and return on equity converged with the EM average. Indian equities have been riding on expectations of reforms from the Modi administration. But, with the exception of the Goods & Services Tax (GST), the reform progress has been disappointing. We are turning cautious on Indian equities until we see improvements in the macro backdrop (Chart 10). Chart 9Sign of slowdown in Chinese Economy Chart 10India: Loosing Steam? How should global equity investors hedge foreign currency exposures? Chart 11Dynamic Hedging Outperforms Static Hedging There have been many conflicting views on how to hedge foreign currency exposures in a global equity portfolio. Full hedge,4 no hedge,5 or simply 50% hedge?6 Or should all investors hold the reserve currencies (USD, euro and Swiss Franc), avoid commodities currencies (AUD and CAD) while being neutral on GBP and JPY?7 As published in a Special Report 8 on September 29, 2017, our research has found that not only should investors with different home currencies manage their foreign currency exposures differently, but also a dynamic hedging framework based on the indicators from BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy service's Intermediate Timing Model (ITTM)9 outperforms all the static hedging strategies for all investors with six different home currencies (USD, EUR, JPY, GBP, AUD and CAD) (Chart 11). A few key observations from Chart 11 Static hedges reduces risk with little impact on returns for the USD and JPY investors only. Unlike the CAD investors, the AUD investors are much better off to hedge than not to, on a risk adjusted basis, even though AUD is also a commodity currencies, like the CAD. The 50% "least regret" hedge ratio has lived up to its reputation as it reduced risk by more than 50% without severely jeopardizing returns. And for the USD based investors, the 50% static hedge has a similar risk/return profile as the dynamic hedge. For all other five home currencies, however, the 50% static hedge underperforms the dynamic hedge. Global Economy Overview: Globally growth has accelerated, with inflation quiescent. We expect growth to continue to be strong, but U.S. inflation will start to normalize, which should trigger further Fed hikes and a rise in long-term rates. Japanese and euro zone growth will be less inflationary, given continued slack in these economies. U.S.: Growth has rebounded sharply after the seasonally weak Q1 and excessive expectations following the presidential election. The Citi Economic Surprise Index (Chart 12, panel 1) shows strong upward surprises. First-half GDP growth came in at 2.2% (above trend, which is estimated at 1.8%), and the manufacturing ISM reached 57.7 in September. The two big hurricanes will probably knock around 0.5 points off Q3 growth but the lesson from previous disasters is that this will be more than made up over the following three quarters. Rebounding capex, and consumption aided by a probable acceleration in wages, should keep GDP growth strong. Euro Area: Due to Europe's greater cyclicality and dependence on the global cycle, growth momentum is unsurprisingly even stronger than in the U.S., with Q2 GDP growth 2.3% YoY and the manufacturing PMI at 57.4. German growth has been particularly robust with the IFO index at 115.9, close to an all-time high, and German manufacturing wages growing by 2.9% YoY. The credit impulse suggests that the strong growth should continue, although the euro appreciation this year (and consequent tightening of financial conditions) might dampen it a little. Japan: Growth continues to be good in the external sector (with exports rising 18% YOY and industrial production 5%), but weak in the domestic economy, where household spending and core inflation continue to flatline. We do, though, see some first tentative signs of inflation: the Bank of Japan's estimate suggests the output gap has now closed, and the tight labor market is showing through in part-time hourly wages, which are rising 2.9%. Emerging Markets: China's PMI has oscillated around 50 all year (Chart 13, panel 3), as the authorities tried to stabilize growth ahead of October's Party Congress. But money supply and credit growth have been slowing all year, and this is now showing through in downside surprises in fixed asset investment and retail sales data. Especially if the congress moves towards structural reform and short-term pain, growth may slow further. This would be negative for other emerging markets, which depend on China for growth. Bank loan growth and domestic consumption generally remain weak throughout EM ex China. Chart 12Global Growth Is Accelerating... Chart 13...Propelling Europe And Japan Interest Rates: Inflation has been soft this year in the U.S. but is likely to pick up in coming months reflecting stronger economic growth and dollar depreciation. We expect the Fed to raise rates in December and confirm its three hikes next year. That should be enough to push the 10-year Treasury yield up to close to 3%. In Japan and the euro area, however, underlying inflationary pressures are much weaker. So we expect the Bank of Japan to stick to its yield curve control policy, and for the ECB to emphasize, when it announces in October next year's (reduced) asset purchase program, that it will be cautious about raising rates. Global Equities Chart 14Earnings Have Been Strong... Q3 2017 was the second quarter in a row when the price appreciation in global equities was driven entirely by earnings growth, since the forward price-to-earnings ratio contracted by 2% compared to Q2 (Chart 14). Chart 15No Compelling Reasons To Make Large Bets The scope of the improvement in earnings so far in 2017 has been wide. Not only are forward earnings being revised up, but 12-month trailing earnings growth has also been very strong, with all 10 top-level sectors registering positive earnings growth. Margins have steadily improved globally from the lows in early 2016. Despite the slight multiple compression in Q3, equity valuations are not cheap by historical standards. As an asset class, however, equities are still attractively valued compared to bonds, especially after the recent safe-haven buying drove global bond yields to very depressed levels. We remain overweight equities versus bonds on the 9-12 month horizon. Within equities, however, we think it's prudent to reduce portfolio risk by bringing allocations closer to benchmark weighting because 1) equities are not cheap, 2) volatility is low, 3) geopolitical tension is rising, and 4) year-on-year earnings growth over coming quarters may not be as strong as it has been so far this year because earnings in the first half of the 2016 were very depressed. As such, we downgrade the U.S. to neutral from overweight (+3 percentage points), and reduce the underweight in EM (to -2 from -5). We remain overweight the euro area and Japan (but hedge the yen exposure). Within EM, we have been more positive on China and remain so on a 6-9 month horizon. Sector-wise, we maintain our pro-cyclical tilt. Country Allocations: Downgrade U.S. To Neutral We started the year being "cautiously optimistic" with a maximum overweight (+6 ppts) in U.S. equities.10 We added risk at the end of the first quarter by reducing by half the U.S. overweight in order to upgrade the higher-beta euro area to overweight (+3) from neutral.11 The change has worked well, as the euro area outperformed the U.S. by 542 basis points (bps) in Q2 and then by 370 bps in Q3 in unhedged USD terms. Our DM-only quant model also started the year with a maximum overweight in the U.S., but the overweight was gradually reduced each month until July when the model indicated a benchmark weight for the U.S. The model continued its shift away from the U.S. in August and September, and now the U.S. is the largest underweight in the model. As we have previously stated, we use the quant model as one key input into our decision-making process, but we do not follow it slavishly because 1) no model can capture all the ever-changing driving forces in the market, and 2) the model moves more often than we prefer. In light of the rising geopolitical risks and low levels of volatility in all asset classes, we conclude that there are no longer compelling reasons to make large bets among the countries (Chart 15). Valuation in the U.S. is stretched, but neither is it cheap in EM anymore; both trailing and forward earnings growth in the U.S. are below the global average. Forward earnings in the EM look likely to outpace the global average, but EM trailing earnings growth seems to be losing steam. As such, we recommend investors to be neutral in the U.S. and use the funds to reduce the underweight in EM. Sector Allocation: Stay Underweight Global Utilities Overall, our sector positioning retains its tilt towards cyclicals and against defensives (see Table 1). Our global sector quant model, however, in September reduced its underweight in defensives by upgrading utilities to overweight from underweight, mainly due to the momentum factor. We have decided to overwrite the model result and maintain our underweight recommendation for the following reasons. In October, the model again downgraded utilities to underweight. In the most recent cycle post the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), the relative performance of utilities has been closely correlated with the performance of bonds vs. equities (Chart 16, top panel). This is not surprising given the bond-like nature of the sector. The sector enjoys a higher dividend yield than the global average: other than during the GFC, the excess yield has been in the range of 1-2%. In a low bond-yield environment, this yield pick-up is no doubt attractive. However, our house view is for global bond yields to rise over the next 9-12 months and we maintain our overweight on equities vs. bonds. As such, underweight utilities is in line with our overall risk/return assessment. In addition, even though the utilities sector has a higher dividend yield, the current reading is not particularly attractive compared to the five-year average (panel 4); valuation measures such as price to book (panel 3) show a neutral reading as well. The other sector where we override our quant model is Healthcare, which we favor as a long-term play because of favorable demographic trends, while the quant model points to an underweight due to short-term factors such as momentum and valuation. Smart Beta Update Year-to-date, the equal-weighted multi-factor portfolio has outperformed the global benchmark by 54 basis point (bps). (Table 1 and Chart 17) Among the five most enduring factors - size, value, quality, minimum volatility, and momentum - momentum is the only factor that has prevailed in both DM and EM universes, while quality has outperformed in the DM, but underperformed in EM. (Table 1) Chart 16Maintain Underweight Utilities Chart 17MSCI ACW: Factor Relative Performance Value has underperformed growth across the board (Table 1). The size performance, however, has large regional divergences in both value and growth spaces. Small cap has outperformed large cap consistently in both the value and growth spaces in the higher-beta euro area, Japan and U.K., while underperforming in the lower-beta U.S. (Table 2) We maintain our neutral view on styles and prefer to use sector positioning to implement the underlying factors given the historically close correlation between styles and cyclicals versus defensives (Chart 17, bottom two panels). Year-to-date cyclicals have outperformed defensives (Table 1). Table 1YTD Relative Performance* Table 2YTD Total Returns* (%) Small Cap - Large Cap Government Bonds Maintain Slight Underweight Duration. U.S. bond yields declined significantly in Q3 to below fair-value levels in response to heightened geopolitical risks and hurricanes (Chart 18, top panel). This safe-haven buying spread globally, despite ample evidence of faster global growth (middle panel) and less accommodative monetary policies from the major central banks. There is now considerable upside risk for global bond yields from these current low levels. Maintain Overweight TIPS Vs. Treasuries. The fall in nominal U.S. Treasury yields, however, was concentrated in the real yields, as 10-year break-even inflation widened in Q3 (Chart 18, panel 3). In terms of relative value, TIPS are now fairly valued vs. nominal bonds. However, our U.S. Bond Strategy's core PCE model, which closely tracks the 10-year TIPS breakeven rate (Chart 18, panel 3), is sending the message that inflationary pressures are building in the economy and that core PCE should reach the Fed's 2% target by the end of this year. This suggests that the bond markets are not providing adequate compensation for the inflationary economic backdrop. Underweight Canadian Government Bonds. The Bank of Canada (BOC) delivered another surprise 25 bps rate hike in September, due to "the impressive strength of the Canadian economy" and "the more synchronized global expansion that was supporting higher industrial commodity prices." BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy has been underweight Canada in its hedged global portfolio and recommends investors not to fight the BOC despite little inflation pressure in the Canadian economy (Chart 19). Chart 18Poor Value in Nominal Government Bonds Chart 19Bank of Canada: Shock Hawks Corporate Bonds As inflation recovers and the Fed moves ahead with rate hikes, we expect long-term risk-free rates to rise moderately. Fair value for the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is currently close to 2.7%. In the context of rising rates and continued economic expansion, we continue to prefer spread product over government bonds. Investment grade bonds in the U.S. trade at an average option-adjusted spread over Treasuries of 110 bps. While Aaa corporate spreads are expensive, other investment grade credit tiers appear fairly valued. Given the deterioration in our U.S. Corporate Health Monitor (Chart 20), amid a rise in leverage, over the past two years (Chart 21) we do not expect the spread to contract further or fall back close to historic lows. However, investors should still be moderately attracted by the carry in a low interest rate environment. Our preference is for U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds over European ones, since the latter could be negatively impacted when the ECB announces its tapering of asset purchases in October. High-yield bonds look attractive after a small rise in spreads and an improvement in the cyclical outlook over the past quarter. The current spread of U.S. high-yield, 360 bps, translates into a default-adjusted yield (assuming a 2.6% default rate and 49% recovery rate over the next 12 months) of 250 bps - close to the long-run average (Chart 22). European junk debt looks less attractive from a valuation perspective. Chart 20Corporate Health Is A Worry In The U.S. Chart 21IG Spreads Unlikely To Contract Further Chart 22High-Yield Debt Valuations Look Attractive Commodities Chart 23Mixed View Towards Commodities Secular perspective: Bearish We hold a bearish secular outlook for commodities, mainly due to our view on China's slowing economic growth and the increasing shift from traditional energy sources to alternatives. Cyclical perspective: Neutral Our short-term commodities view remains neutral since oil inventory drawdowns will push up the crude oil price further, and because low real interest rates will keep gold from falling this year. But industrial metals are likely to react negatively to the winding down of China's reflation after the Party Congress in mid-October. Precious metal: Short-term bullish, long-term bearish. We expect the Fed to tighten rates only slowly which, over time, will mean the central bank finds itself behind the curve on inflation. Real rates are expected to remain relatively low for the foreseeable future, which will be supportive of gold. Rising tension between North Korea and the U.S. could also give gold a lift. Industrial metals: Bearish The copper price has rallied by 10% during Q3 2017, thanks to supply-side disruptions at some of the world's largest copper mines, along with better-than-expected performance of the Chinese economy. However, mine interruptions will be transitory, and the world copper market is already back in balance (Chart 23, panel 3). Although the rebound in the Chinese PMI is keeping metal prices up, we believe China after the Party Congress will try to reengineer its economy towards being more consumption and services-led, which will temper demand for industrial metals. Energy: Bullish We believe that market has been overly pessimistic on oil, and that this will change due to declining inventories and better demand and supply dynamics. (Chart 23) The U.S. Energy Information Administration revised down its shale production forecast for 2H 2017 by 200,000 barrels/day, which should lower investors' concerns over shale overproduction. Libyan oil production, the biggest threat to our bullish oil view, faltered by 300,000/day in August, keeping OPEC in compliance with its promised cuts. Currencies U.S. Dollar: Year to date, the dollar is down by 8% on a trade-weighted basis (Chart 24). However, after a period of underperformance, the U.S. economy is improving relative to its G10 peers, as seen by the strong rebound in the U.S. ISM manufacturing index. Additionally, the pick-up in money velocity points to a recovery in core inflation. As inflation starts to pick up again, markets will discount additional Fed rate hikes. Stay bullish U.S. dollar over the next 12 months. Chart 24U.S. Dollar Recovery? Pound: After a weak start to the year, sterling has recovered all its losses. Strong net FDI inflows have pushed the basic balance back into positive territory. However, Brexit negotiations will impact the financial sector, the largest target for FDI. Additionally, the recent sharp increase in inflation came from the pass-through effect of the weaker currency, and is not reflective of domestic economic activity. We expect increased political uncertainty to weigh down on future growth, forcing the Bank of England to maintain a dovish stance. Stay bearish over the next 12 months. Dollar: On a trade-weighted basis the currency is up 4% year to date, primarily driven by the rally in select metal prices. OECD's measure of output gap still points to substantial slack in the domestic economy, as seen in the downtrend in core inflation and nominal retail sales. However, despite improvements in global trade and domestic real estate activity, the Reserve Bank of Australia will keep policy easy in response to volatile commodity markets. Stay bearish over the next 12 months. Canadian Dollar: Driven by net portfolio inflows near record highs, the currency is up 6% on a trade-weighted basis so far this year. With improving economic activity, as seen in strong retail sales, the Bank of Canada expects the output gap to close in 2018. However, going forward, oil prices are unlikely to double again, and the combination of elevated indebtedness, bubby house prices and rising rates will create headwinds for the household sector. Stay bearish over the next 12 months. Alternatives Chart 25Favor PE, Real Assets Return Enhancers: Favor private equity vs. hedge funds In 2017 so far, private equity has returned 9%, whereas hedge funds have managed only a 3.5% return (Chart 25). Given their strong performance, private equity firms are raising near-record amounts of capital from investors starved for yield. By contrast, hedge funds continue to underperform both global equities and private equity, as is typical outside of recessions or bear markets. However, increasing concerns about valuations in private markets have pushed private equity dry powder to new highs of $963 billion. We continue to favor private equity over hedge funds, albeit with a more cautious outlook. Within the hedge fund space, we favor event-driven funds over the cycle, and macro funds heading into a recession. Inflation Hedges: Favor direct real estate vs. commodity futures In 2017 to date, direct real estate has returned 3.3%, whereas commodity futures are down over 10%. With energy markets likely to continue to recover lost ground over the coming months, we stress the structural nature of our negative recommendation on commodities. Depressed interest rates will keep financing cheap, making the spread between real estate and fixed income yields attractive. However, the slowdown in commercial real estate has made us more cautious on the overall real estate space. With regards to the commodity complex, the long term transition of China to a service-based economy will continue the structural decline in commodity demand. Continue to favor direct real estate vs. commodity futures. Volatility Dampeners: Favor farmland & timberland vs. structured products In 2017 to date, farmland and timberland have returned 2.2% and 1.5% respectively, whereas structured products have returned 1.4%. Farmland continues to outperform timberland given the latter's lower correlation with growth. Timberland returns have also lagged farmland given the weak recovery in the U.S. housing market. Investors can reduce the volatility of a multi-asset portfolio with the inclusion of farmland and timberland. With regards to structured products, rising rates and deteriorating credit quality in the auto loan market will weigh on returns. Given the Fed's plans to start unwinding its balance sheet this year, increased supply will put upward pressure on spreads. Risks To Our View Our pro-risk positioning would be incorrect if global growth were to slow sharply. But we see little sign that this is a significant risk over the next six to 12 months. Of our three favorite indicators of recession risk, global PMIs remain strong, and the U.S. 10-minus-2 year yield curve is still solidly positive at around 80 BP. Only a small blip up in junk bond spreads in August (Chart 26) is of any concern, and it was probably caused just by geopolitical tensions. With U.S. and European consumption and capex looking strong, probably the biggest risk to global growth would come from China, similar to 2015, if October's Party Congress signals a shift to short-term pain to achieve structural reforms. Perhaps more likely is an upside surprise to growth, with BCA's models - based on consumer and business sentiment - pointing to around 3% real GDP growth in the U.S. and 2½% in the euro area over the coming couple of quarters (Chart 27). Such an acceleration of growth would raise the risk of upside surprises to inflation, which could cause a bigger sell off in bond markets than we currently anticipate. Chart 26Any Need To Worry About Credit Spreads? Chart 27Could Growth Surprise On The Upside? Chart 28Suppose Inflation Stays Stubbornly Low Our positioning is not based on inflation remaining chronically low. But structural changes in the economy could cause this. While the Philips curve has not broken down completely, wage growth in the U.S. is 1-1½% lower than in previous expansions when the unemployment gap was at its current level (Chart 28). Could the Nairu be lower than the Fed's estimate of 4.6%? Has the gig economy somehow changed worker and employer behavior? 1 Please see What Our Clients Are Asking: "What Will Happen After China's 19th Party Congress, And Will There Be A Slowdown In The Economy?" of this report. 2 For their most comprehensive analysis, please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," dated April 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress'' dated July 19, 2017. available at gps.bcaresearch.com). 4 Perold, A and E. Schulman, 1988, "The free lunch in currency hedging: Implications for investment policy and performance standards," Financial Analyst Journal 44, 45-50. 5 Froot K., 1993, "Currency hedging over long horizons," NBER working paper 4355. 6 Michenaud, S., and B., Solnik, 2008, "Applying Regret Theory to Investment Choices: Currency Hedging Decisions," Journal of International Money and Finance 27, 677-694. 7 Campbell, J., K. de Medeiros and L. Viceira, 2010, "Global Currency Hedging," Journal of Finance LXV, 87-122. 8 Please see Global Asset Allocation Special Report, "Currency Hedging: Dynamic Or Static? - A Practical Guide For Global Equity Investors," dated September 29, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy "In Search of A Timing Model," dated July 22, 2016, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Quarterly - December 2016," dated December 15, 2016. 11 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Quarterly - April 2017," dated April 3, 2017. GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Industrials stocks are on the verge of a breakout on the back of firming earnings fundamentals. Lift to an above benchmark allocation. Reviving global end-demand is a boon to U.S. machinery equities. Act on the upgrade alert and boost the construction machinery & heavy truck sub-index to overweight. Recent Changes S&P Industrials - Upgrade to overweight. S&P Construction Machinery & Heavy Truck - Lift to overweight. Table 1Sector Performance Returns (%) Feature Equities gained ground last week, cheering the Trump administration's apparent headway in getting a tax bill passed. Chart 1 depicts this euphoria with small- and mid-caps breaking out to all-time highs and the broad based value line arithmetic index also vaulting into uncharted territory. Financials also jumped taking their cue from the bond market selloff as Janet Yellen reiterated that higher interest rates are in store, despite ("probably temporary") low inflation. Beneath the surface, synchronized global growth remains the dominant macro theme and on the eve of earnings season, profits will take center stage. Chart 2 plots the evolution of Q1, Q2 and Q3 2017 EPS growth forecasts using Thomson Reuters/IBES data, with the final datapoint representing actual EPS growth. Notably, forecasts have been coming down substantially only to surprise to the upside once the final numbers are in. Chart 1New Highs Abound Chart 2SPX OEPS Forecasts Vs Actuals Granted, this is the typical profile. EPS numbers tend to be "massaged" ahead of earnings season, but we are surprised by the 9 percentage point drop in Q3 EPS forecasts to a low y/y profit growth hurdle of 6%. A particularly destructive hurricane season likely played a role in this dramatic slide in growth forecasts. By comparison, in Q1 and Q2 the EPS growth forecast declines were 6 and 5 percentage points, respectively. And, on average the positive surprise EPS factor was 470bps (yellow highlight, Chart 2). If recent history is any guide, Q3 EPS will likely surprise to the upside once again. With regard to sector contribution to earnings growth in Q3, Chart 3 shows an extreme concentration in two sectors: energy and tech. These sectors comprise 70% of the growth in EPS for the current quarter. In fact, if one adds health care, industrials and financials, then the percent contribution jumps to 98%. Such high concentration is a risk. But, the recent hurricane-related increase in refining crack spreads and multi-month highs in crude oil signal that, at least, energy EPS will be robust. As a reminder we upgraded the S&P energy sector to overweight in early July.1 The sector revenue growth contribution picture is more diverse. Chart 4 shows the year-over-year sales growth sector contribution for Q3/2017. While energy and tech still dominate the revenue growth landscape, they add up to 44% of the total. Adding consumer staples, industrials and health care elevates this number to 86%, still high, but much less concentrated than the profit contribution figure. Bloomberg's soft versus hard economic data surprise index has historically been an excellent leading indicator of quarterly SPX EPS, and the current message is to expect a fresh all-time high (Chart 5). Chart 3Sector Contribution To Profit Growth Chart 4Sector Contribution To Revenue Growth Chart 5Soft Data Green Light Summing it all up, our sense is that the earnings-led advance in the equity market has staying power. Under such a backdrop, this week we continue to add deep cyclical exposure to our portfolio. Mighty Industrials Industrials stocks have been trading in a well-defined and narrow range since the end of the Great Recession (top panel, Chart 6). But now, conditions are ripe for a breakout in relative share prices. We recommend augmenting S&P industrials exposure to overweight. Valuations have corrected back to the neutral zone and our Technical Indicator (TI) has unwound previously overbought conditions. In fact our TI is steadily sinking, on track to hit one standard deviation below its historical mean, a level that has previously consistently coincided with playable rallies (third & fourth panels, Chart 6). On the earnings fundamental front, our newly introduced S&P industrials operating EPS model is humming (second panel, Chart 6). Rebounding commodity prices, with the aid of a softer U.S. dollar, a pickup in capital goods end-demand, and still generationally low interest rates are key profit model drivers. The industrials sector Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) echoes the EPS model's message. The CMI has surged recently, signaling that sell-side analysts are pessimistic on the sector's relative profit outlook (second panel, Chart 7). Chart 6EPS Model Says Buy Industrials Chart 7Domestic Demand... Forward looking indicators of industrials final demand suggest that this high operating leverage deep cyclical sector is on the cusp of flexing its muscle. Domestic capex intentions from a number of regional Fed surveys are the most upbeat in decades (second panel, Chart 8). Pent-up capex demand will likely continue to get unleashed in the coming quarters. While the Trump Administration's health care bill was unsuccessful, the odds are better that a tax bill and/or an infrastructure bill will receive warmer welcomes in Washington. Tack on bankers' willingness to extend credit, and 2018 may morph into a significant domestic capex revival year (Chart 8). The implication is that the nascent industrials profit margin expansion phase has more legs. In fact, the ISM manufacturing survey has been an excellent leading indicator of industrials margins and the current message is to expect a widening in the latter (Chart 8). On the domestic front there are even more signs that industry end-demand is on a solid footing. Non-tech industrial production and core durable goods orders are expanding at a healthy clip. Firming industrials pricing power reflects this vibrant demand backdrop. The upshot is that the path of least resistance for industrials relative profitability is higher (Chart 7). Nevertheless, this tightening demand narrative is not restricted to U.S. shores. Global capital goods demand also continues to firm. The global manufacturing PMI is at a six-year high on the back of synchronized global growth. Chinese wholesale price inflation has also recently reaccelerated likely reflecting increased end-demand (Chart 9). Emerging markets (EM) equities best capture all of this global manufacturing euphoria. Historically, EM equity performance and the relative share price ratio have been positively correlated, and the recent breakout in the former is a harbinger of fresh all-time highs in U.S. industrials relative performance (Chart 9). The greenback's sizable year-to-date depreciation will also boost U.S. industrials exporters' global market share and profits in the back half of 2017, irrespective of where the U.S. dollar drifts in the coming months. Moreover, a softening U.S. currency is commodity/industry pricing power positive, and thus a boon to revenue growth (Chart 10). Finally, over the past two decades, a falling trade-weighted U.S. dollar has been synonymous with a multiple expansion phase and vice versa. Currently, an unsustainably wide gap has opened that will likely narrow via a rerating phase (bottom panel, Chart 10). Chart 8... Capex Upcycle... Chart 9... Global Demand... Chart 10... And Greenback Point Point To A Rerating Phase Bottom Line: Boost the S&P industrials sector to an above benchmark allocation. We are executing this upgrade by lifting the construction machinery & heavy truck sub-index to overweight. Rise Of The Machines Machinery stocks have been in a V-shaped recovery for the past 18 months retracing all of their relative losses since the 2014 highs. Our machinery EPS model is firing on all cylinders, underscoring that the earnings-led recovery has more running room (Chart 11). This buoyant EPS growth backdrop gives us comfort to act on our upgrade alert and lift the S&P construction machinery & heavy truck sub-index to overweight.2 As a reminder, we have already been overweight the S&P industrial machinery index since early April3 and have participated in the machinery index advance. A fresh capex upcycle will likely fuel the next machinery stock outperformance upleg. Not only are expectations for overall capital outlays as good as they get (second panel, Chart 12), but there are also tentative signs that even the previously moribund mining and oil & gas complexes will be capex upcycle participants. While we are not calling for a return to the previous cycle's peak, even a modest renormalization of capital spending plans (i.e. maintenance capex alone would suffice) in these two key machinery client segments would rekindle industry sales growth (top panel, Chart 12). Chart 11EPS Recovery Is In The Early Innings Chart 12Levered To Capex A quick channel check also waves the green flag. Both machinery shipments and new orders are outpacing inventory accumulation (third & fourth panels, Chart 12). Moreover, backlogs are rebuilding at the quickest pace of the past five years (not shown). This suggests that client demand visibility is returning. This machinery end-demand improvement is a global phenomenon. In fact, the bottom panel of Chart 12 shows that global machinery new orders are climbing faster than domestic new order growth. Tack on the reaccelerating global credit impulse courtesy of the latest Bank for International Settlements Quarterly Review and the ingredients are in place for a global machinery export boom (third & fourth panels, Chart 13). Already anecdotally, bellwether Caterpillar's global sales-to-dealers figures suggest that the industry's relative EPS upward trajectory is sustainable (bottom panel, Chart 13). Similar to the global growth synchronization thesis, Caterpillar's regional sales breakdown confirms that all regions are expanding simultaneously led by Asia Pacific - even in the extremely volatile Latin American and laggard EMEA end-markets (Chart 14). Chart 13Global Growth Beneficiary Chart 14CAT Confirms Synchronized Global Growth Importantly, Chinese machinery demand is growing briskly. A cheapened U.S. dollar makes China imports of U.S. machinery more enticing. Beyond the currency dynamics, the dual force of Chinese fiscal spending thrust and credit impulse are also stimulating machinery final demand (Chart 15 on page 12). While Chinese excavator sales growth has likely petered out, it is still near a triple digit growth rate (Chart 15 on page 12). Komatsu's Chinese excavator sales data corroborate the official Chinese data.4 All of this impressive demand backdrop is not yet reflected in relative valuations. The relative forward P/E multiple has deflated of late and investors can initiate fresh positions at a market multiple, which is also the historical mean (Chart 16 on page 12). Chart 15Stable China Is Encouraging Chart 16Room For Valuation Expansion Bottom Line: We are acting on our upgrade alert and lifting the S&P construction machinery & heavy truck index to overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5CSTF - CAT, PCAR, CMI. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy & Global Alpha Sector Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "SPX 3,000?" dated July 10, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Daily Insight, "Building Up Steam", dated August 18, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Revenue Revival", dated April 10, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 http://www.komatsu.com/CompanyInfo/ir/demand_orders/ Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps and stay neutral growth over value.