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Emerging Markets

Executive Summary The RMB And Real Interest Rates The RMB And Real Interest Rates The RMB And Real Interest Rates The RMB has overshot and will likely consolidate gains in the coming months. The said, the yuan remains underpinned by a current account surplus, positive real rates, and a valuation cushion. This will support modest appreciation over the next 12-18 months (Feature Chart). The dollar is likely to enter a period of weakness beyond the Russo-Ukrainian crisis, underpinning a firm RMB. Yield spreads between China and the US will narrow across the bond curve, slowing the pace of any RMB appreciation. In its quest to dominate Asian trade flows, China will also seek a stable yuan which can be an anchor for regional currencies. Low volatility in the Chinese bond and currency market will increasingly make it an attractive hedge for global portfolio managers. This will encourage RMB inflows. The financial sanctions on Russia from the ongoing Ukrainian conflict will accelerate Chinese diversification from US assets. It will also boost the use of RMB in global trade, lifting its share in global FX reserves. Bottom Line: In the near term, USD/CNY is due for a bounce and could retrace to 6.5. It is also the case that a lot of the gains in the Chinese RMB have been frontloaded, suggesting a flattish path ahead. Beyond the near term, we expect the DXY to hit 90 in the next 12-18 months, which will boost the RMB towards 6.0. Feature The RMB has been strong across the board versus most major currencies (Chart 1). Year-to-date, the DXY dollar index is up 2% while the CFETS basket is up 3%. This places the Chinese yuan as one of the best performing major currencies this year. Such a configuration where USD/CNY diverges from the broad dollar trend has been very rare in recent history (Chart 2). More importantly, this has occurred amidst very low volatility. Chart 1A Bull Market In Yuans A Bull Market In Yuans A Bull Market In Yuans Chart 2USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge USD/CNY And The Dollar Diverge In this Special Report, we try to understand the driving forces behind a rising RMB, to gauge its likely path going forward. In our view, while the yuan is vulnerable tactically, it is underpinned by strong structural forces that support modest appreciation over the next 12-18 months. The Chinese Economy, Interest Rates, And The RMB An exchange rate is simply a mechanism to equalize rates of returns across countries. For most currencies, the key determinants of this arbitrage window are real interest rate differentials. In China, while nominal interest rates vis-à-vis the US have been collapsing, real interest rate differentials are near a record high. This has been the key driver of a rising RMB (Chart 3). Real interest rates tend to matter because high and rising inflation destroys the purchasing power of any currency. Our bias is that higher real rates in China versus the US will persist and keep the RMB firm. Five key reasons underpin this view: The Chinese economy is expected to accelerate this year relative to the US. The IMF expects 4.8% GDP growth in China, versus 4% in the US. Bloomberg consensus estimates corroborate this view – 5.2% growth is expected for China this year, versus 3.6% for the US. Even the Chinese government’s GDP growth target this year is 5.5%, much higher than street estimates. US interest rates are likely to rise over the medium term, but so will those in China. The Chinese credit impulse has bottomed, and it is usually a good precursor to both stronger economic activity and higher relative government bond yields (Chart 4). Chart 3The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates The RMB And Real Versus Nominal Rates Chart 4Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse Interest Rate Differentials And The Credit Impulse While Chinese productivity growth is slowing, it remains structurally higher compared to that in the US or Europe. Stronger productivity growth suggests the neutral rate of interest in China will remain higher than in Western economies for years to come. This will continue to attract further fixed-income inflows. The RMB is a procyclical currency and tends to benefit when flows into emerging market assets in general, and Chinese stocks in particular, are fervent. While the Chinese authorities have cracked down on the property and information technology/communication service sectors, they have done so without causing widespread capital flight and hurting the RMB (Chart 5). Going forward, odds are that the interest from foreign bargain hunters will rise as these sectors reset from lower and much cheaper levels. It is well known that the Chinese economy has excess capacity, which is inherently deflationary (and positive for real rates). Like Japan, China has excess savings and deficient demand (Chart 6). However, in an inflationary world, this excess capacity can easily be exported, especially to the US, which is on the verge of overheating. A healthy trade balance in China suggests there is little reason for the RMB to depreciate meaningfully. Chart 6Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation Excess Savings In China And Low Inflation Chart 5The RMB And Chinese Equities The RMB And Chinese Equities The RMB And Chinese Equities It is remarkable that despite being the largest commodity importer in the world, terms of trade in China is picking up. Rising terms of trade is usually synonymous with a stronger currency. On the flip side, a stronger currency will also temper inflationary pressures in China (Chart 7). Chart 7The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation The RMB, Terms Of Trade And Inflation The bottom line is that real interest rates will remain relatively high in China, even as the US begins to tighten monetary policy while China eases. The reason is that the US economy is much more inflationary, and Chinese bond yields tend to rise when the PBoC stimulates growth. Market Liberalization And Portfolio Flows With attractive real yields, Chinese bonds have been gaining widespread investor appeal. Their inclusion in the world’s three major bond indices has been a seminal milestone in the process of liberalizing the Chinese fixed-income market. Chinese bonds have also acted as perfect portfolio hedges, moving inversely to US and global equities (Chart 8). The result has been significant portfolio inflows into Chinese bonds. As a reminder, Chinese bonds were initially included in the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index (BBGA) in April 2019. Following that, they were added to the JP Morgan Government Bond - Emerging Market Index (GBI-EM) in February 2020. Finally, FTSE Russell announced their inclusion of in the FTSE World Government Bond Index (WGBI) as of October 2021. Since their inclusion, a net US$350 billion has flowed into Chinese bonds. We estimate that about 35% of that has been due to index inclusion. The amount of Chinese onshore bonds held by overseas investors has breached US$600 billion, a record high (Chart 9). Chart 9A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors A Healthy Appetite From Foreign Investors Chart 8RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge RMB Bonds As A Portfolio Hedge In a nutshell, the path of the RMB in the short term will follow relative growth dynamics between China and the rest of the world, but structural factors such the inclusion of RMB bonds in global portfolios will underpin strong inflows into the Chinese fixed-income market. The Dollar, Trade, And Lessons From The Ukrainian Conflict Chart 10China Is Destocking USDs China Is Destocking USDs China Is Destocking USDs Another factor to consider vis-à-vis the RMB is the dollar’s reserve status, and the overreach that it commands. Quite simply, transactions conducted in US dollars anywhere fall under US law. This means that if a company in any country buys energy from Iran and the transaction is done in US dollars, the Treasury has powers to sanction the parties involved. Russian holdings of US Treasurys peaked during the Georgian war and have since fallen to near 0% of total reserves. Even so, the world has witnessed how vulnerable the Russian economy has been to a cut-off from the Society For Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) messaging system. China is the largest holder of US Treasurys and what it decides to do with this war chest of savings is of critical importance. At a minimum, a few trends that have been underway in recent years are likely to accelerate. China will continue to destock its holding of Treasurys into gold and other currencies (Chart 10). This will put downward pressure on the dollar and boost the RMB. In fact, ever since China started destocking Treasurys in earnest in 2015, the DXY has been unable to sustainably punch through the 100 level. Trade flows in Asia remain rather buoyant, even as globalization has peaked (Chart 11A and 11B). With most Asian countries having China as a large trading partner, the logical step will be more and more invoicing in RMB. Most global trade hubs in history (such as Hong Kong for example) have always sought a stable currency with low volatility to instill confidence in trade. China is likely to also favor a stable RMB. Chart 11AChina Could Dominate Asian Trade China Could Dominate Asian Trade China Could Dominate Asian Trade Chart 11BAsian Trade Is Booming What Next For The RMB? What Next For The RMB? As Asian trade continues to expand, the PBoC can step in as the regional central bank and lender of last resort. It is notable that China is already engaging in this role. Since the global financial crisis, the number of bilateral swap lines offered to foreign central banks by the PBoC has ballooned (Chart 12). According to the most recent data (from the PBoC), the Chinese central bank had bilateral local currency swap agreements with central banks or monetary authorities in 40 countries and regions, with a total amount of around 4 trillion yuan. The People’s Bank of China has massive foreign exchange reserves, worth about US$3.2 trillion. This means it can provide swap agreements that will almost cover the totality of EM foreign dollar debt. The Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) already allows the transfer and clearing of yuan-denominated payments. In 2021, the system processed US$12.7 trillion, a 75% increase in turnover from the previous year.1 While the system still largely relies on SWIFT messaging for most cross-border transactions, progress towards independence is moving fast. The key point is that as China continues to rise as an economic power and increases the share of RMB trade within its sphere of influence, the yuan will naturally become the de facto Asian currency. This will allow the RMB to continue to gain international appeal (Chart 13). Chart 12The People's Bank Of Asia? What Next For The RMB? What Next For The RMB? Chart 13The RMB And International Appeal The RMB And International Appeal The RMB And International Appeal Valuation Concerns Most of the discussion above has focused on the cyclical outlook for the Chinese economy and bond yields, as well as the geopolitical ramifications from the Russo-Ukrainian conflict. While the macro environment is by far the most important driver of currencies, valuation and sentiment tend to matter as well. On this note: Our productivity model suggests the RMB is at fair value. Productivity in China remains higher than among its western trading partners, but the gap has been closing. This has flattened the slope of the fair-value model (Chart 14). That said, the US and Europe are generating much higher inflation than China, suggesting there is higher pressure for unit labor costs to rise in these countries. This will improve the competitive profile of the RMB. Our PPP model for the RMB, using an apples-to-apples consumer basket vis-à-vis the US suggests the RMB is undervalued by 11% (Chart 15). Historically, such levels of undervaluation have seen the RMB appreciate by 2% per year over the next 4 years (Chart 16). Chart 14The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends The RMB Is At Fair Value Based On Productivity Trends Chart 15The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices The RMB Is Cheap Based On Relative Prices   Chart 16Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors Potential RMB Returns For Foreign Investors Valuation tends to be important because it is usually the trigger for imbalances to manifest themselves. Back in 2015-20162  when Chinese capital outflows (especially illicit flows) were rampant amongst global and Chinese concerns, the RMB also happened to be very overvalued. Today, such a risk is much limited. Concluding Thoughts The RMB and the dollar tend to move in harmony, and so a discussion of one entails talking about the other. We have characterized the dollar this year as caught in a tug of war. Specifically, aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve will boost interest rate differentials in favor of the US but undermine the equity market via a derating in stocks. This will tighten financial conditions, nudging the Fed to pivot. On the other hand, less accommodation by the Fed will significantly unwind the rate-driven rally that has nudged the DXY close to 100.  On the other hand, the Chinese credit impulse has bottomed meaning bond investors will benefit from rising bond yields in China. Equity investors will also benefit from a cheaper market, as well as exposure to sectors that are primed to benefit as the global economy reopens. This combination could sustain the pace of foreign capital inflows. In the near term, USD/CNY is due for a bounce and could retrace to 6.5. It is also the case that a lot of the gains in the Chinese RMB have been front loaded, suggesting a flattish path ahead. Beyond the near term, we expect the DXY to hit 90 in the next 12-18 months, which will boost the RMB towards 6.0. Chester Ntonifor Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Reuters: https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/what-is-chinas-onshore-yuan-clearing-settlement-system-cips-2022-02-28/ 2 Please see Chinese Investment Strategy Special Report, titled “Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows,” dated March 20, 2019, available at cis.bcaresearch.com Trades & Forecasts Strategic View Tactical Holdings (0-6 months) Limit Orders   Forecast Summary
Executive Summary Tight Inventories Spike Metals Commodities' Watershed Moment Commodities' Watershed Moment Russia's war against Ukraine is a watershed moment, which will realign production, distribution and consumption of commodities globally. The development of new sources of the critical metals desperately needed to build out renewable energy grids and the drive to secure access to oil, gas and coal will intensify along political lines. China, reinforced by Russia, will lead the East, while the US and its allies will lead the West, in a redux of the Cold War. Local politics will intrude on this process, as left-of-center governments in important commodity-producing states secure their electoral victories and claim greater shares of commodity revenues. The rebuilding of defense systems, particularly in Europe, will compete with the renewable-energy transition. This will stress already-tight metals markets, where low inventories will predispose markets to higher volatility a la this week's oil, natgas and nickel price spikes. This will retard economic growth. In the short term, CO2 emissions will surge. Longer term, the transition to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 will be pushed back years, as states compete for access to commodities. East-West trade restrictions and hoarding of commodities secured via trade within these respective blocs, as is occurring presently, will increase. Bottom Line: Russia's war against Ukraine is a watershed moment.  The development of new sources of the critical metals desperately needed to build out renewable energy grids, and the drive to secure access to oil, gas and coal will intensify. China, reinforced by Russia, will lead the East, while the US and its allies will lead the West, in a redux of the Cold War. Feature Russia's war with Ukraine provoked a watershed moment for Europe: Leaders suddenly realized they had to reverse decades of energy dependence on Russia, rebuild their militaries, and sustain a massive buildout of the continent's renewable-energy generation and grid. This occurred as inventories of the basic commodities required to achieve all of these objectives were stretched so tight that the mere threat of the cutoff of pipeline natural gas was enough to send benchmark EU natgas prices to a record $113/MMBtu, up nearly 80% from the previous day's close before it settled back to still-elevated levels (Chart 1). Oil inventories also were stretched extremely thin even before Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine 24 February (Chart 2). The situation is not improving, since, in the wake of the Ukraine war, numerous refiners and trading companies now are observing self-imposed sanctions against taking any Russian oil or refined products. It is worthwhile remembering this began before the US and UK announced they would ban all imports of Russian material this week.1 This will stretch supply chains by unknow durations – the movement of crude from Russia to a refiner could take months instead of weeks, until new trade patterns are established. Chart 1Little Flex In EU Gas Inventories Commodities' Watershed Moment Commodities' Watershed Moment Chart 2Little Flex In EU Gas Inventories Little Flex In EU Gas Inventories Little Flex In EU Gas Inventories   Global economic and policy uncertainty is massively elevated, with percent changes in oil and gas prices swinging on a double-digit basis daily. This makes it extremely difficult to bid or offer oil cargoes in the physical market or make markets (i.e., bid or offer) in the futures markets, which has the effect of compounding uncertainty and volatility. Fundamentals – supply, demand and inventories – take a back seat to fear and uncertainty in such markets. This makes it virtually impossible to assign a probability to any price outcomes based on supply and demand – the true definition of uncertainty in the Frank Knight sense – and to make long-term capex decisions over the long term.2 We raised our 2022 and 2023 Brent forecasts on the back of the massive uncertainty in the markets to $90/bbl and $85/bbl, respectively, right after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. We assume 1Q22 Brent will average $100/bbl. We expect core OPEC 2.0 producers – Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait – will increase production beginning in 2Q22; US shale-oil output will rise, and ~ 1.2mm b/d of Iranian production will return to market in 2H22. Among the risks to our forecasts are a failure by core OPEC 2.0 to lift output (we expect an announcement at the end of this month when the producer coalition meets); lower-than-expected US shale output, and a failure to resolve the Iran nuclear deal with the US. Our modeling indicated these outcomes could lift Brent to between $120/bbl and $140/bbl by 2023 (Chart 3). We will be updating our forecasts next week.3 Chart 3Brent Forwards Lift Brent Forwards Lift Brent Forwards Lift EU's Watershed Metals Moment EU leadership is setting out to reverse decades of energy dependence on Russia, rebuild their militaries, and sustain a massive buildout of the continent's renewable-energy grid, all a result of the Ukraine war. This will require massive investment in metals mining and refining, along with steel-making capacity. Already, Germany is pledging to increase LNG import capacity and measures to reduce its dependence on Russian natural gas by 75% this year.4 The EU is looking to restore its natgas inventories to 90% of capacity before next winter, and has pledged to double down on renewables, in order to remove member-state dependence on Russian energy exports.5 These ambitious goals are up against the hard reality of scarce base metals supply globally. This will be exacerbated going forward by actions taken by and against Russia. The Russia-Ukraine crisis will destabilize metal markets, given supply uncertainty from Russia and its contribution to global supply. The commodities heavyweight constitutes 6%, 5% and 4% of global primary aluminum, refined nickel and copper production. Against the backdrop of very low global inventories in these metals (Chart 4), the prices of all three hit record highs over the last few days due to uncertain supply (Chart 5). LME nickel prices more than quadrupled on Tuesday as traders rushed to cover short positions and margin calls. Chart 4Low Inventories... Low Inventories... Low Inventories... Chart 5...Lead To Price Volatility ...Lead To Price Volatility ...Lead To Price Volatility Uncertainty has engulfed metal markets, with a Western ban on Russian metal imports still a possibility. Putin’s announcement regarding raw material export restrictions will further fuel supply uncertainty.6 As in the case of oil, private entities’ self-sanctioning, sanctions on the Russian financial system, and war-related supply chain disruptions are causing current Russian metal export disruptions.7 So far, Western sanctions on commodities have not directly interfered with metal flows from Russia. But markets are taking it day to day. Supply disruptions and sanctions force the formation of new trade patterns, as private entities aim to maximize arbitrage opportunities. For example, high European aluminum price spreads incentivized shipments from China, the world’s largest producer and consumer of refined aluminum. Normally, Europe relies on Russia for aluminum supplies. Rising European physical premiums for delivered metal, caused by Russian export disruptions, will see trading companies take advantage of arbitrage opportunities in other commodities as well. Europe's Risk Profile Rising Since the Ukraine war began, rising European physical premiums in commodities ranging from metals to natgas indicate the continent – more so than others – is particularly vulnerable to Russian export disruptions. Europe’s reliance on Russian energy and its supply disruptions will raise operating costs for smelters and refiners on the continent, threatening smelter shutdowns similar to those we saw this past winter. Markets were expecting power price relief over the warmer months and higher smelting activity. Elevated fuel and power prices, however, will constrain metals refining in Europe, and could shut or close even more smelters, keeping refined metals supply scarce and prices high. Rebuilding Europe's Defenses EU leaders are scheduled to take up a new energy and defense funding proposal today, which media reports are describing as "massive" (no detail provided ahead of the meeting, of course). This program reportedly will be akin to the EU's $2 trillion COVID-relief fund.8 The EU's fast response to defense shortfalls comes against the backdrop discussed above regarding super-tight metals markets, which now face a further complication of unpredictable local politics in metals-producing states. Some of these states have voted left-of-center governments into office, which now appear to be intent on nationalizing mining operations.9 Chile, e.g., accounts for ~ 30% of global copper ore output, and is in the process of re-writing its constitution, which will change tax and royalty law, and could pave the way for nationalization of copper and lithium mines. This political risk compounds any long-term planning operations by consumers like the EU and producers. Investment Implications Energy markets – broadly defined to include oil, gas and coal along with the base metals required for renewables and their supporting grids and electric vehicles – are being rocked by Russia's war with Ukraine. Base metals, in particular, will have to find price levels that destroy demand among competing uses, if the EU's dual-track plan to build out its renewables generation and restore a military capability is approved. A "massive" funding effort in Europe, coupled with equally massive efforts in the US and China – both intent on building out their renewable generation and grids, as well as expanding their defensive capabilities – will be extremely difficult to pull off. Critical base metals inventories remain low, and prices are high because demand exceeds supply for the foreseeable future (Chart 6). Chart 6Tight Inventories Spike Metals Commodities' Watershed Moment Commodities' Watershed Moment The EU will join a world in which the other two great economic centers – the US and China – will engage in a geopolitical competition over access to and control of scarce base metals, oil, gas and coal resources. Russia will remain aggressive toward the West, at least until the Putin regime falls, and will play an ancillary role to China. Fossil fuels and base metals have been starved for capex for more than a decade. Governmental pronouncements will not reverse this. These markets will remain tight, and will get tighter in order to allocate increasingly scarce supply with rapidly growing demand. As such, we remain long commodity-index exposure (S&P GSCI and the COMT ETF), along with equity exposure to oil and gas producers via the XOP ETF, and the XME and PICK ETFs to retain exposure to base metals and bulks producers and traders.   Robert P. Ryan Chief Commodity & Energy Strategist rryan@bcaresearch.com Ashwin Shyam Research Associate Commodity & Energy Strategy ashwin.shyam@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1     Please see Russian tankers at sea despite ‘big unknown’ over who will buy oil, published by ft.com on March 7, 2022. 2     Please see Explained: Knightian uncertainty, published by mit.edu for discussion. 3    Please see Oil Risk Premium Abates, But Still Remains, which we published on February 25, 2022. 4    Please see Germany Revives LNG Import Plans to Cut Reliance on Russian Natural Gas in Marked Policy Shift, published by naturalgasintel.com on March 1, 2022. 5    Please see Climate change: EU unveils plan to end reliance on Russian gas, published by bbc.co.uk on March 8, 2022, and The EU plan to drastically ramp renewables to replace Russian gas, published by pv-magazine.com on March 9, 2022. 6    Please see Russia to Omit Raw Material Exports but Omits Details, published by Bloomberg on March 9, 2022. 7     Please see here for Which companies have stopped doing business with Russia? 8    Please see Ukraine: ECB governing council to meet as crisis intensifies, published on March 8, 2022 by greencentralbanking.com. 9    Please see Chile a step closer to nationalizing copper and lithium, published by mining.com on March 7, 2022, and Add Local Politics To Copper Supply Risks, which we published on November 25, 2021.   Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations
Executive Summary US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks ​​​​​​ The most recent examples of geopolitical and commodity price shocks similar the current one include the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, the oil embargo of 1973 in response to the Yom Kippur War as well as the Gulf War of 1990. The magnitude of the S&P 500 selloff was 28% in 1962, 23% in 1973 and 20% in 1990 (Chart of the week). Neither of our capitulation indicators for the S&P 500 or for EM stocks have reached their previous lows. As for commodity prices, the only thing that is certain in the next couple of months is that volatility will remain very elevated. Having incurred considerable costs, Russia will push to maximize its gains and secure a new, more favorable agreement with NATO. This will keep geopolitical tension elevated.   Bottom Line: The drawdown in global and EM stocks in not over yet. The US dollar has more upside in the near term. This is consistent with the S&P500 outperforming and EM stocks underperforming. A rising US dollar bodes ill for EM fixed-income markets. Feature Chart 1US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks US Equity Drawdowns During Geopolitical Crises/Commodity Shocks The world is experiencing geopolitical and commodity price shocks that have not been seen in over a generation. The most recent examples of this kind of shock include the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, the oil embargo of 1973 in response to the Yom Kippur War as well as the Gulf War of 1990. Chart 1 illustrates the current trajectory of the S&P 500 with selloffs that occurred during those three episodes. The magnitude of the S&P 500 selloff was 28% in 1962, 23% in 1973 and 20% in 1990. The S&P 500 is down only 11% from its peak. Based on the above three profiles, the current selloff in US stocks has further to go. This also means that non-US equities, including EM, will continue to suffer. What are the conditions needed for global stocks to bottom? In our opinion, a durable bottom in share prices will occur when measures of capitulation in equity markets reach their previous lows, commodity prices (particularly crude prices) decline and geopolitical tensions peak. We elaborate on each below. Equity Capitulation Neither of our capitulation indicators for the S&P 500 or for EM stocks have reached their previous lows. Chart 2 displays our capitulation indicator for US equities. Its construction is based on four equal-weighted components: the composite momentum indicator, the US equity sentiment indicator, industry group breadth and the advance-decline line (shown individually in Chart 7-8 below). Chart 2US Stocks Have Not Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Reached Their Selling Climax This indicator has not reached its lows of 2010, 2011, 2018 and 2020. In 2011 and 2018, the S&P500 selloffs were 19.5% and 19.8%, respectively. Hence, our best guess for the magnitude of an equity drawdown in this selloff is about 20%. This puts the potential S&P500 low at 3600-3700. The latter is consistent with the technical support (3-year moving average) that held up in 2011, 2016 and 2018 (Chart 2, top panel).  Chart 3 illustrates our EM equity capitulation indicator. Its four equal-weighted components are the composite momentum indicator, EM equity sentiment, industry group breadth and net EPS revisions (shown individually in Chart 9-10 below). We believe that EM share prices will drop until this capitulation indicator comes to the levels reached in the 2011, 2013 and 2018 selloffs. Chart 3The EM Equity Capitulation Has Further To Run The EM Equity Capitulation Has Further To Run The EM Equity Capitulation Has Further To Run Concerning the magnitude of further EM equity selloff, the next technical defense line for the MSCI EM stock index in USD is 10%, or in the worst-case scenario, 25% below current levels (Chart 3, top panel). The Commodity Shock Global share prices have become negatively correlated with commodity (primarily oil) prices and such an inverse relationship will likely persist for now. In fact, an important signal of the bottom in the S&P 500 during the 1990 oil spike was the peak in crude prices (the latter is shown inverted in Chart 4). In the case of the oil embargo of 1973-74, the oil market was not developed, and US share prices were negatively correlated with US 10-year Treasury yields (Chart 5). Chart 4The 1990 Oil Shock The 1990 Oil Shock The 1990 Oil Shock Chart 5The 1973 Oil Shock The 1973 Oil Shock The 1973 Oil Shock   Presently, given that US stocks were reacting negatively to rising US bond yields prior to the Ukraine crisis, it is reasonable to expect American share prices to bottom only when two conditions are satisfied: (1) oil prices start falling on a sustainable basis and (2) US bond yields do not rise much. How much will oil and other commodity prices rise? It is hard to know because multiple forces are in play. First, Russia is the second largest commodity exporter in the world (after the US). Russia’s crude oil exports account for 8.4% of global crude consumption, natural gas exports for 5.9% of global consumption and 3.4% for coal (Table 1). Across metals, Russia is a large producer too – 35.6% for palladium, 4.4% for nickel and 4.2% for copper (Table 1).  In turn, Russia and Ukraine production together accounts for 14% of global wheat consumption. Table 1Russia’s Global Share In Various Commodities Equity Capitulation, A Commodity Shock And Geopolitics Equity Capitulation, A Commodity Shock And Geopolitics The West’s official sanctions affect Russian exports of certain commodities but there is also a reluctance on the part of private companies to buy or ship Russian exports. This latter factor makes it nearly impossible to gauge just how much supply of each individual commodity will be curtailed. Assuming in the near term that a considerable share of Russia’s commodity exports will be blocked from global markets, the largest impact will be on oil, palladium, copper, nickel and fertilizer. While ratcheting sales of resources to China is a saving grace for Russia, it might take some time until shipments can be rerouted and reorganized. Second, the US is pressuring allied nations in the Gulf as well as other countries like Venezuela to produce and bring more oil to the market. Finally, the surge in commodity prices is probably already destroying demand. Oil and wheat prices have risen to record highs in many EM currencies (Chart 36 and 37 below). This will push inflation higher and herald more rate hikes from central banks. High interest rates along with tight fiscal policy and eroding discretionary spending (due to high energy and food prices) entail weak demand in developing economies. Bottom Line: In the very short run, risks to many commodity prices are skewed to the upside due to supply constraints. Yet, enormous uncertainty over factors driving their demand and supply makes prices over the next three months impossible to forecast. During this period, individual commodity prices might be driven by idiosyncratic factors. The only thing that is certain in the next couple of months is that volatility in commodity prices will remain very elevated. Price surges might be followed by large drawdowns and vice versa. Geopolitical Tensions The Kremlin will continue its military assault until it establishes firm control over Kyiv and the Black Sea coast, including the city of Odessa. As we wrote in our March 2 report, Putin’s objective is to install a very loyal government in Kyiv and to control the territory east of the Dniepr river. It is not clear to us whether the Kremlin has the appetite to control the Ukraine territory west of the Dniepr river. Western Ukraine has always been very anti-Russian and Putin might realize that it will be too costly to capture and control it. We do not think Putin has ambitions to go beyond Ukraine (Moldova being an exception). That said, there is no doubt that the Kremlin will be presenting more demands to NATO and threatening if those demands are not met. Having incurred considerable costs, Russia will push to maximize its gains and secure a new, more favorable agreement with NATO. It is not clear how many geopolitical concessions or what security guarantees the US is willing to provide to Russia. On the whole, geopolitical tensions between Russia and NATO/the US will continue until there is a new deal between the parties. Investment Strategy Chart 6No Trend Change In EM And US Relative Equity Performance No Trend Change In EM And US Relative Equity Performance No Trend Change In EM And US Relative Equity Performance The drawdown in global and EM stocks in not over yet. Within a global equity portfolio, we continue to recommend underweighting EM and Europe and overweighting the US. Interestingly, the EM relative equity performance versus the global stock index has rolled over at its 200-day moving average, while the US’s relative performance has found a support at its 200-day moving average (Chart 6). Such a technical configuration suggests that EM stocks will continue underperforming for now while US equities will have another upleg in relative terms. The US dollar has more upside in the near term. This is consistent with the S&P500 outperforming and EM stocks underperforming. A rising US dollar bodes ill for EM fixed-income markets. Arthur Budaghyan Chief Emerging Markets Strategist arthurb@bcaresearch.com Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Not all components of our US Equity Capitulation Indicator have reached their previous lows. Given the backdrop of still expensive US equity valuations, heightened geopolitical risks, very elevated inflation and high inflation expectations as well as the little maneuvering room that the Fed has, odds are that US share prices will drop further. Chart 7Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Chart 8Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our US Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Not all components of our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator have reached their previous lows either. The share of industry groups above their 200-day moving average, analysts’ net EPS revisions as well as the momentum and equity sentiment indicators remain above their lows. Further downside in EM share prices is likely. Chart 9Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Chart 10Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator Components Of Our EM Equity Capitulation Indicator US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax The NYSE’s advance/decline line has broken down and is dropping, signifying a broadening equity rout. Yet, we doubt the US equity indexes will bottom when 35% of NYSE listed stocks are above their 200-day moving average. Finally, the US median stock has broken below its 200-day moving average. Given the fundamental backdrop, all of these technical signposts point to a larger than 10% correction in the S&P 500. Chart 11US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax Chart 12US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax Chart 13US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax Chart 14US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax US Stocks Have Not Yet Reached Their Selling Climax Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Although Global ex-US stocks are much more oversold than US stocks, their growth and profit backdrops are worse. As we argued in the front section of this report (Chart 6 above), odds are that US stocks will continue outperforming non-US stocks in the near term. Despite crashing, European stocks might not have found a support yet. Chart 15Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Chart 16Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Chart 17Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Chart 18Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities Global Overall And Global ex-US Equities European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? Investor sentiment on European stocks has become depressed. Yet, European economies will decelerate due to the energy shock (natural gas prices have shot up two-fold since October 1) as well as falling consumer and business confidence. A bottom for euro area stocks might be lower than current prices. Chart 19European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? Chart 20European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? Chart 21European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? European Stocks: Is A Support At Hand? EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook According to our cyclically adjusted P/E ratio, EM stocks are slightly cheap in absolute terms and are very attractive versus US equities. However, this valuation indicator should be used by long-term investors. In the short run and even from a cyclical perspective, this valuation indicator is not very useful. Besides, investor sentiment on EM equities was neutral in the middle of February. It might take more weakness before bad news get priced in EM share prices. Chart 22EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook Chart 23EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook Chart 24EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Equities: Cheap But Mind The Profit Outlook EM Profits In A Soft Spot As projected by our EM narrow money (M1) aggregate, EM corporate earnings will continue to disappoint. This is the key risk to EM share prices. In fact, EM EPS has been broadly flat over the past 15 years. That is why EM stocks appear cheap. Plus, EM ex-TMT stocks have not yet fallen much and downside risks remain. Chart 25EM Profits In A Soft Spot EM Profits In A Soft Spot EM Profits In A Soft Spot Chart 26EM Profits In A Soft Spot EM Profits In A Soft Spot EM Profits In A Soft Spot Chart 27EM Profits In A Soft Spot EM Profits In A Soft Spot EM Profits In A Soft Spot Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Offshore and onshore Chinese shares prices have been falling hard. Not only have Chinese corporate profit expectations been downshifting but also Chinese Investable stocks have been derating (their multiples have been compressing). This has been due to foreign investors projecting/extrapolating the US-Russia confrontation to a possible future US-China geopolitical standoff, and therefore possible sanctions the West can impose on China. Chart 28Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chart 29Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chart 30Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chart 31Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows Chinese Investable Stocks Are At Their March 2020 Lows China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet The improvement in China’s total social financing has been entirely due to local government bond issuance. Corporate and household credit have not improved at all. Consistently, traditional infrastructure investment has probably bottomed. Yet, outside this sector the outlook is uninspiring. Property construction remains at risk, consumer spending is very sluggish and private business sentiment is downbeat. Chart 32China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet Chart 33China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet Chart 34China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet Chart 35China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet China: No "All-In" Stimulus Yet EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices Many low-income developing countries will be suffering from elevated food and energy prices. Oil and wheat prices in EM currencies have surged to all-time highs. This will lift headline inflation in many emerging economies, lead to monetary tightening and reduce household income available for discretionary spending. All of these and the lack of fiscal easing in many developing countries entail growth disappointments this year. Chart 36EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices Chart 37EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices Chart 38EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices Chart 39EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Woes: Energy And Food Prices EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM sovereign and corporate spreads have broken out. Such spread widening is not simply due to Russian credit. The pace of spread widening differs among countries. However, directionally, credit spreads seem to have embarked on a widening path. In a nutshell, Chinese USD corporate in general and property bond prices in particular are tanking (see below). This foreshadows the poor outlook for Chinese housing. Chart 40EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly Chart 41EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly Chart 42EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly Chart 43EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Spreads Are Widening Rapidly EM Credit Markets And EM Equities Historically, rising EM corporate USD bond yields led to a selloff in EM share prices. This is the cost of capital that matters for EM equities. Unless EM sovereign and corporate bonds yields start falling on a sustainable basis, EM equities will continue to struggle. Chart 44EM Credit Markets And EM Equities EM Credit Markets And EM Equities EM Credit Markets And EM Equities Chart 45EM Credit Markets And EM Equities EM Credit Markets And EM Equities EM Credit Markets And EM Equities Chart 46EM Credit Markets And EM Equities EM Credit Markets And EM Equities EM Credit Markets And EM Equities Global Resource Stocks The relative performance of global energy and basic materials versus the global equity index has bottomed. In the medium term, odds are that TMT stocks will underperform while resource companies outperform. Yet, the outlook for energy stocks and basic materials in absolute terms is complicated (in line with the elevated volatility in commodity prices we discussed in the front section). Notably, even though commodity prices have skyrocketed, basic materials and energy share prices have not yet broken out. It seems the market is doubting the sustainability of high commodity prices. Chart 47Global Resource Stocks Global Resource Stocks Global Resource Stocks Equity Capitulation, A Commodity Shock And Geopolitics Equity Capitulation, A Commodity Shock And Geopolitics Equity Capitulation, A Commodity Shock And Geopolitics Equity Capitulation, A Commodity Shock And Geopolitics Footnotes
Price pressures in China eased in February. The producer price index increased by 8.8% – the slowest pace in eight months and below January’s 9.1% y/y growth rate. Meanwhile, CPI inflation was unchanged at January’s 0.9% y/y. Surging commodity prices due…
Chinese investable stocks have collapsed 12.4% since the start of the Russia-Ukraine war in late-February. The MSCI investable index is now at its mid-March 2020 pandemic low. Several factors are contributing to the selloff. First, domestic economic…
BCA Research’s Emerging Markets Strategy service recommends investors pay Polish / receive Czech 10-year swap rates. The Czech National Bank (CNB) has hiked its policy rate by 425 bps since June 2021. This has produced both higher nominal and real Czech…
Taiwanese exports surged 34.8% y/y in February – accelerating from January’s 16.7% increase and more than double expectations of 15.7% y/y. In particular, exports of electronic product parts – which account for roughly 40% of total exports – were up 47% y/y…
Executive Summary Euro Natgas Soars; LME Nickel Squeezed Euro Natgas, Nickel Soar Euro Natgas, Nickel Soar Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak's threat to halt shipmentsof natgas on Nord Stream 1 to Europe lifted European gas prices 25% overnight, and will reverberate for years. We make the odds of a cut-off of Russian natgas exports to the EU low but not extremely low. Russia’s war is about the status of Ukraine. Russia needs the EU markets, and the EU needs Russia's gas. However, if Russia follows through on Novak's threat, it would be a major disruption for gas markets in the short term. Over the medium to long term, US shale gas producers, LNG terminal operators and exporters will benefit from new demand. On the import side, China likely benefits most from Russia's need to re-route gas. But this will require substantial infrastructure investment to monetize Russia's gas supplies and as such will take years to realize. Separately, the LME has shut down its nickel markets following an explosive 250% rally over two days that took prices above $100,000/MT. Nickel settled at ~ $80,000/MT before the LME closed the market today for margin calls on shorts squeezed by the surge in prices to make margin calls. Bottom Line: We remain long commodity-index exposure (S&P GSCI and the COMT ETF), along with equity exposure to oil and gas producers via the XOP ETF. We also remain long the XME and PICK ETFs to retain exposure to base metals and bulks.
Highlights Chart 1A Tough Balancing Act For The Fed A Tough Balancing Act For The Fed A Tough Balancing Act For The Fed In last week’s Congressional testimony, Fed Chair Jay Powell talked about his goal of achieving a “soft landing”. That is, the Fed will tighten enough to slow inflation but not so much that the economy tips into recession. This balancing act was always going to be difficult, and recent world events have only complicated it. On the one hand, the US labor market has essentially returned to full employment. The prime-age employment-to-population ratio is just 1% below its pre-COVID level, a gap that will soon be filled by the 1.2 million people being kept out of the labor force by the pandemic (Chart 1). On the other hand, risk-off market moves driven by the war in Ukraine have caused the yield curve to flatten (Chart 1, bottom panel). The Fed’s task is to respond to the strong US economy by lifting rates, but to also avoid inverting the yield curve. To split the difference, the Fed will proceed with a 25 bps rate hike at each FOMC meeting, but will slow down if the curve inverts. Our recommended strategy is to keep portfolio duration close to benchmark for the time being given the uncertainty in Ukraine. However, the Treasury curve is now priced for too shallow a path for rate hikes. We are actively looking for a good time to re-initiate duration shorts. Feature   Table 1Recommended Portfolio Specification Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Table 2Fixed Income Sector Performance Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Investment Grade: Neutral Chart 2Investment Grade Market Overview Investment Grade Market Overview Investment Grade Market Overview Investment grade corporate bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 124 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -238 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 16 bps on the month and it currently sits at 130 bps. Our quality-adjusted 12-month breakeven spread has moved up to its 36th percentile since 1995 (Chart 2). The corporate bond sell-off that began late last year on heightened expectations of Fed tightening has accelerated in recent weeks, this time driven by the war in Ukraine. The result of the turmoil is that a significant amount of value has returned to the corporate bond market. In fact, spreads have not been this wide since early 2021. Continued uncertainty about how the Ukrainian situation will evolve causes us to recommend a neutral stance on investment grade corporate bonds in the near term. However, enough value has been created that a buying opportunity could soon emerge. Corporate balance sheets remain healthy. In fact, the ratio of total debt to net worth on nonfinancial corporate balance sheets is at its lowest level since 2010 (bottom panel). Further, the most likely scenario is that the economic contagion from Russia/Ukraine to the United States will be limited. While Fed tightening is set to begin this month, spreads are now wide enough that a flat but positively sloped yield curve is not sufficient to justify an underweight stance on corporate bonds. Investors should stay neutral for now but look for an opportunity to turn more bullish. Table 3ACorporate Sector Relative Valuation And Recommended Allocation* Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Table 3BCorporate Sector Risk Vs. Reward* Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing High-Yield: Overweight Chart 3High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield Market Overview High-Yield underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 56 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -213 bps. The index option-adjusted spread widened 17 bps on the month and it currently sits at 376 bps. The 12-month spread-implied default rate – the default rate that is priced into the junk index assuming a 40% recovery rate on defaulted debt and an excess spread of 100 bps – also moved up to 4.6% (Chart 3). The odds are good that defaults will come in below 4.6% during the next 12 months, and as such, we expect high-yield bonds to outperform a duration-matched position in Treasuries. This warrants a continued overweight allocation to High-Yield on a cyclical (6-12 month) horizon, though we acknowledge that further spread widening is likely until the situation in Ukraine reaches a place of greater stability. High-Yield valuations continue to be more favorable than for investment grade corporates (panel 3). We therefore maintain a preference for high-yield corporate bonds over investment grade.       MBS: Underweight Chart 4MBS Market Overview MBS Market Overview MBS Market Overview Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 48 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -60 bps. The zero-volatility spread for conventional 30-year agency MBS widened 12 bps on the month, driven by an 11 bps widening of the option-adjusted spread (OAS). The compensation for prepayment risk (option cost) increased by 1 bp on the month (Chart 4). We wrote in a recent report that MBS’ poor performance in 2021 was attributable to an option cost that was too low relative to the pace of mortgage refinancings, noting that the MBA Refinance Index was slow to fall in 2021 despite the back-up in yields.1 This valuation picture is starting to change. The option cost is now up to 44 bps, its highest level since 2016 and refi activity is slowing as the Fed moves toward rate hikes. At 30 bps, the index OAS remains unattractive. However, the elevated option cost raises the possibility that the OAS may be over-estimating the pace of mortgage refinancings for the first time in a while. If these trends continue, it may soon make sense to increase exposure to agency MBS. We closed our recommendation to favor high coupon over low coupon securities on February 15th, concurrent with our decision to increase portfolio duration. We will likely re-establish this position when we move portfolio duration back to below benchmark. Emerging Market Bonds (USD): Underweight Chart 5Emerging Markets Overview Emerging Markets Overview Emerging Markets Overview Emerging Market bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 399 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -483 bps. EM Sovereigns underperformed the Treasury benchmark by 519 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -646 bps. The EM Corporate & Quasi-Sovereign Index underperformed by 323 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -379 bps. Russian sovereign bonds were recently downgraded to below investment grade, but before they were removed from the index they contributed -367 bps to Sovereign excess returns in February. In other words, if Russian securities are excluded, the EM Sovereign index only lagged Treasuries by 152 bps in February and actually outperformed a duration-matched position in US corporate bonds. As a result, the EM Sovereign index now offers less yield than a credit rating and duration-matched position in US corporate bonds (Chart 5). This recent shift in valuation leads us to reduce our recommended exposure to EM Sovereigns from overweight to underweight. Russian securities also negatively influenced EM Corporate & Quasi-Sovereign returns in February, but that index still offers a significant yield premium over US corporates whether Russian bonds are included or not (bottom panel). The turmoil overseas causes us to reduce exposure to this sector as well, but we will retain a neutral allocation instead of underweight because of still-attractive valuations. Municipal Bonds: Overweight Chart 6Municipal Market Overview Municipal Market Overview Municipal Market Overview Municipal bonds underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 5 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -126 bps (before adjusting for the tax advantage). While the war in Ukraine introduces a great deal of uncertainty into the economic outlook, the municipal bond sector should be better placed than most to deal with the fallout. Trailing 4-quarter net state & local government savings are incredibly high (Chart 6) and 2021’s federal spending splurge will continue to support state & local government coffers for some time. That said, relative muni valuations have tightened significantly during the past few months and the recent back-up in corporate spreads will eventually give us an opportunity to increase exposure to that sector. With that in mind, this week we downgrade our municipal bond allocation from “maximum overweight” (5 out of 5) to “overweight” (4 out of 5). We calculate that 12-17 year maturity Revenue munis offer a breakeven tax rate of 5% relative to credit rating and duration matched US corporate bonds. 12-17 year General Obligation Munis offer a breakeven tax rate of 11% versus corporates (panel 2). Both figures are down considerably from their 2020 peaks. For their part, high-yield muni spreads have also not kept pace with the recent widening in high-yield corporate spreads (bottom panel). Treasury Curve: Buy 2-Year Bullet Versus Cash/10 Barbell Chart 7Treasury Yield Curve Overview Treasury Yield Curve Overview Treasury Yield Curve Overview The Treasury curve flattened dramatically In February, driven by a re-pricing of Fed expectations in the first half of the month and then later by flight-to-quality flows spurred by the war in Ukraine. The 2/10 and 5/30 Treasury slopes flattened by 22 bps and 3 bps in February. They currently sit at 24 bps and 51 bps, respectively (Chart 7). As noted on the first page of this report, during the next few months the Fed will be forced to strike a balance between tightening policy fast enough to prevent a de-stabilizing increase in inflation expectations and slow enough to prevent an inversion of the yield curve. The latter would likely signal an unacceptable increase in recession risk. In the near-term, we view the risks as clearly tilted toward further curve flattening as the Fed initiates a rate hike cycle while geopolitical uncertainties keep a lid on long-dated yields. However, this dynamic will eventually give way when political uncertainties abate and/or the Fed is forced to move more slowly in response to an inverted (or almost inverted) curve. With that in mind, a position in curve steepeners continues to make sense on a 6-12 month investment horizon. We also maintain our recommendation to favor the 20-year bond over a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 10-year note and 30-year bond. This position offers an enticing 26 bps of duration-neutral carry. TIPS: Neutral Chart 8TIPS Market Overview TIPS Market Overview TIPS Market Overview TIPS outperformed the duration-equivalent nominal Treasury index by 150 basis points in February, bringing year-to-date excess returns up to +127 bps. The 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 19 bps on the month and the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate rose 7 bps. Perhaps the most interesting recent market move is that TIPS breakeven inflation rates rose during the past month, even as flight-to-safety flows surged into the US bond market. That is, while nominal Treasury yields declined, TIPS yields fell even more, and the cost of inflation compensation embedded in US bond prices increased. At present, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 2.70%, above the Fed’s 2.3% to 2.5% target range (Chart 8). The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 2.16%, still below the Fed’s target range but significantly higher than where it was in January. The bond market has responded to the war in Ukraine and resultant surge in commodity prices by bidding up the cost of inflation compensation. While we agree that higher commodity prices increase the risk that inflation will remain elevated in the second half of the year, we still think the most likely outcome is that core inflation starts to moderate in the coming months as supply chain pressures ease and the pandemic exerts less of an impact on daily life. Upcoming Fed rate hikes will also apply downward pressure to long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates. As a result, we maintain our recommended neutral allocation to TIPS versus nominal Treasuries at the long-end of the curve and re-iterate our recommendation to underweight TIPS versus nominal Treasuries at the front-end of the curve.  ABS: Overweight Chart 9ABS Market Overview ABS Market Overview ABS Market Overview Asset-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 25 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -5 bps. Aaa-rated ABS underperformed by 25 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -6 bps. Non-Aaa ABS underperformed by 22 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -1 bp. During the past two years, substantial federal government support for household incomes has caused US households to build up an extremely large buffer of excess savings. During this period, many households have used their windfalls to pay down consumer debt and credit card debt levels have fallen to well below pre-COVID levels (Chart 9). Though consumer credit growth has rebounded, debt levels are still low. This indicates that the collateral quality backing consumer ABS remains exceptionally strong. This also indicates that while surging gasoline prices will weigh on consumer activity in the coming months, household balance sheets are starting from such a good place that we don’t expect a meaningful increase in consumer credit delinquencies. Investors should remain overweight consumer ABS and should take advantage of the high quality of household balance sheets by moving down the quality spectrum, favoring non-Aaa rated securities over Aaa-rated ones. Non-Agency CMBS: Neutral Chart 10CMBS Market Overview CMBS Market Overview CMBS Market Overview Non-Agency Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 95 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -98 bps. Aaa Non-Agency CMBS underperformed Treasuries by 90 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -92 bps. Non-Aaa Non-Agency CMBS underperformed by 108 bps on the month, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -105 bps (Chart 10). Though CMBS spreads remain wide compared to other similarly risky spread products, we continue to recommend only a neutral allocation to the sector because of the structurally challenging environment for commercial real estate. Agency CMBS: Overweight Agency CMBS underperformed the duration-equivalent Treasury index by 24 basis points in February, dragging year-to-date excess returns down to -21 bps. The average index option-adjusted spread widened 6 bps on the month. It currently sits at 46 bps (bottom panel). The average Agency CMBS spread remains below its pre-COVID level, but it continues to look attractive compared to other similarly risky spread products. Stay overweight. Appendix A: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing We follow a two-step process to formulate recommendations for bond portfolio duration. First, we determine the change in the federal funds rate that is priced into the yield curve for the next 12 months. Second, we decide – based on our assessments of the economy and Fed policy – whether the change in the fed funds rate will exceed or fall short of what is priced into the curve. Most of the time, a correct answer to this question leads to the appropriate duration call. We call this framework the Golden Rule Of Bond Investing, and we demonstrated its effectiveness in the US Bond Strategy Special Report, “The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing”, dated July 24, 2018. Chart 11 illustrates the Golden Rule’s track record by showing that the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Master Index tends to outperform cash when rate hikes fall short of 12-month expectations, and vice-versa. At present, the market is priced for 172 basis points of rate hikes during the next 12 months. Chart 11The Golden Rule's Track Record The Golden Rule's Track Record The Golden Rule's Track Record Appendix A: The Golden Rule Of Bond Investing We can also use our Golden Rule framework to make 12-month total return and excess return forecasts for the Bloomberg Barclays Treasury index under different scenarios for the fed funds rate. Excess returns are relative to the Bloomberg Barclays Cash index. To forecast total returns we first calculate the 12-month fed funds rate surprise in each scenario by comparing the assumed change in the fed funds rate to the current value of our 12-month discounter. This rate hike surprise is then mapped to an expected change in the Treasury index yield using a regression based on the historical relationship between those two variables. Finally, we apply the expected change in index yield to the current characteristics (yield, duration and convexity) of the Treasury index to estimate total returns on a 12-month horizon. The below tables present those results, along with excess returns for a front-loaded and a back-loaded rate hike scenario. Excess returns are calculated by subtracting assumed cash returns in each scenario from our total return projections. Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Appendix B: Butterfly Strategy Valuations The following tables present the current read-outs from our butterfly spread models. We use these models to identify opportunities to take duration-neutral positions across the Treasury curve. The following two Special Reports explain the models in more detail: US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated July 25, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com US Bond Strategy Special Report, “More Bullets, Barbells And Butterflies”, dated May 15, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Table 4 shows the raw residuals from each model. A positive value indicates that the bullet is cheap relative to the duration-matched barbell. A negative value indicates that the barbell is cheap relative to the bullet. Table 4Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Raw Residuals In Basis Points (As Of February 28, 2022) Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Table 5 scales the raw residuals in Table 4 by their historical means and standard deviations. This facilitates comparison between the different butterfly spreads. Table 5Butterfly Strategy Valuation: Standardized Residuals (As Of February 28, 2022) Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Table 6 flips the models on their heads. It shows the change in the slope between the two barbell maturities that must be realized during the next six months to make returns between the bullet and barbell equal. For example, a reading of -29 bps in the 5 over 2/10 cell means that we would expect the 5-year to outperform the 2/10 if the 2/10 slope flattens by less than 29 bps during the next six months. Otherwise, we would expect the 2/10 barbell to outperform the 5-year bullet. Table 6Discounted Slope Change During Next 6 Months (BPs) Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Appendix C: Excess Return Bond Map The Excess Return Bond Map is used to assess the relative risk/reward trade-off between different sectors of the US bond market. It is a purely computational exercise and does not impose any macroeconomic view. The Map’s vertical axis shows 12-month expected excess returns. These are proxied by each sector’s option-adjusted spread. Sectors plotting further toward the top of the Map have higher expected returns and vice-versa. Our novel risk measure called the “Risk Of Losing 100 bps” is shown on the Map’s horizontal axis. To calculate it, we first compute the spread widening required on a 12-month horizon for each sector to lose 100 bps or more relative to a duration-matched position in Treasury securities. Then, we divide that amount of spread widening by each sector’s historical spread volatility. The end result is the number of standard deviations of 12-month spread widening required for each sector to lose 100 bps or more versus a position in Treasuries. Lower risk sectors plot further to the right of the Map, and higher risk sectors plot further to the left. Chart 12Excess Return Bond Map (As Of February 28, 2022) Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Recommended Portfolio Specification Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Other Recommendations Sticking The Landing Sticking The Landing Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “The Omicron Impact”, dated November 30, 2021. Treasury Index Returns Spread Product Returns
With Russia and Ukraine accounting for less than 3% of Chinese exports, the Ukraine conflict is likely to have a limited direct impact on the Chinese economy. Data released on Monday reveal that China’s trade surplus beat expectations in the first two months…