Equities
In this week's Weekly Report, we postulated that we are in the early innings of the late-cycle inflation stage where excesses can morph into a mania. One way to benefit from this onset of the inflation stage/mania phase is to go long oil & gas exploration & production/short global gold miners. The handoff from reflation to inflation has historically been a boon to the oil/gold ratio (OGR). Importantly, the prices paid subcomponent of the ISM manufacturing survey has gone parabolic compared with the new orders sub index, roughly doubling since the 2016 nadir. This depicts an inflationary backdrop and is signaling that the OGR will play catch up in the coming months (middle panel). Beyond this enticing relative commodity complex outlook, the synchronized global capex upcycle, one of BCA's key themes for the year, is underpinning the relative share price ratio. U.S. capex in particular is outpacing GDP growth and oil & gas investment is the key driver. Moreover, capex intentions from the Dallas Fed survey point to more upside in relative share prices (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We initiated a market- and currency-neutral long S&P oil & gas exploration & production/short global gold miners pair trade; please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details. The ETF ticker symbols the S&P oil & gas exploration & production and the global gold mining index are: XOP and GDX, respectively.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Looming inflation, the synchronized global capex upcycle and rising real Treasury yields all argue for preferring oil-related to gold-exposed equities. Recent Changes Initiate a long S&P oil & gas exploration & production / short global gold miners pair trade today. Table 1 Feature Chart 1No Contagion Yet Stocks recovered smartly from the Turkey induced pullback last week, and continue to flirt with all-time highs. While the risk of contagion remains acute, three key high-frequency financial market metrics suggest that the SPX will likely escape unscathed. The second panel of Chart 1 shows that both the Japanese yen and the Swiss franc, the two ultimate safe havens, have barely budged vis-a-vis the U.S. dollar and also the junk bond market remains extremely calm (third panel, Chart 1). We will continue to closely monitor these indicators to gauge the risk of contagion in U.S. equities. The greatest risk, however, is China's economic footing, particularly its foreign exchange policy (bottom panel, Chart 1). Any further steep devaluation in the renminbi will prove destabilizing and bring back memories of August 2015 when Chinese policy easing caused the dollar to spike and short-circuited SPX EPS growth. Relatedly, there is also a risk that China moves forward more aggressively on capital account liberalization, likely leading to a renminbi devaluation at least initially. Re-reading this Bank For International Settlements paper (starting on page 35 penned by Mitsuhiro Fukao, an ex-Director of Economic Research at the Bank of Japan) and taking a cue from Japan's experience was insightful.1 But, it remains difficult to predict what China's ultimate reaction function to Trump's trade rhetoric will be (Mathieu Savary, BCA's foreign exchange strategist, will be addressing this in one of his upcoming reports). While a tactical 5-10% pullback cannot be ruled out as the seasonally weak month of September is nearing, from a cyclical perspective our strategy would be to "buy the dip" if one were to materialize. Importantly, this bulletproof equity market that refuses to go down has two stealthy allies on its side: pension plans that are forced into equities and corporate treasurers that execute buybacks. Granted, EPS have delivered and suggest that upbeat fundamentals remain the key market support pillars. As a result, the S&P 500 is on track to register a tenth consecutive positive total return year, which is unprecedented in previous expansions. The only other time that the (reconstructed) SPX rose every year for 10 years in a row was in the late 1940s, however, two recessions occurred during that equity market run (Chart 2). While we are undoubtedly in the later stages of the bull market and the business cycle, there is a big difference between "late-cycle" and "end-of-cycle". Keep in mind that the current backdrop is unusual. A large fiscal package has hit late in the game likely extending the cycle. Thus, gauging where we are in the cycle is important. Chart 3 shows a stylized liquidity cycle and our sense is that we are in the early innings of the inflation stage. The handoff from reflation to inflation has happened and during this stage excesses take root eventually morphing, more often than not, into a mania. Chart 2Impressive Streak Continues Chart 3Liquidity Cycle From a macro perspective inflation is slated to rear its ugly head. Nominal GDP is far exceeding the 10-year Treasury yield, and this yield curve type steepening is bullish for SPX top line growth (Chart 4). As a reminder, in Q2 the GDP deflator jumped to 3.35% pushing nominal GDP growth to 7.41%. Money velocity2 is also enjoying a slingshot recovery. Nominal GDP growth is outpacing M2 money supply growth by roughly 150bps. The U.S. money multiplier (M2 over the monetary base, not shown) is also at a 5-year high. This is an inflationary backdrop (bottom panel, Chart 5) and should also boost SPX revenues and thus continue to underpin the broad equity market. Similarly, the NY Fed's Underlying Inflation Gauge (UIG) is firing on all cylinders and is a harbinger of a further pickup in core inflation in the coming months. As a result, SPX sales growth remains on a solid foundation (Chart 6). Chart 4SPX Sales Rest On Solid Foundations Chart 5A Little Bit Of Inflation... Chart 6...Is A Boon For The SPX This week we are initiating a market and asset class neutral pair trade to benefit from the inflationary backdrop. Initiate A Long Oil & Gas E&P / Short Gold Miners Pair Trade One way to benefit from this onset of the inflation stage/mania phase is to go long oil & gas exploration & production/short global gold miners. On the underlying commodity front, the handoff from reflation to inflation has historically been a boon to the oil/gold ratio (OGR). Importantly, the prices paid subcomponent of the ISM manufacturing survey has gone parabolic compared with the new order sub index, roughly doubling since the 2016 nadir. This depicts an inflationary backdrop and is signaling that the OGR will play catch up in the coming months (Chart 7). Chart 7CHART 7 Reflation To Inflation Handoff Similarly, another surging inflation indicator also suggests that the OGR has ample room to run. The GDP deflator has recently eclipsed the 3% mark and since exiting deflation following the end of the recent global manufacturing recession it is up over 370bps. Chart 8 shows that if this multi-decade positive correlation were to hold then the OGR could double from current levels. Chart 8GDP Deflator On The Rise Finally, the NY Fed's UIG is also closely correlated with OGR momentum, corroborates the other firming inflation signals and hints that more gains are in store for the OGR (bottom panel, Chart 9). Global macro tailwinds are also clearly in favor of oil at the expense of gold. BCA's global industrial production gauge of 40 DM and EM countries continues to expand at a healthy clip. Oil is a global growth barometer, whereas gold represents one of the few true safe havens in times of duress. Taken together, the implication is that a catch up phase looms for the OGR (middle panel, Chart 9). The relative commodity backdrop is the most important determinant of relative share prices as it dictates the direction of relative profitability (middle panel, Chart 10). Therefore, as the OGR goes so do relative share prices. Chart 9Enticing Global Macro Backdrop Chart 10Buy Oil & Gas E&P... Beyond this enticing relative commodity complex outlook, the synchronized global capex upcycle, one of BCA's key themes for the year, is underpinning the relative share price ratio. U.S. capex in particular is outpacing GDP growth and oil & gas investment is the key driver. The V-shaped recovery in the Baker Hughes oil & gas rig count data (bottom panel, Chart 10) confirms this upbeat energy capital outlay backdrop. Moreover, capex intentions from the Dallas Fed survey point to more upside in relative share prices (bottom panel, Chart 11). Meanwhile, keep in mind that the U.S. has been at full employment for 18 months now (in other words the unemployment gap closed in February of 2017) and the economy is firing on all cylinders. Real rates have also shot the lights out recently. In fact the 5-year real Treasury yield is perched near 1%, a multi-year high. Given that gold does not yield any income, it suffers when real yields rise and vice versa (for additional details on the relationship between gold and interest rates, please refer to the early-May piece penned by our sister publication U.S. Bond Strategy titled "A Signal From Gold?").3 Similarly, relative share prices thrive when real yields advance and retreat when the TIPS yield sinks (top panel, Chart 12). Chart 11...At The Expense Of Gold Miners Chart 12Bullion TIPS Over Unsurprisingly, the Fed has been tightening monetary policy since December 2015. Nevertheless, the "Fed Spread" (2-year Treasury yield compared with the fed funds rate) is steepening and continues to point to additional gains in the share price ratio (bottom panel, Chart 12). Given that both the ECB and the BoJ have remained ultra-accommodative, a hawkish Fed has boosted the U.S. dollar. However, most commodities are priced in greenbacks, thus the currency effect is a washout and is neither closely correlated to the OGR nor to the share price ratio. Two risks to this high octane, high momentum pair trade are: an EM accident induced risk off phase and a global recession likely due to a flare up in the global trade war (policy uncertainty shown inverted, top panel, Chart 9). In either of these scenarios, investors will likely seek the refuge of bullion's perceived safety as the bond market will almost immediately start pricing in easier monetary policy with investors flocking into the ultimate safe haven asset, U.S. Treasurys. Netting it all out, an enticing macro backdrop with the onset of the inflation stage, the synchronized global capex upcycle and rising real Treasury yields all argue for preferring oil-related to gold-exposed equities. Bottom Line: Initiate a market- and currency-neutral long S&P oil & gas exploration & production/short global gold miners pair trade today. The ETF ticker symbols the S&P oil & gas exploration & production and the global gold mining index are: XOP and GDX, respectively. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 BIS Papers No 15 "China's capital account liberalisation: international perspectives", Monetary and Economic Department, April 2003. 2 "The velocity of money is the frequency at which one unit of currency is used to purchase domestically- produced goods and services within a given time period. In other words, it is the number of times one dollar is spent to buy goods and services per unit of time. If the velocity of money is increasing, then more transactions are occurring between individuals in an economy". Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. 3 Please see BCA U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "A Signal From Gold?" dated May 1, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Dear Client, We had intended to send you the second part of our two-part special report on long-term inflation risks this week, but given the sharp moves in the dollar and emerging market assets, we decided to write this bulletin instead. Barring any further major market turbulence, we will send you the sequel to the inflation report next week. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights The dollar rally and EM selloff have further to go. The U.S. economy is firing on all cylinders, while the rest of the world is sputtering. Turkey is not an isolated case. Emerging markets as a whole have feasted on debt over the past decade, and now will be held to account. We remain neutral on global equities, while underweighting EM relative to DM and overweighting defensives relative to deep cyclicals. Brewing EM stresses could cause the 10-year Treasury yield to temporarily fall to 2.5%, leading to a further flattening of the yield curve. However, the long-term path for yields is up. Feature King Dollar Reigns Supreme Our expectation going into this year was that the dollar would strengthen, triggering turmoil in emerging markets. This thesis has panned out, raising the question of whether it is time to declare victory and move on. We don't think so. While market positioning has clearly shifted closer towards our own views, we still think that the stronger dollar/weaker EM story has further to run. To understand why, it is useful to review the reasoning behind our thesis. Our bullish dollar view was based on a simple observation, which is that the U.S. had finally reached a point where aggregate demand was starting to outstrip supply. This implied that the dollar would need to strengthen in order to shift demand away from the United States. It is amazing how many commentators still think that the U.S. can divert spending towards imported goods without any change in the value of the dollar. Americans do not care what the CBO's or IMF's estimate of the domestic output gap is when they are deciding whether to buy U.S. or foreign-made goods. They care about relative quality-adjusted prices. Since the U.S. is a fairly closed economy - imports are only 15% of GDP - we reckoned that the dollar would need to strengthen considerably in order to displace a significant amount of domestic production with foreign-made goods. This is exactly what happened. Still More Upside For U.S. Rates Currency values tend to track interest rate differentials (Chart 1). As such, our prediction of a stronger dollar entailed the expectation that investors would increasingly price in a more hawkish path for the fed funds rate. This has indeed occurred. Since the start of the year, the expected fed funds rate has risen by 34 basis points for end-2018 and by 65 basis points for end-2019 (Chart 2). Chart 1Historically, The Dollar Has Moved In Line With Interest Rate Differentials Chart 2Rate Expectations Have Increased, ##br##But There Is Still A Long Way To Go Our sense is that U.S. interest rate expectations can rise further. Faster wage growth will boost consumption. The household savings rate can also fall from its current elevated level, which will give consumer spending an additional boost (Chart 3). Business investment should remain firm. Chart 4 shows that capex intentions are strong, while bank lending standards for commercial and industrial loans, which tend to lead loan growth, continue to ease. Fiscal stimulus will also goose the economy. Chart 3Consumption Could Accelerate As The Savings Rate Drops Chart 4U.S. Capex Investment Going Strong Could interest rate expectations move up more in the rest of the world than in the U.S., causing the dollar to tumble? It is possible, but unlikely. In contrast to most other central banks, the Fed wants to tighten financial conditions in order to keep the economy from overheating. A weaker dollar would entail an easing of financial conditions, and hence would require an even more hawkish response from the Fed. Currency Intervention Is Unlikely To Succeed Some have speculated that the Trump administration will intervene in the foreign exchange market in order to drive down the value of the dollar. We doubt this will happen, but even if such interventions were to take place, they would not be successful. Presumably, currency interventions would take the form of purchases of foreign exchange, financed through the issuance of Treasurys. The purchase of foreign currency would release U.S. dollars into the financial system, but the sale of Treasury securities would suck out those dollars from the financial system. The net result would be no change in the volume of U.S. dollars in circulation - what economists call a "sterilized" intervention. Both economic theory and years of history show that sterilized interventions do not have lasting effects on currency values. The Fed could, of course, provide funding for the Treasury's purchases of foreign exchange, leading to an increase in the monetary base. This would be tantamount to an unsterilized intervention. However, such a deliberate attempt to weaken the dollar by expanding the money supply would fly in the face of the Fed's efforts to cool growth by tightening financial conditions. We highly doubt the Fed's current leadership would go along with this. Emerging Markets In The Crosshairs This brings us to emerging markets. EM equities almost always fall when U.S. financial conditions are tightening (Chart 5). One can believe that emerging market stocks will go up; one can also believe, as we do, that the Fed will do its job and tighten financial conditions. But one cannot believe that both of these things will happen at the same time. Some pundits think that the plunge in the Turkish lira is not emblematic of the problems facing emerging markets. We are skeptical of this sanguine conclusion. Chart 6 shows that as a share of both GDP and exports, EM dollar-denominated debt is now as high as it was in the late 1990s. Turkey may be the worst of the lot, but it is hardly an isolated case. Chart 5Tightening U.S. Financial Conditions Do Not Bode Well For EM Stocks Chart 6EM Dollar Debt Is High Chart 7 presents a vulnerability heat map for a number of key emerging markets.1 We consider fourteen variables (expressed as a share of GDP, unless otherwise noted): 1) Current account balance; 2) Net international investment position; 3) External debt; 4) Change in external debt during the past five years; 5) External debt-servicing obligations coming due over the next 12 months as a share of exports; 6) External funding requirements over the next 12 months as a share of foreign exchange reserves; 7) Private sector savings-investment balance; 8) Private-sector debt; 9) Change in private-sector debt over the past five years; 10) Government budget balance; 11) Government debt; 12) Change in government debt over the past five years; 13) Share of domestic debt held by overseas investors; and 14) Inflation. Our analysis suggests that Turkey, Argentina, Colombia, Brazil, Mexico, Chile, South Africa, and Indonesia are all vulnerable to balance of payments stresses. Chart 7Vulnerability Heat Map For Key EM Markets Of course, asset markets in some of these economies have already moved quite a bit over the past few months, so it is useful to benchmark their stock markets and currencies to the underlying macro risks they face. For stock markets, we do this by comparing the heat map score with a composite valuation measure that incorporates price-to-book, price-to-sales, price-to-forward earnings, price-to-cash flow, and the dividend yield. Our analysis suggests that stocks in Russia and Korea are rather cheap, while equities in Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa, and Argentina are still quite expensive (Chart 8, top panel). Chart 8Some EM Stock Markets And Currencies Have Not Fully Priced In Macro Risks For currencies, we compare the heat map score with the level of the real effective exchange rate relative to its ten-year average. The Mexican peso, Brazilian real, Chilean peso, Indonesian rupiah, and South African rand still look pricey on this basis (Chart 8, bottom panel). In contrast, the Turkish lira and the Argentine peso are starting to look fairly cheap, although they could still get quite a bit cheaper before finding a floor. The China Wildcard The last time emerging markets seemed at risk of melting down was in 2015. Fortunately for them, China came to the rescue, delivering a massive double dose of fiscal and credit easing. Things may not be so straightforward this time around. China does not want to let its economy falter, but high debt levels and an overvalued housing market have made the usual policy prescriptions less appealing. As such, we would not necessarily conclude that the recent decline in the Chinese three-month interbank rate is a signal that the authorities want to see much faster credit growth (Chart 9). They may simply want to see a weaker currency. This is an important distinction because while faster credit growth would boost demand for EM exports, a weaker yuan would hurt other emerging markets by giving China a leg up in competitiveness. A weaker yuan would also make it more expensive for Chinese companies to import natural resources, thus putting downward pressure on commodity prices. It is too soon to know what policy mix the Chinese authorities will choose to pursue. Investors should pay close attention to the monthly data on the growth rates of social financing and local government bond issuance. So far, the combined credit and fiscal impulse has continued to weaken, suggesting that the authorities are in no hurry to open the stimulus floodgate (Chart 10). Chart 9Is China Trying To Stimulate Credit ##br##Growth Or Weaken The Yuan? Chart 10China Has Been Slow To Open The Credit And Fiscal Spigots Worries About The Euro Area Slower EM growth is likely to take a bigger toll on the euro area than the United States. Exports to emerging markets account for only 3.6% of GDP for the U.S., compared to 9.7% of GDP for the euro area. Euro area banks also have more exposure to emerging markets than U.S. banks. Notably, Spanish banks have sizeable exposure to Turkey and other vulnerable emerging markets (Chart 11). Meanwhile, worries about Italy have resurfaced. The 10-year Italian bond yield has moved back above 3%, not far from its May highs. The gap in fiscal policy between what Italy's new populist government has promised voters and what the European Commission is willing to accept remains a mile wide. Italian banks have become increasingly wary of financing their spendthrift government. With the ECB stepping back from asset purchases, two critical buyers of Italian debt are moving to the sidelines. The credit impulse in the euro area turned negative even before concerns about emerging markets and Italian politics came to the fore. As Chart 12 shows, the credit impulse has reliably tracked euro area growth. Right now, there is little reason to think that European banks will open the credit spigots, suggesting that euro area growth will be lackluster. Chart 11Who Has More Exposure To EM? Chart 12Euro Area Credit Impulse Suggests Growth Will Remain Lackluster Investment Conclusions If last year was the year of global growth resynchronization, this year is turning into one of desynchronization. The U.S. economy is outperforming the rest of the world, and the dollar is benefiting in the process. As we go to press, the broad trade-weighted dollar is up 6.1% year-to-date and stands only 2.2% below its December 28, 2016 high (Chart 13). From a long-term perspective, the greenback has become expensive, so we are inclined to close our strategic long DXY trade for a potential carry-adjusted profit of 15.7% if it reaches our target of 98 (as of the time of writing, the DXY is at 96.5). However, even if we were to close this trade, our tactical bias would be to remain long the dollar until clearer evidence emerges that the brewing EM crisis is about to abate. We moved from overweight to neutral on global equities on June 19. The MSCI All-Country World index has fluctuated a lot since then, but is currently up only 0.7% in dollar terms. Developed markets have gained 1.4%, while emerging markets have lost 3.8% (Chart 14). We have yet to reach a capitulation point for EM equities. The number of shares in the iShares MSCI Turkey ETF has almost doubled since August 3rd, as a stampede of bottom fishers have plowed into the fund (Chart 15). Equity investors should maintain our recommendation to underweight emerging markets relative to DM and to favor defensive sectors over deep cyclicals. We expect euro area stocks to perform in line with their U.S. peers in local-currency terms, but to underperform in dollar terms over the remainder of the year. Chart 13The Dollar Is Back Near Its Highs Chart 14Stock Market Performance: Roller Coaster Ride Chart 15Foreign Investors And Turkish Stocks: ##br##Trying To Catch A Falling Knife In the fixed-income realm, the long-term trend in global bond yields remains to the upside, but near-term EM stresses could cause the 10-year Treasury yield to temporarily fall back towards 2.5%. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 We collaborated with our colleague Mathieu Savary and his team at BCA’s Foreign Exchange Strategy to build this heat map. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Overweight On Monday of this week, President Trump signed the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act into law. Most significantly, the bill authorizes $717 billion in defense funding for FY2019, a small increase from the $696 billion in FY2018, which was a significant increase from the FY2016 $580 billion budget. The administration's commitment to returning military funding to wartime levels (regardless of budget constraints or geopolitical threat) are confirmed by defense spending surging at the fastest rate in nearly a decade (second panel). This is further reflected in the recovery in defense investment (bottom panel). We highlighted earlier this week that defense stocks should be winners in a trade war, particularly if such a war increases the threat of a more conventional one. Tack on above-normal earnings growth from exceptional government funding and defense stocks look even more appealing; stay overweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in the BCA Defense index are: LMT, GD, RTN, NOC, LLL.
Turkey's unorthodox macroeconomic policies have backfired. The pursuit of economic growth at all costs has created major macroeconomic imbalances including surging inflation, a large current account deficit, extreme reliance on foreign portfolio inflows and foreign borrowing as well as an over-expansion of domestic credit. The nation's financial markets have been in freefall since early this year, hit by external shocks as well as investors' realization that President Erdogan is reluctant to adopt requisite and orthodox macroeconomic policies. The political spat between Turkey and the U.S. over the detention of American pastor Andrew Brunson in the past two weeks was a trigger - not the cause - of the selloff in Turkish financial markets. The basis for the ongoing selloff since early this year has been unsustainable macro policies, and the resulting macroeconomic imbalances. The key questions for investors are whether these ongoing adjustments in Turkey's financial markets and economy have further to go, and how to position in terms of investment strategy going forward. Valuations Have Become Attractive With share prices having dropped by 60% in U.S. dollar terms since their peak at the beginning of the year, Turkish equity valuations have become utterly depressed. The same can be said about the lira. In brief, there is now good value in Turkish financial markets. The lira has reached two standard deviations below fair value, according to the unit labor cost-based real effective exchange rate - which is our favorite currency valuation measure (Chart 1). At the moment, the lira is cheap. That said, if high inflation persists (Chart 2), the currency will appreciate in real terms, even if the nominal exchange rate stays around these levels. Chart 3 demonstrates that the cyclically-adjusted P/E (CAPE) ratio for Turkish stocks is now, two standard deviations below the historical average. Chart 1The Lira Has Become Cheap Chart 2Turkey: Inflation Breakout Chart 3Turkish Equities Are Cheap Nevertheless, it is essential to recognize that the CAPE ratio is a structural valuation measure - i.e., it is intended to work in the long term, beyond short-term business cycle fluctuations. Furthermore, structural valuation measures assume there is no structural shift in financial markets or the economy. If the Turkish authorities move to impose capital controls and double down on their unorthodox macro policies, there will arguably be a structural shift in the nation's economy and financial markets, and any indicator based on the past, including this CAPE ratio, will lose its relevance. In short, investors who buy Turkish stocks now will have a high probability of making money in the long run - possibly in the next three years or beyond barring structural regime shift. That said, the CAPE ratio is not a useful gauge for investors with short- and medium-term time horizons. Turkish U.S. dollar credit spreads are now the widest in the EM corporate space (1300 basis points). Sovereign spreads have also spiked to 590 basis points, the widest in 9 years, although still below levels that prevailed in the early 2000s (Chart 4). Local currency bonds are yielding 23%, and their total return in U.S. dollars have plunged to new lows (Chart 5). Bottom Line: Valuations, especially for equities and the currency, have become cheap. Chart 4Turkish Sovereign Spreads ##br##Have Broken Out Chart 5Turkish Local Currency ##br##Bonds Have Collapsed Adjustment: How Complete Is It? From a macroeconomic perspective, Turkey has been over-spending, especially on foreign goods. Thus, a cheaper currency and higher borrowing costs were needed to force an adjustment - i.e. squeeze spending in general and imports in particular. Although the Turkish exchange rate has weakened dramatically, making imports more expensive, an adjustment in interest rates is still pending. The policy rate - the one-week repo rate - still stands at 17.75% while 3-month interbank rates have spiked to 22% compared with core inflation of 15%. Provided core inflation will rise further following the latest plunge in the lira's value, it is reasonable to conclude that the policy rate in Turkey in real (inflation-adjusted) terms is still low. As we have argued in the past,1 the pre-conditions for turning bullish on Turkey are (1) a very cheap currency (as well as low valuations for other asset classes), (2) reasonably high real policy rates (say between 2-4%) and (3) a switch and an adherence to orthodox macro policies, including the elimination of capital control risks. The first pre-condition - valuations - has been met, as we discussed above. The second pre-condition - high real interest rates - has only partially been met: market-driven interest rates have spiked, yet policy rates are still low. Finally, there has been no sign that Turkish policymakers have embraced more orthodox macro policies. Consequently, the risk of capital controls or additional unorthodox measures remains reasonably high. In term of the real economy, there is presently little doubt that it is heading into a major recession with the banking system under siege. This necessitates considerable bad-asset restructuring. However, financial market valuations have probably already priced these developments in. Bottom Line: Out of three pre-conditions for turning positive, only one and a half have been met. Investment Strategy: Book Profits On Shorts The investment strategy with respect to Turkish financial markets should take into account that valuations have become very attractive, yet uncertainty over policy remains unusually high. In particular, in the case of imposition of capital controls, investors will suffer more losses. Capital controls or other unorthodox measures would represent a structural breakdown, and historical valuation metrics will be of little value. It is impossible to forecast and quantify the probability of capital controls being imposed by Turkey because it is a decision only one individual can take: President Erdogan. Nevertheless, disciplined investors should never ignore extreme valuations. As shown in Charts 1 and 3 above, the currency and equities now trade at two standard deviations below their fair value. Therefore, balancing cheap valuations on the one hand and lingering risks of further unorthodox policies (capital controls in particular) on the other, we recommend the following: 1. Investors who are short should take profits. We are doing this on the following positions: Short TRY / long USD - we reinstated this position on April 19, 2017, and it has generated a 41% gain since that time. The cumulative gain on our short lira position is 65% since January 17, 2011 (Chart 6, top panel). Short Turkish bank stocks - we recommended this trade on April 19, 2017; it has produced a 65% gain since. Prior to this, we shorted banks from June 4, 2013 to January 25, 2017. The cumulative gain on our short bank stocks is 124% in U.S. dollar terms since June 4, 2013 (Chart 6, bottom panel). 2. For absolute return investors, we do not yet recommend going long Turkish assets, even if they are in distressed territory. Domestic policy uncertainty remains high, the U.S. dollar will advance further and the broad EM selloff will continue. It will be difficult for Turkish markets to rally meaningfully in absolute terms amid these headwinds. 3. As to dedicated EM equity and fixed income portfolios (both credit and local currency bonds), we recommend shifting from an underweight to neutral allocation. The odds of continued underperformance and risk of capital controls are somewhat offset by cheap valuations and oversold conditions (Chart 7). Chart 6Book Profits On Turkish Shorts Chart 7Turkish Fixed Income Markets ##br##Have Been Slammed A neutral stance on Turkey within fully invested EM portfolios would mean that dedicated investors eliminate the risk of being on the wrong side of the market in the case of either potential outperformance or continued underperformance. A Word On Contagion Although the plunge in Turkish markets this past week has certainly unnerved investors and caused selloffs in other vulnerable EMs, it is a mistake to blame this selloff on Turkey alone. BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy team maintains that many EM economies have poor fundamentals and are vulnerable for various reasons.2 In fact, a broad-based selloff in EM financial markets had already commenced earlier this year before the latest events in Turkey began to unfold. In short, recent events in Turkey have acted as an additional trigger - not a cause - for the EM carnage. For example, on the surface, it may seem that the South African rand has plunged due to the turmoil in Turkey. However, this is an incorrect rationalization. Chart 8 demonstrates that the rand and metals prices are very highly correlated. Therefore, the rand's selloff since early this year should be attributed to the broad strength in the U.S. dollar, falling metals prices (negative terms of trade) and poor domestic economic fundamentals that we have discussed extensively in our reports on South Africa. As we outlined in our June 14 report,3 bear markets and crises often develop in phases, where some markets plunge while others show temporary resilience. However, if our big-picture view - that EMs are in a bear market - is correct, then it is only a matter of time before the markets that are still resilient re-couple to the downside with the rest. That said, there are always going to be outperformers and underperformers. Our country allocation recommendations are presented at the end of each report (please refer to pages 9 and 10). Furthermore, investors should not focus solely on the impact of the Turkish crisis on developed financial markets. BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy team maintains that EM financial markets will continue to sell off, and that the downturn will eventually affect DM markets. Remarkably, DM ex-U.S. share prices have failed to recover from the January selloff along with the U.S. equity markets and still hover around their lows for the year (Chart 9). Chart 8The Rand Is Driven By ##br##Metal Prices Not By Turkey Chart 9No Recovery In DM ##br##ex-U.S. And EM Stocks Bottom Line: Woes in EM markets will persist, weighing on DM equities as well. The headwinds are slower global trade (for DM ex-U.S.) and a strong U.S. dollar for the S&P 500. The path of least resistance for the U.S. dollar is up, and U.S. stocks will continue to outperform European and Japanese equities in common currency terms. EM will be the worst performer among all regions. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy & Frontier Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the section on Turkey in Emerging Markets Weekly Report titled "The Dollar Rally And China's Imports," dated May 24, 2018, available on page 11. 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report titled "Understanding The EM/China Cycles," dated July 19, 2018, available on page 11. 3 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report titled "EM: Sustained Decoupling, Or Domino Effect?" dated June 14, 2018, available on page 11. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
On January 22nd and again on January 29th we cautioned investors that a sentiment driven technical in nature pullback was in order. Once the near 10% drawdown occurred, on February 8th our "buy the dip" analysis suggested that it was a great time to deploy capital with a cyclical time horizon. The top two panels of the chart update our "buy the dip" cycle-on-cycle research. While this iteration has been more volatile than the average of the previous 16, the SPX has climbed the proverbial wall of worry and is set to vault to new all-time highs. Already, on a total return basis, the S&P 500 has breached the previous highs and is in uncharted territory. Organic profit growth euphoria, stock buybacks and firming corporate pricing power alongside anemic wage growth will continue to prove powerful tailwinds for equities. Bottom Line: Fresh all-time highs loom for the SPX, sustain a cyclical over defensive portfolio bent.
Highlights Global QE has made bonds as risky as equities. Thereby, global QE has forced investors to accept identically depressed returns from equities and from bonds, requiring equity and other risk-asset valuations to surge. The good news is that record high valuations of risk-assets are fully justified if global bond yields remain at current levels or fall. The bad news is that risk-asset valuations will become dangerously unstable if global bond yields march much higher. The 'rule of 4' for equity/bond allocation: sum the three 10-year yields - the German bund, the U.S. T-bond, and the JGB. Above 3.5 means a neutral stance in equities... ... Above 4 means it's time to go underweight equities and overweight bonds. Feature Chart of the WeekAt Higher Bond Yields, The Correlation With Equity Prices Has Flipped From Positive To Negative The end is nigh for QE. The ECB will exit its asset purchase program at the end of the year. In doing so, it will mark the end of an epoch which began in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, a ten year period in which at least one of the world's major central banks has been buying a defined quantity of assets every month (Chart I-2). Approaching the end of the epoch, it is fitting to ask: how did the global QE stimulant work, and what will be the withdrawal symptoms? Chart I-2The End Is Nigh For QE As far back as 2011, in a provocative report titled QE And Riots we predicted that: "QE... will exacerbate already extreme income inequality and the consequent social tensions that arise from it" Events in the subsequent seven years have fully vindicated our prediction. Simply put, QE has front-loaded asset returns which would ordinarily have accrued in the distant future to the here and now - in the form of sharply higher capital values. So if you were invested in the financial markets or most housing markets, congratulations, you have received a bonanza; if you weren't, bad luck, there's not much left for you (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Equities Are Now Priced To Generate A Measly Long-Term Return To understand why, we need to delve deeper into behavioural economics. QE: Why The Stimulant Was So Powerful Central banks admit that there is a lower bound for interest rates below which there would be an exodus of bank deposits. Once policy rates hit the lower bound, central banks can unleash a 'plan B': a commitment to keep policy rates at this lower bound for an extended period. QE is simply a powerful signalling tool for this commitment. As ECB Chief Economist Peter Praet explains: "There is a signalling channel inherent in asset purchases, which reinforces the credibility of forward guidance on policy rates. This credibility of promises to follow a certain course for policy rates in the future is enhanced by the asset purchases, as these asset purchases are a concrete demonstration of our desire (to keep policy rates at the lower bound)" The credible commitment to keep policy rates near the lower bound for an extended period depresses bond yields towards the lower bound too (Chart I-4). Chart I-4The Credible Commitment To Keep Policy Rates##br## Low Pulls Down Bond Yields Now comes the part of the story that is not well understood, even by central bankers, because it derives from recent breakthroughs in behavioural economics. When bond yields approach the lower bound, the asymmetry in their future direction makes bonds very risky investments. The short-term potential for capital appreciation - nominal or real - vanishes, while the potential for vicious losses increases dramatically (Chart I-5). The technical term for this unattractive asymmetry is negative skew. Years of research in behavioural economics has led Nobel Laureate Professor Daniel Kahneman to conclude: negative skew is the measure that best encapsulates our perception of an investment's risk. Chart I-5Bonds Become Much Riskier ##br## At Low Bond Yields Professor Kahneman's work reveals a profound truth: global QE has made bonds as risky as equities (Chart I-6). The ramification is that equities and other risk-assets no longer need to lure investors with an excess return over bond returns. QE has forced investors to accept identically depressed returns from equities and from bonds, requiring equity and other risk-asset valuations to surge.1 Chart I-6Global QE Has Made Bonds ##br##As Risky As Equities One counterargument we hear is that bonds offer investors a diversification benefit and, because of this, investors will still accept a lower return from bonds. But this argument is flawed. Just as bonds are a diversifier for equity investors, equities are a diversifier for bond investors. Indeed in recent years, equities have protected bond investors during vicious sell-offs in the bond market such as after Trump's shock victory in 2016. So we could equally argue that equities require the lower return. In fact, with the same negative skew and symmetrical diversification properties, both assets must offer the same prospective return. The breakthroughs in behavioural economics provide some good news and some bad news. The good news is that record high valuations of risk-assets are fully justified if bond yields remain at current levels or fall. The bad news is that risk-asset valuations will become dangerously unstable if bond yields march much higher (Chart I-7). Chart I-7At Low Bond Yields The Required Return On ##br##Equities Plunges, So Equity Valuations Surge Financial Markets Dwarf The World Economy One common misunderstanding about QE is that it has been the bond purchasing itself that has held down bond yields. This seems a natural assumption because we connect the act of buying with higher prices (lower yields). Moreover, the $10 trillion of bonds that the 'big four' central banks have bought is not far short of the size of the euro area economy. But let's put this into context. The global bond market exceeds $100 trillion. Long-term bank loans amount to something similar. In this $217 trillion2 global fixed income market, $10 trillion of QE is peanuts. To reiterate, QE's impact came not from the $10 trillion of central bank purchases in itself, but from the signal that interest rates would remain at the lower bound for a long time, mathematically requiring bond yields to approach the lower bound too;3 and from the consequent equalization of negative skew on bonds and risk-assets, mathematically requiring an exponential rerating of all risk-asset valuations (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Equities Are Now Priced To Generate A Measly Long-Term Return Now note that the combination of equities and correlated risk-assets such as corporate and EM debt is worth around $160 trillion, and real estate is worth $220 trillion. World GDP is worth much less, around $80 trillion. So if returns from these richly valued risk-assets were reallocated from the here and now back to the distant future, through lower capital values today, there would be a very real risk that current spending could take a dive. Supporting this broad thesis, central bank measures of 'financial conditions easiness' are just tracking the level of the stock market (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Financial Conditions Are Just##br## Tracking The Stock Market The 'Rule Of 4' For Equities And Bonds On February 1 this year, we advised that the big threat to risk-asset valuations "comes from the global 10-year bond yield rising to 2% - broadly equivalent to the German 10-year bund yield rising to 1% or the U.S. 10-year T-bond yield rising to 3%." This advice has proved to be remarkably prescient. Whenever bond yields have been at the lower end of recent ranges, the correlation with equities has been positive, meaning equities have risen in tandem with bond yields. But whenever bond yields have moved to the upper end of recent ranges, the correlation has abruptly flipped to negative, meaning equities have fallen as bond yields have risen (Chart of the Week). While many strategists and commentators are fixated on the risks from trade wars and/or the global economy, our non-consensus call is that the biggest threat to risk-assets comes from rich valuations which will become dangerously unstable if bond yields march much higher. In this regard the bond yield that matters is the global bond yield. Previously we defined this in terms of the German 10-year bund yield and the U.S. 10-year T-bond yield. But today for completeness, we would like to add another important component: the Japanese 10-year government bond yield. The global bond yield is a weighted average of the three components. But for a useful rule of thumb, just sum the three 10-year yields - the German bund, the U.S. T-bond, and the JGB. A sum above 3.5 means a neutral stance to equities. A sum above 4 - which broadly equates to the global yield rising above 2% - means it's time to go underweight equities and overweight bonds. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Consider what happens to valuations when bond yields decline from 4% to 2%. At a 4% bond yield, equities possess significantly more negative skew than 10-year bonds. So investors will demand a comparatively higher return from equities, let’s say 8% a year. Whereas, at a 2% bond yield, equities and 10-year bonds possess the same negative skew. So investors will demand the same return from equities as they can get from bonds, 2% a year. At the lower bond yield, the bond must deliver 2% a year less for ten years compared to previously, meaning its price must rise by 22%. But equities must deliver 6% a year less for ten years, so the equity market must surge by 80%. 2 Source: The Institute of International Finance (IIF) https://www.iif.com/publication/global-debt-monitor/global-debt-monitor-june-2017 3 In contrast, if the market feared bond purchases would cause inflation and thereby imply a higher path of interest rates, QE would push up bond yields! Fractal Trading Model* This week we note that the underperformance of emerging market versus developed market equities is technically stretched and ripe for at least a brief countertrend reversal. The 65-day trade is long EM versus DM with a profit target of 2.5% and a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch ##br##- Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations