Financial Markets
Highlights U.S. Treasuries: The surprisingly positive response from financial markets to last week's Fed rate hike should force the Fed to quickly shift back to a hawkish bias. Maintain an underweight exposure to U.S. Treasuries, and an overall below-benchmark portfolio duration stance. Bearish Fed Trade: As a new tactical trade, go short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract to benefit from the Fed ramping up the hawkish language again. Japan: Japanese inflation remains too low for the Bank of Japan to move away from its 0% target on JGB yields anytime soon, even with signs of better Japanese growth and rising pressure on global bond yields. Upgrade low-beta Japan to above-benchmark in global hedged bond portfolios, while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France, the Netherlands) to neutral. Feature Chart of the WeekAre Central Banks OK With This? The major central banks all had a chance to send a more hawkish message to the markets in the past couple of weeks, and every one took a pass. Even the Fed, who actually hiked rates, signaled that U.S. monetary policy would not be tightened more aggressively than previously planned, which financial markets took very bullishly. With the global economy finally enjoying a synchronized upturn after several years of sluggishness, policymakers are showing no interest in hitting the brakes too hard, too soon and risking a sudden downturn in growth The current backdrop of improving economic momentum, with central banks remaining accommodative, is sustaining the strong performance of growth-sensitive assets like equities and corporate debt over government bonds. This should continue over the next 6-12 months. Inflation rates, both realized and expected, continue to rise across the developed economies alongside faster economic growth, putting upward pressure on government bond yields (Chart of the Week). Central bank dovishness is looking increasingly non-credible as long as this dynamic persists, but policymakers will likely be slow to respond without a more rapid rise in inflation. Bond yields will continue to climb higher against this backdrop, first from continued increases in inflation expectations and, later, from a shift to less restrictive monetary settings. We continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration stance, while underweighting government bonds versus corporate debt, particularly in the U.S. This week, we are making a significant portfolio shift to get even more defensive within our government bond allocation, upgrading low-beta Japan to above-benchmark while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France & the Netherlands) to neutral. The Fed Declares Victory Over "Low-flation" The market response to last week's Fed tightening was consistent with the idea of a "dovish hike", with U.S. equity and bond markets rallying while the U.S. dollar sold off and overall U.S. financial conditions actually easing. There was heightened nervousness heading into the meeting that the Fed could signal a faster or steeper trajectory for interest rates. That turned out to be a false alarm, as not much was changed from the Fed's prior guidance to markets. The range for the funds rate was raised to 0.75-1.00%, as expected, but there was virtually no change to any of the median FOMC member projections for GDP growth, inflation or interest rates out to 2019. Another 50bps of increases are expected this year, with 75bps in both 2018 and 2019 (Chart 2). This would bring the funds rate to 3% in 2019, which is the median FOMC member's assessment of where the terminal rate lies. The pricing from the U.S. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve shows that market expectations for the funds rate are in line with the Fed's projections for this year, but lower for the next two years. Our proxy measure for the market's assessment of the terminal rate - the 5-year OIS rate, 5-years forward - sits at 2.25%, 75bps below the Fed's number. Our bias is closer to the market on this point, as we do not see a need for the funds rate, in real terms, to end this tightening cycle much above 0% against a backdrop of still very high U.S. debt levels and low U.S. productivity growth. A 0% real funds rate would be the result of the Fed successfully getting U.S. inflation expectations back to its 2% target level, with a nominal funds rate of 2%. That inflation goal has not yet been reached, however, as inflation expectations are still below levels consistent with the Fed's inflation target (Chart 3, bottom panel). Chart 2FOMC & Market Disagree Beyond This Year Chart 3Few Signs Of An Overheating U.S. Economy The FOMC has made it clear that they believe the U.S. economy is running very close to full employment. Yet the recent modest deceleration in the various measures of wage inflation (middle panel) suggests that there could still be some excess slack in the U.S. labor market - even with the recent Payrolls reports showing job growth of over 200k per month. If that pace is sustained for several months, however, the unemployment rate will likely fall further and wage pressures will intensify. In the near-term, the Fed will continue to focus on financial markets to get a sense of whether current policy settings are too restrictive or too accommodative. One recent development on this front is that the correlation between the U.S. dollar (USD) and risk assets has flipped, with a stronger USD now positively correlated to global equities and credit (Chart 4). This shift was already starting to happen before the election of Donald Trump and his pro-growth agenda last November, likely because the global economy was improving as evidenced by the accelerating trend in our global purchasing managers' index (PMI, bottom panel). We have written extensively about the Fed being stuck in a "policy loop" in the past couple of years, where a shift to a more hawkish bias would sharply drive up the USD and cause a risk-off move in global financial markets. This unwanted tightening of financial conditions would cause the Fed to back off from its hawkishness, causing the USD to soften and markets to rally. We have argued that the way to break out of this loop would likely be a rise in non-U.S. economic growth that would allow the Fed to continue slowly normalizing U.S. monetary policy without disrupting global markets. We seem to be in that period now. One implication of this is that the longer risk assets can withstand rising U.S. interest rates and a stronger USD, the more the fed funds rate and U.S. Treasury yields must rise in response to U.S. economic strength. For this reason, we continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration stance on U.S. Treasuries on a 6-12 month horizon. We also maintain our bias towards a bear-steepening of the Treasury curve through our butterfly trade, long the 5-year bullet versus a duration-matched 2-year/10-year barbell. The curve will remain positively correlated to inflation expectations until those reach the Fed's target level, after which any additional Fed rate hikes will likely flatten the yield curve in a more typical pattern during the latter stages of a tightening cycle. It is possible, though, that because markets shrugged off the latest rate increase, the Fed could return to sending hawkish signals in the near term. To play for this possibility, our colleagues at BCA U.S. Bond Strategy recommend that investors add a tactical trade: going short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract (Chart 5). We are today adding this trade to our list of Tactical Overlay Trades (see page 12). Chart 4The Strong USD Is Not A Problem Chart 5Go Short January 2018 Fed Funds Futures We calculate that this trade will return 11bps in a scenario where the Fed lifts rates twice more before the end of the year and 37bps in a scenario where the funds rate is raised a more aggressive-than-expected three times. However, we do not expect to hold this trade until the end of the year. Rather, we expect the Fed will nudge rate expectations higher in the next month or two in response to the latest easing of financial conditions, and that these gains will be realized over a much shorter horizon. We also add a caveat that, in the present environment, it is safer to implement any "hawkish Fed trades" in either fed funds futures or the OIS market. The Eurodollar market does not provide the same potential for gains because the LIBOR / OIS spread is currently elevated and could tighten to offset the profits from rising rate expectations. Bottom Line: The surprisingly positive response from financial markets to last week's Fed rate hike could force the Fed to quickly shift back to a hawkish bias. Maintain below-benchmark exposure to U.S. Treasuries. As a new tactical trade, go short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract to benefit from the Fed ramping up the hawkish language again. Japan: A Weaker Yen Is Still The Only Way Out The Bank of Japan (BoJ) stayed on hold last week, as expected. There had been some increased speculation of late that the BoJ could start to signal a potential increase in its 0% target for the 10-year Japanese Government Bond (JGB) yield, given the rising trend in global yields and signs of better growth in Japan. At the press conference following the BoJ meeting, however, Governor Kuroda shot down that notion, saying that the current accommodative policy stance must be maintained given how far Japanese inflation is below the central bank's 2% target. It remains far too soon for the central bank to signal any shift to a less accommodative stance, as both the pace of economic growth and inflation are not only modest but lagging the current global upturn. In Chart 6, we show some Japanese growth variables relative to an aggregate of the same data for the major developed economies.1 What is clear from the chart is that Japan is benefitting from faster global growth on the industrial side, with the manufacturing PMI above 50. However, the domestic demand story is not as positive, with consumer confidence and real retail sales growth languishing. The lack of real income growth remains the biggest drag on Japanese consumers, as we show in another set of international comparisons in Chart 7. Japan's unemployment rate, currently at 3%, is below the OECD's estimate of the full employment level (consistent with stable domestic inflation pressures). This is in contrast to the other major economies, which are either at, or close to, full employment. Yet Japanese wages continue to struggle, both in nominal terms (a year-over-over growth rate of 1%) and real terms (a year-over-year growth rate of 0.4%). The current annual spring round of Japanese wage negotiations is showing that downward pressure remains powerful, with many manufacturing companies offering pay raises only half as large as those of last year.2 Chart 6Japan Is Lagging The Global Upturn Chart 7Still No Wage Growth In Japan Japan is still struggling to generate positive rates of inflation, even as price growth is accelerating in the other major economies (Chart 8). This is keeping Japanese inflation expectations, which the BoJ believes are mostly a function of the recent performance of actual inflation, subdued. As always, the only reliable source of Japanese inflation seems to be yen weakness. We continue to see this as the only way out of the low-inflation trap for Japan - keeping Japanese interest rates depressed versus the rest of the world, thus weakening the yen through increasingly unattractive interest rate differentials. The BoJ's 0% yield curve targeting framework has been successful in keeping rate differentials wide enough to soften up the yen, especially against the USD (Chart 9). Given our expectations of additional Fed rate hikes, and higher U.S. Treasury yields, over the rest of the year, the yen will likely depreciate further as long as the BoJ sticks with its current interest rate targets. A similar argument holds for the yen versus the Euro, given the increasing likelihood that the European Central Bank (ECB) will be forced to signal a less accommodative monetary policy stance later this year. Against this backdrop, JGBs are likely to outperform the major global government bond markets over the rest of 2017. We upgraded our recommended stance on JGBs from underweight to neutral last October after the BoJ introduced its yield curve targeting framework. In Chart 10, we show the relative performance of JGBs versus some other bond benchmarks, on a duration-matched and common-currency (hedged into USD) basis. We broke up the returns into two periods, from our October 11, 2016 Japan upgrade to January 31 of this year when we upgraded our U.S. corporate bond exposure and cut our overall portfolio duration stance to below-benchmark. The chart shows that JGBs were a good defensive hedge during the latter part of 2016 when global yields were rising, led by U.S. Treasuries. The more recent period, however, shows a much more negligible relative performance, both against other government bonds and corporate debt, during a period where global bond yields have generally traded sideways. Chart 8Japan Inflation Still A No-Show Chart 9A Weaker Yen Is Still Necessary Chart 10Relative Performance Of JGBs Given our views that U.S. Treasury yields will continue to move higher in the next 6-9 months, and that the performance of core European government bonds will suffer over the same period as the ECB signals a slower pace of asset purchases for next year, a return to the late 2016 relative performance of JGBs is very likely. Thus, we are upgrading Japan to an above-benchmark stance in our model portfolio this week, while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France, the Netherlands) to neutral. This is purely a move to get even more defensive in our overall country exposures, by allocating into JGBs which are low-beta to both U.S. Treasuries (where we are already below-benchmark) and core European government debt. Bottom Line: Japanese inflation remains too low for the Bank of Japan to move away from its 0% target on JGB yields anytime soon, even with signs of better Japanese growth and rising pressure on global bond yields. Upgrade Japan to above-benchmark in global hedged bond portfolios, while downgrading core Europe (Germany, France, the Netherlands) to neutral. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 The U.S., Euro Area, U.K., Canada & Australia 2 https://www.ft.com/content/0895c4ee-eb3b-11e5-888e-2eadd5fbc4a4 The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Duration & Fed Policy: The longer risk assets can withstand rising rates, the higher will be the ultimate resting place for Treasury yields. Maintain below-benchmark duration on a 6-12 month horizon and add a short fed funds futures trade to profit from increased Fed hawkishness in the near-term. Yield Curve: While the long-run trend will be for the yield curve to flatten as the Fed hiking cycle progresses, rising inflation expectations will cause the curve to steepen between now and the end of the year. Maintain a position long the 5-year bullet, short a duration-matched 2/10 barbell to profit from a steeper curve on a 6-9 month horizon. Feature Say Uncle Chart 1More Tightening To Come The Fed lifted rates last week but kept its median projected path for future rate hikes unchanged. Judging from the market's reaction, this was a more dovish outcome than was anticipated. Since last Wednesday's meeting the dollar is down 0.5%, junk spreads have tightened 10 basis points and the 2/10 yield curve has steepened 1 bp. In other words, financial conditions have continued to ease even as the Fed took another step toward more restrictive policy. All in all, money markets are now discounting only a slightly slower pace of rate hikes than the Fed's median forecast (Chart 1) and financial conditions suggest that further incremental tightening is in store. The financial conditions component of our Fed Monitor1 is above zero, meaning that financial conditions are more accommodative than the long-run average, and the Chicago Fed's Adjusted Financial Conditions Index also shows that conditions are easy relative to the strength of the economy (Chart 1, bottom panel). New York Fed President William Dudley has previously described how the Fed incorporates financial conditions into its decision making:2 Chart 2The Fed Policy Loop All else equal, if financial conditions tighten sharply, then we are likely to proceed more slowly. In contrast, if financial conditions were not to tighten at all or only very little, then - assuming the economic outlook hadn't changed significantly - we would likely have to move more quickly. In the end, we will adjust the policy stance to support financial market conditions that we deem are most consistent with our employment and inflation objectives. We have also described this process in the context of our Fed Policy Loop3 (Chart 2). In essence, the Fed will continue to nudge rate hike expectations higher until financial conditions tighten excessively. At that point - because with inflation below target the Fed still has an interest in supporting the recovery - it will quickly shift to a more dovish stance. Chart 3Short Jan 2018 Fed Funds Futures One implication of the Fed Policy Loop is that the longer risk assets can withstand rising rates, the higher will be the ultimate resting place for the fed funds rate and Treasury yields. As such, we continue to recommend a below-benchmark duration allocation on a 6-12 month horizon. Another implication is that because markets shrugged off the latest rate increase, Fed policy is likely to turn more hawkish in the very near term. We therefore recommend investors add a tactical trade: short the January 2018 fed funds futures contract (Chart 3). We calculate that this trade will return 11 bps in a scenario where the Fed lifts rates twice more before the end of the year and 37 bps in a scenario where the funds rate is raised three times. However, we do not expect to hold this trade until the end of the year. Rather, we expect the Fed will nudge rate expectations higher in the next month or two and that these gains will be realized over a much shorter horizon. We also add a caveat that, in the present environment, it is safer to implement any "hawkish Fed trades" in either fed funds futures or the overnight index swap market. The Eurodollar market does not provide the same potential for gains because the LIBOR / OIS spread is currently elevated and could tighten to offset the profits from rising fed funds rate expectations (Chart 3, bottom panel). Fed hawkishness also argues for a flatter yield curve in the very near term. While this could materialize, we continue to hold our position in the 5-year bullet over a duration-matched 2/10 barbell - a trade designed to profit from a steeper 2/10 slope. For reasons described in the next section we believe the yield curve will steepen between now and the end of the year, although the risks are tilted toward flattening in the very near term and in 2018 and beyond. What Drives The Yield Curve? In this week's report we present an overview of the main drivers of the slope of the Treasury yield curve. Specifically, we identify (i) the fed funds rate, (ii) inflation expectations, (iii) implied volatility and (iv) unit labor costs as factors that correlate strongly with the slope of the yield curve on a cyclical horizon. We review the outlook for each of these factors and conclude that the Treasury yield curve has room to steepen between now and the end of the year. Beyond that, the curve will likely resume flattening as inflationary pressures start to bite and the Fed's rate hike cycle picks up steam. Chart 4Fed Rate Hikes Flatten The Curve 1. The Fed Funds Rate Not surprisingly, the slope of the Treasury curve correlates very strongly with the level of short rates (Chart 4). Typically, short-maturity yields are much more influenced by the expected path of Fed rate hikes than long-maturity yields. As such, when the Fed is lifting rates the yield curve tends to bear-flatten - both the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields rise, but the 2-year rises more quickly. In contrast, when the Fed is cutting rates the yield curve tends to bull-steepen - both the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields fall, but the 2-year falls more quickly. In a typical cycle the yield curve will start to flatten as the Fed lifts rates and will eventually become completely flat when the end of the rate hike cycle is reached and the fed funds rate is at its "equilibrium" or "terminal" level. Usually, at that point in the cycle, the Fed will keep policy too tight in an effort to rein in inflation. This causes the economy to slow and the yield curve to invert, signaling the start of the next recession. A recent BCA Special Report4 speculates that if the federal government succeeds in delivering sizeable fiscal stimulus, inflationary pressures could start to build next year, leading to a more rapid pace of Fed rate hikes and a flat or inverted yield curve by the end of 2018. This would be consistent with a recession in 2019. In terms of the behavior of the yield curve, this is not far off from the Fed's own projections. At present, the median FOMC projection calls for the fed funds rate to reach its equilibrium level of 3% by the end of 2019. If this forecast plays out, it means that the 2/10 Treasury slope must flatten by roughly 117 bps between now and then. Turning back to Chart 4, we see that the Treasury curve has already flattened considerably even though the Fed has only raised rates three times. This means that either the equilibrium fed funds rate is much lower than the Fed's 3% projection and the 2/10 slope will reach zero with a much lower fed funds rate, or that the curve flattening is overdone and the curve has room to steepen before it resumes its cyclical flattening trend. As is explained below, we favor the latter interpretation. 2. Inflation Expectations The 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate is also highly correlated with the slope of the yield curve (Chart 5). As long-dated inflation expectations increase the yield curve tends to steepen, and vice-versa. Interestingly, the positive correlation between long-dated inflation expectations and the slope of the Treasury curve persists even when the Fed is hiking rates. Notice that in the 1999 rate hike cycle, the yield curve did not start to flatten until the 5-year/5-year breakeven fell. Also, in the 2004-06 hike cycle, curve flattening ebbed just as the breakeven started to widen. Chart 5Rising TIPS Breakevens Steepen The Curve Charts 6 and 7 show the relationship between the 2/10 Treasury slope and the 5-year/5-year breakeven in more detail. Chart 6 shows the correlation between monthly changes in the 2/10 Treasury slope and the 5-year/5-year breakeven using all available data back to January 1999. We see that a positive correlation between the slope and the breakeven prevailed in 64% of monthly observations, while only 36% of months displayed a negative correlation. Chart 62/10 Nominal Treasury Slope Vs. TIPS Breakeven ##br##Inflation Rate 5-Year/5-Year Forward (February 1999 - Present) Chart 72/10 Nominal Treasury Slope Vs. TIPS Breakeven Inflation Rate 5-Year/5-Year ##br##Forward During Fed Tightening Cycles (June 1999 To May 2000 & June 2004 To June 2006) In Chart 7, we focus exclusively on the past two Fed tightening cycles (1999-2000 & 2004-2006). Not only does a linear regression show an even stronger correlation than was achieved with the full sample, but we also see that a positive correlation between the slope and the breakeven existed in 73% of monthly observations, while only 27% of months displayed a negative correlation. At present, core PCE inflation is still below the Fed's 2% target and different measures of inflation expectations are all well below levels that prevailed during prior rate hike cycles (Chart 8). In other words, the Fed must proceed slowly enough with rate hikes to ensure that long-dated inflation expectations continue to trend higher, which argues for a steeper yield curve until inflation and inflation expectations are more firmly anchored around the Fed's target. For the 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rate we think a range of 2.4% to 2.5% would signal that inflation expectations are well anchored around the Fed's target. 3. Volatility Implied interest rate volatility - as measured by the MOVE volatility index - is another factor that correlates with the yield curve on a cyclical horizon (Chart 9). In theory, higher rate volatility should coincide with a steeper yield curve, all else equal, and this is exactly the correlation we observe. Chart 8Fed Wants Inflation Expectations To Rise Chart 9Higher Vol Steepens The Curve Let's consider that there is a risk premium applied to taking a unit of duration risk (usually called the term premium) and that said risk premium is larger for longer-maturity bonds that carry more duration risk. All else equal, the risk premium applied to one unit of duration risk should be larger when rate volatility is higher. This should also coincide with a steeper yield curve, since there is more duration risk at the long-end of the curve. In a recent report,5 we concluded that the level of disagreement among forecasters about future GDP growth and T-bill rates were the two most important drivers of cyclical swings in implied rate volatility, the Global Economic Policy Uncertainty Index has at times also played a role (Chart 9, bottom 3 panels). Chart 10Higher Unit Labor Costs Flatten The Curve At the moment, the amount of forecaster disagreement about future GDP growth is near its lows since 1990 and T-bill forecast disagreement has, until recently, been suppressed by the zero lower bound on interest rates. All this implies that the balance of risks favors higher implied interest rate volatility in the months ahead, which will apply steepening pressure to the yield curve. 4. Unit Labor Costs Unit labor costs are the final yield curve indicator we discuss in this report. Since faster wage growth tends to coincide with Fed tightening and slowing wage growth tends to correlate with Fed easing, it makes sense for wage indicators to be inversely correlated with the slope of the yield curve. While it is broadly true that all wage indicators show a reasonable inverse correlation with the slope of the curve, unit labor costs are the best. The reason is that unit labor costs (compensation per unit produced) actually measure both wage growth (compensation per hour) and labor productivity (output per hour) (Chart 10). It turns out that the yield curve can flatten in the traditional way - a bear-flattening driven by rising wages and Fed tightening - but occasionally it can also bull-flatten if the market starts to discount a lower equilibrium (or terminal) fed funds rate. We might expect this sort of curve behavior in an environment of extremely low productivity growth, and this is exactly what has occurred during the past few years. Notice in Chart 10 that compensation per hour does not explain the curve flattening that started in 2014, but unit labor costs do because they also factor in incredibly low productivity growth. In the longer-run, we would strongly expect unit labor costs to remain in an uptrend. Wage growth is accelerating and there are structural headwinds that will prevent productivity growth from returning to the levels seen at the height of the IT revolution in the late 1990s and early 2000s. As was discussed last year in a Special Report from our Global Investment Strategy service,6 the rate of human capital accumulation is in a secular downtrend as is the share of workers in their 40s - the age cohort when people are most productive. However, there has also been a cyclical component to the productivity slowdown and it is possible that productivity growth could accelerate somewhat in the near-term as the cycle matures. The capital stock per worker correlates strongly with productivity growth (Chart 11), and while capital investment has been depressed for most of the recovery there are finally some signs that it may return (Chart 12). Chart 11Productivity Held Back By Lack Of Investment Chart 12Getting Optimistic About Capex In fact, it is even conceivable that more rapid wage growth itself might encourage firms to replace labor with capital, causing traditional measures of wage growth to accelerate relative to unit labor costs. Also, the prospect of tax reform and regulatory relief could give capital spending a boost - it has already led to a jump higher in small business optimism (Chart 12, bottom panel). Unit labor costs will likely continue to accelerate on a cyclical investment horizon, applying flattening pressure to the yield curve. But this flattening pressure would be mitigated to the extent that there is any cyclical rebound in productivity growth. Yield Curve Strategy Upon consideration of the four factors described above, we conclude that while the slope of the yield curve will likely be close to zero sometime in late 2018, curve flattening won't start in earnest until late this year or early next year when inflation expectations are higher (2.4% to 2.5% on long-dated TIPS breakevens) and core PCE inflation is firmly anchored around the Fed's 2% target. This conclusion is based on our observations that: TIPS breakevens and the slope of the curve tend to be positively correlated, even during rate hike cycles. Interest rate volatility is more likely to rise than fall. Unit labor costs are likely to remain in an uptrend on a cyclical horizon, but there is scope for them to level-off if we see a modest late-cycle rebound in productivity growth. To position for a steeper yield curve between now and the end of this year we continue to recommend that investors favor the 5-year Treasury note relative to a duration-matched position in a 2-year/10-year barbell. Long bullet/short barbell trades tend to outperform when the yield curve steepens, and our model suggests that the 5-year yield is currently very cheap relative to the 2/10 slope (Chart 13). We have been recommending this trade since December 20, 2016 and it has so far returned +2 bps even though the 2/10 slope has flattened 13 bps during that time. The strong positive carry means that not much curve steepening is required for the trade to realize strong positive gains. Chart 13The 5-Year Bullet Is Cheap On The Curve Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 For further details on our Fed Monitor please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Buy The Back-Up In Junk Spreads", dated March 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/speeches/2015/dud150605 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "Caught In A Loop", dated September 29, 2015, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see BCA Special Report, "Beware The 2019 Trump Recession", dated March 7, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, "The Road To Higher Vol Is Paved With Uncertainty", dated February 14, 2017, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Weak Productivity Growth: Don't Blame The Statisticians", dated March 25, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Dear Client, In addition to an abridged Weekly Report, we are also including a Special Report written by our Global ETF Strategy team. BCA's Global ETF Strategy, launched in September joins comprehensive ETF analysis with BCA's global macroeconomic thematic research: its aim is to help clients connect the dots from BCA themes to individual ETF ticker symbols with real-time market expressions of our views. The team is currently producing a series of reports on smart-beta ETF selection, whereby they examine the key factors recognized by academia and investment practitioners as persistent drivers of market performance. In this second installment, the team focuses on dividend-focused funds. Although the team finds that dividends do not qualify as a true standalone factor consistently explaining equity returns, dividend policy can add to multi-factor models' explanatory power at the margin. Given the popularity of dividend investing, we think dividend policy could be a fruitful subject for further research. Best regards, Lenka Martinek Feature U.S. financial markets breathed a collective sigh of relief last week when the FOMC followed through on a fully discounted 25 bps rate hike, but did not increase the number of expected rate hikes for the year. In other words, the Fed successfully delivered a "dovish hike", thus reassuring investors that the policy sweet spot - the period when interest rates are rising but have not become restrictive - will last a while longer (Chart 1). Chart 1A "Dovish Hike" Chart 2Low Structural Unemployment Rate The Fed's assessment of the economy is not very different from our own, though there were a few details in the economic projections worth highlighting. First, the estimate for the structural rate of unemployment was scaled down further by a tenth of a percentage point to 4.7%. This may seem minor, but it suggests that policymakers believe the labor market has more running room before wage inflation moves higher. Granted, any forecast for structural unemployment should be taken with a dose of salt, but our bias throughout this cycle - and as outlined in our November Special Report - has been to expect wage inflation to lag relative to past cycles due to structural factors (Chart 2). And as can be seen in Chart 3, Japan provides a roadmap: in that country, demographic factors helped push the unemployment rate to below 3% without creating inflationary pressures. Of course, the U.S. economy is very different from Japan and we do not expect unemployment to drop as low. However, as occurred in Japan, we would not be surprised to see the FOMC trim its forecast for the structural unemployment rate further in the coming quarters. A related point is that the Fed also adjusted the wording of the FOMC statement regarding its inflation targets. The statement said that the Fed was looking for a "sustained" return to 2% inflation, while also referring to its inflation target as a "symmetric" one. Our interpretation is that the Fed is trying to clarify that it will not react too aggressively if core inflation were to drift somewhat above 2%. Clearly, the Fed is beginning to see the balance of risks toward higher inflation. That makes sense, given that the economy is operating close to full employment. However, we maintain that a sustained rise in inflation above the Fed's 2% core PCE target is not imminent. Indeed, the message from last week' CPI report reinforces our view that with the exception of a few components, inflation is very well contained (Chart 4). Our diffusion index of the major inflation components is in negative territory. Importantly, price surveys continue to show that businesses are not able to easily raise prices. For example, despite the continued optimism in the headline components of the NFIB small businesses survey, small businesses have not been able to - and do not yet anticipate being able to - raise prices. This reinforces our long-held view that after a long period of disinflation - and outright deflation in the retail sector - inflation expectations are extremely well-anchored and savvy consumers know how to extract a better deal. Core PCE inflation may converge on the Fed's target of 2% in the second half of 2017, but an inflation overshoot should not be a major driver of investment decision-making over the next 6-12 months. Chart 3Japan: A Low Unemployment Rate ##br##And Little Wage Inflation Chart 4Inflation ##br##Still Low In the end, it is Fed Chair Yellen's least sophisticated remarks that provide the best summation. During the FOMC press conference, she stated that "the simple message is the economy is doing well". Indeed, the moderate pace of growth that has prevailed since the beginning of the recovery means that the typical imbalances and pressure points that accumulate in the advanced stages of a business cycle are so far still absent. The backdrop overwhelmingly favors stocks relative to government bonds on a cyclical horizon. To be sure, equities are expensive, but as we wrote last week, relative to competing assets, valuations are not extreme. The greater near-term risk continues to be a phase of economic and earnings disappointments that could develop later this year, since there remains a tremendous amount of optimism in the business community regarding regime change in Washington. Note that the policy uncertainty index remains very elevated (Chart 5) and Trump's "skinny budget", which aims to slash spending across all discretionary items save military and veterans affairs, will be contested. Our geopolitical team notes that Democrats could threaten a government shutdown later this year to try to force Republicans' hand at removing the most controversial elements of the budget. Democrats can filibuster parts of the appropriations process which makes the concrete budget allocations. Chart 5Political Uncertainty Still Elevated On this basis, we remain skeptical that fiscal policy will be clean fuel for the equity bull market. However, we adhere to Yellen's "simple message" that the economy is on a stable footing. That implies that Washington disappointments will most likely lead to equity setbacks rather than a painful breakdown. Lenka Martinek, Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy lenka@bcaresearch.com Appendix Monthly Asset Allocation Model Update Our Asset Allocation (AA) model provides an objective assessment of the outlook for relative returns across equities, Treasuries and cash. It combines valuation, cyclical, monetary and technical indicators. The model was constructed as a capital preservation tool, and has historically outperformed the benchmark in large part by avoiding major equity bear markets. Please note that our official cyclical asset allocation recommendations deviate at times from the model's recommendation. The model is just one input to our decision process. The model's recommendation weightings for the major asset classes are unchanged: neutral equity exposure at 60% (benchmark 60%), neutral Treasury allocation at 30% (benchmark 30%) and cash at 10% (benchmark 10%). The diffusion index of the three components for The Equity Model remained neutral. The technical component "buy" signal strengthened, with sturdy advances for both the breadth & trend and momentum indicators. The monetary component, which measures overall liquidity conditions within the financial and economic system and designed to lead equity prices, is slightly more bullish and still favorable for equities. The earnings-driven component continues to give a cautious signal. Real operating earnings remain at a significant distance from positive economic expectations which have moved higher yet again. Moreover, earnings momentum is still sluggish, based on our earnings diffusion index, which compares nominal earnings growth relative to four key macro proxies for business costs. The model's recommendation for bonds remains at benchmark which still fits with our neutral qualitative stance for Treasuries in balanced portfolios since November 7, 2016. Although the cyclical component of the bond model is more constructive than the valuation component, the further deterioration in the technical component maintains the "sell" signal for Treasuries firmly in place. Chart 6Portfolio Total Returns Chart 7Current Model Recommendations Note: The asset allocation model is not necessarily consistent with the weighting recommendations of the Cyclical Investment Stance. For further information, please see our Special Report "Presenting Our U.S. Asset Allocation Model", February 6, 2009. Highlights Factor attribution began a half-century ago with the Capital Asset Pricing Model ("CAPM"). Although the CAPM itself has been superseded, selected factors have exerted a consistent influence on equity performance. The empirical evidence does not support including dividends among the proven factors, yet dividend-focused funds are the most numerous in the smart-beta universe. The ambiguity surrounding dividends' effect on equity performance leaves plenty of room for smart-beta purveyors to build a better mousetrap, but our own research suggests that they will have to do so with something other than purely dividend-related metrics. Reflecting the fact that many of the dividend funds already incorporate multi-factor inputs, we evaluate them based on their exposure to all of the metrics within our Equity Trading Strategy service's multi-factor model. Feature Welcome to the second installment of our series on smart-beta ETF selection. Over the course of the series, we intend to examine the factors widely recognized by academia and investment practitioners as persistent drivers of equity performance. Each Special Report will weigh the evidence for the factor's efficacy, consider the metrics that best reveal its presence and compare our ideal metrics with the metrics utilized by our proprietary Equity Trading Strategy ("ETS") multi-factor model. It will then evaluate the menu of smart-beta ETFs using either our ETS model's metrics or an augmented version of them. The series began last month with a review of the Value factor, enshrined by Fama and French's research, and the current subset of Value smart-beta ETFs.1 This month we examine Dividend smart-beta ETFs. Subsequent installments will examine Quality, Momentum and Volatility,2 and we will likely wrap up the series with a review of Multi-Factor smart-beta ETFs. This installment provides some background on factor investing and the smart-beta process before subjecting Yield (Dividends) to scrutiny to determine whether or not it really constitutes a standalone equity factor. Back To The Beginning The ubiquity of beta in discussions of investing performance originates from the Capital Asset Pricing Model ("CAPM"), as advanced by William Sharpe and other researchers in the early 1960's. The CAPM posits that the expected return of stock XYZ is solely a function of XYZ's riskiness relative to the overall equity market. XYZ's riskiness is a function of its covariance with the market, and is represented in the CAPM's simple linear model as the coefficient "beta.3" The elegantly simple CAPM holds that any stock's expected return (E(rs)) is the sum of the risk-free rate (rf) and the product of its beta (ßs) and the difference between the expected market return (E(rm)) and the risk-free rate (rf): E(rs) = rf + ßs x (E(rm) - rf) As noted by several researchers, including Eugene Fama and Kenneth French,4 CAPM's return predictions are woefully errant when applied to stocks. As Chart 1 indicates, the returns projected by the CAPM bear little relationship to empirical results. It turns out that low-beta stocks have systematically outperformed high-beta stocks on a risk-adjusted basis (Chart 2), just as low-book-multiple stocks have crushed high-book-multiple stocks without regard for beta (Chart 3). This is powerful evidence for value, and for the low-volatility factor that we will examine in a subsequent report, but it is damning for the simple application of the CAPM to stocks. Chart 1CAPM Sounded Great In Theory ... Chart 2... But It Flopped In Practice Chart 3Low-Book-Multiple Stocks Systematically ##br##Flout CAPM Predictions A New Vocabulary Despite its empirical shortcomings, the CAPM provides an intuitive way of conceptualizing the risk-return tradeoff, and it paved the way for the asset-pricing research that followed it. The notion that individual securities' risks come in two flavors, market and idiosyncratic, is a critical element of portfolio theory and its thou-shalt-diversify commandment. It is also the basis, as we shall see, for beta, alpha and the factor-investing approach enabled by smart-beta ETFs. For that application, let us add an alpha term to the CAPM to account for the component of realized returns that cannot be explained by market exposures: rs = rf + ßs x (E(rm) - rf) + a Rearranging terms to solve for alpha shows it to be the difference between the realized return and the return expected by CAPM: a = rs - (rf + ßs x (E(rm) - rf)) From CAPM To Factors To Smart Beta In today's accepted usage, alpha is the ex-post difference between portfolio and benchmark return, adjusted for risk. It is the component of return attributed to portfolio manager skill, whereas beta is the return accruing to simple market exposure. As return-attribution research has uncovered the systematic factors underpinning performance, beta has claimed an increasing share of the pie from alpha. The salubrious effect for investors, especially those who employ third-party managers, has been to demystify the sources of portfolio returns. Beta's expanding share has also opened the door to a middle course between purely active and purely passive portfolio management strategies. Factor research has made it possible to join the main advantages of passive strategies - transparency, predictability and low cost - with active strategies' aim of delivering a risk-adjusted return profile distinct from those offered by cap-weighted benchmarks. Investors have embraced the factor approach and traditional asset managers have obliged them with a torrent of smart-beta ETF choices. Both should put investors on alert: according to the late Barton Biggs, there is no investment idea so good that it can't be destroyed by too much money, and fund company enthusiasm may correlate more closely with its own profits than its clients'. Biggs' admonition is always on our mind, but we don't think the established factors are in imminent danger of losing their zest. Factor excess returns are not new news. 25 years after Fama and French's paper, low-book-multiple stocks continue to outperform high-book-multiple stocks and smaller stocks continue to outperform larger stocks. We do not see the comparatively modest aggregate smart-beta ETF AUM as a catalyst for bidding away the returns that have durably accrued to factors. Are Dividends Really An Equity Factor? For the purposes of this report, our first objective is to determine whether or not Dividends can properly be considered a factor alongside the big five (Value, Quality, Momentum, Volatility and Size). Unable to find compelling evidence for their inclusion, we do not think they should. Yield may be a promising factor in fixed income, but extending the concept to equities is problematic. Across all capitalization buckets for the last 20 years, it cannot even be said that dividend payers outperform non-dividend payers (Chart 4). The empirical record for more sophisticated slicing and dicing is mixed, depending on the level of granularity. Breaking the universe of U.S. equities into non-dividend payers and dividend payers, and then segmenting the latter by yield into the lowest three deciles, the median four deciles and the highest three deciles, Fama and French's 90-year dataset supports the idea that higher-yielding stocks generate higher total returns (Chart 5). The breakout is neatly consistent, with dividend payers outperforming non-dividend payers, and each yield cohort of the dividend payers outperforming the lower-yielding cohorts beneath it (Chart 6, top panel). Zoom into the dividend payers at the quintile and decile levels, however, and the consistency disappears as the tidy staircase pattern begins instead to resemble a jagged picket fence (Chart 6, lower panels). Chart 4Dividends Have Been Hazardous To Investors' ##br##Wealth Over The Last 20 Years ... Chart 5... Though They've Rewarded Investors ##br##Over Nine Decades Chart 6Not Ready For A Close-Up Adjusting for risk makes the picture even murkier. While the non-payers and the lowest-yielding cohorts always post the smallest risk-adjusted returns, they are the only cohorts the highest-yielders manage to beat. The median 40 is the winner among our 30-40-30 cohorts, while the fourth and the second quintiles bracketing the median 40 easily outpace the top quintile, and the eighth, fourth and seventh deciles break away from the rest of the decile pack (Chart 7). It should come as no surprise that our long top 30%/short bottom 30% litmus test failed to reveal any viable excess return strategies based on dividend yields. Our attempts to develop simple portfolio construction rules based on markers of dividend quality and sustainability failed to conclusively advance the dividend cause. Long/short strategies founded on dividend growth added no value to a simple portfolio built from dividend yield and change in share count (Chart 8). Payout ratio metrics, which might shed some light on both quality and sustainability, provided pretty solid results, but they weren't enormous winners (Chart 9). Our analysis left us unable to conclude that Yield merits inclusion among the established equity factors. Chart 7No Theme To Risk-Adjusted Return Profiles Chart 8No Viable Long/Short Dividend-Growth Strategy ... Chart 9... But Payout Ratios Work Pretty Well An Ideal Dividend Index The fact that the way forward for dividend strategies is not obvious is good news for smart-beta sponsors. The ambiguity leaves plenty of room for developing better index-construction methods. Some sources of improvement might include: A means of identifying and sidestepping "yield traps," high and/or growing yields that are actually a distress signal. A way to review historical metrics to gain a sense of ongoing dividend growth. An evaluation of a dividend's source, valuing dividends supported by operating cash flows more highly than those supported by financing activities or asset dispositions. A process for limiting sector exposures, and an awareness of the most auspicious backdrops for taking on exposure to specialized yield plays like mortgage REITs, MLPs and BDCs. Ticking off every item on this wish list, however, would necessarily involve infringing on other factors' turf. Quality, Value, Size and Volatility could all spill into the process of assessing dividend quality and sustainability. Given that our attempts at creating our own tests to measure up to the wish list came up empty, it seems that a cross-disciplinary approach might be the only option. Even if the indexes are not based completely on dividend-derived metrics, it may be possible for a few dividend accents to add some incremental value to the overall stew. Smart-Beta Fund Evaluation These issues were on our mind when we set out to define the metrics that we would use to evaluate the indexes created by our Dividend smart-beta ETF subset. The two payout metrics in the ETS model, dividend yield and change in shares outstanding, are pretty thin gruel for evaluating the dividend ETFs. The ETS payout metrics were selected based on their interaction with the Value, Safety, Quality, Momentum and Sentiment metrics, 23 in all, that comprise the rest of the stock-level inputs into our model. They were not intended to be stand-alone measures. Many of the ETFs in our subset explicitly screen for Quality, Value and/or Low Volatility. They could just as accurately be described as multi-factor funds in a dividend-first wrapper, and we have therefore deployed the entire ETS model to evaluate them. To assess whether or not their constituent selection process consistently improves upon a simple dividend strategy, we compare their ETS scores to those of VIG, the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF, which tracks the NASDAQ US Dividend Achievers Select Index of stocks (ex-REITs and LPs) with at least 10 consecutive years of dividend increases. First Trust Rising Dividend Achievers ETF (RDVY) RDVY's ETS scores have stood out from its smart-beta peers' since the fund's inception at the beginning of 2014. Its concentrated 50-stock portfolio allows it to focus on exposure to its preferred growth and sustainability metrics. Only stocks that have grown their dividends over 3- and 5-year periods, and their non-zero earnings per share over a 3-year period, make it through the growth filters. The sustainability filters admit only stocks with cash-to-debt ratios of at least 50% and dividend payout ratios of 65% or less. Chart 10Good Things Come To Those Who Wait Although the fund has outperformed VIG since inception, its relative performance has not been nearly as consistent as its relative ETS scores (Chart 10). It has taken a 40% surge over the 12 months ended February 28th to put RDVY over the top. We recognize that performance can be capricious, however, and place more weight on RDVY's consistently stellar relative ETS scores, which are 20% more, on average, than its smart-beta peers'.5 RDVY's 50-basis-point ("bps") expense ratio exceeds the 36-bps group average, but we think its screens and concentration are worth the incremental 14 bps. The fund is on the smaller side with $127 million of AUM, and daily turnover of just over $2 million, but larger investors can make use of the creation/redemption unit process to transact in larger volumes without concern. We recommend RDVY for investors seeking large- and mid-cap dividend exposure. FlexShares Quality Dividend Index Fund (QDF) QDF stands second to RDVY on an ETS score basis. Its relative scores have been remarkably stable, rarely falling below 110% en route to averaging 113% of the aggregate Dividend smart-beta score. QDF's selection process is proprietary, and it incorporates measures of cash flow, profitability, and management's skill at deploying capital and financing its activities. The mix has enabled QDF to outperform VIG from the get-go, and steadily pad its lead ever since (Chart 11). Its 37-bps expense ratio is right in line with the group's and its $1.7 billion AUM and $5 million average daily turnover provide a nice sense of ballast. We recommend QDF, along with RDVY, as the best Dividend smart-beta options. Chart 11Wire-To-Wire Outperformance WisdomTree MidCap Dividend Fund (DON) O'Shares FTSE US Quality Dividend ETF (OUSA) WisdomTree has been a pioneer in creating dividend-weighted indexes, but the formula it's applied to selecting constituents for DON, its mid-cap dividend ETF, has not found favor with the ETS model. The fund's constituents have repeatedly earned an aggregate ETS score below 40, holding its relative score below 80% for extended periods. OUSA is a newer fund, with less than a year of history, but its ETS scores have been noticeably weak. We would avoid OUSA until it compiles enough of a track record to permit more conclusions about its process and we would advise investors seeking targeted mid-cap exposure to gain it via funds other than DON. Dividends' Curious Attraction Our work in researching this Special Report has brought dividends' many contradictions to light. In countries like the U.S., where ordinary income is taxed at a higher rate than capital gains, dividends represent an especially tax-inefficient way of redeeming a portion of one's investment. Either share buybacks or sales to third parties would yield more after-tax cash. Humans feel a strong pull to book gains, and steadily redeeming portions of a successful investment has an intuitive emotional appeal: "Let's quit while we're ahead, let's go while the getting is good." It's exactly the wrong thing to do with investments, however. If the quarterly dividend flow assuages the remorse over a mistaken investment, encouraging an investor to stick with a losing position, it's even worse. It is possible that dividends, even though they're small, help reinforce our innate resistance to selling losers and letting winners run. From management's perspective, legacy dividend payments can act as handcuffs. Fearful of issuing a signal that is sure to be interpreted negatively by the market, firms take pains to refrain from cutting dividends. Dividend declarations, then, are a part of the capital budgeting process that is not rooted in economics. A rigorously utility-maximizing visitor from outer space may have found the oil majors' borrowing to fund their dividends in the midst of the severe downturn in crude prices to be very odd indeed. All of these shortcomings may help explain why we were unable to find clear evidence that dividends exert a clear and consistent influence on stock prices. And yet, dividends are enormously popular, with dividend funds by far outnumbering every other flavor of smart-beta ETF. We, too, like to think of positions in balanced portfolios on a total-return basis, as does our U.S. Investment Strategy service, which has successfully recommended the Dividend Aristocrats much longer than we have. Total return is important, but we are increasingly leaning toward the view that specialty dividend plays, purchased at the right point of the cycle, are the best way for an investor to capture income from equity holdings. Such an all-or-nothing approach may well be superior to the one-foot-in, one-foot-out stance that is embodied by the average 2% large-cap dividend yield. Our U.S. Investment Strategy service has successfully surfed the cyclical wave in mortgage REITs, and we are attempting to do so now with the inclusion of BIZD, the business development company ETF, in our U.S. portfolios. Adding cycle analysis would make our smart-beta studies too long, but we are conducting research into the interaction between factor performance and cycle phases, and we will share our findings with our clients in standalone Special Reports if they are insightful enough to merit their attention. Doug Peta, Vice President Global ETF Strategy dougp@bcaresearch.com Jennifer Lacombe, Research Analyst Global ETF Strategy Jenniferl@bcaresearch.com Philippe Morissette, Associate Vice President Equity Trading Strategy philippem@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global ETF Strategy/Equity Trading Strategy Special Report, "Smart-Beta ETF Selection, Part I - Value Funds," published February 15, 2017, at etf.bcaresearch.com. 2 Size may be too straightforward to allow for an index-construction edge. 3 Stock XYZ's beta is equal to the covariance of its returns with the market's returns, divided by the variance of the market's returns, where its covariance with the market equals its returns' correlation with the market's times the product of XYZ's volatility and the market's volatility. 4 Fama, Eugene F. and French, Kenneth R., "The Capital Asset Pricing Model: Theory and Evidence," Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 18, Number 3 (Summer 2004), pp. 25-46. 5Befitting its benchmark status, VIG’s ETS scores have averaged 99.8% of the entire subset’s since inception.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Contrary to popular perception, non-cyclical sectors have led the market so far this year, while deep cyclical sectors are breaking down, in relative performance terms. Our models point to more of the same ahead. The oversold rebound in the pharmaceutical group may soon run into resistance so we recommend trimming positions to neutral. Put the proceeds into restaurants, a quasi-defensive group that enjoys a brightening sales outlook without pharma's political and regulatory risk. Recent Changes S&P Pharmaceuticals - Downgrade to neutral. S&P Restaurants - Upgrade to overweight. Table 1 Feature Equities are exhibiting signs of mild fatigue. Breadth has begun to narrow, and new highs have sagged compared with new lows (Chart 1). Both of these technical developments have warned of previous tactical pullbacks. The recent reset in oil prices may also test investor nerves. Oil prices have been a critical macro variable, because they influence inflation expectations and the corporate bond market (high yield bond spreads shown inverted, Chart 1). Crude oil price corrections have accurately timed equity retreats (Chart 1), and general risk aversion phases. To be sure, the global economy is no longer on a deflationary precipice, suggesting that weaker oil prices may not foreshadow a soft patch, but they may be a good enough excuse for profit taking in the equity market after a good run. Contrary to popular perception, cyclical sectors have not led the broad market so far in 2017. In fact, energy, materials and industrials have all broken down in relative performance terms (Chart 2), after peaking in mid-December. Only the technology sector has stayed resilient. Chart 1Short-Term Fatigue Chart 2Cyclicals Have Broken Down Chart 3Overshoot Renormalization Insipid cyclical sector performance has occurred within the context of a synchronized lift in global economic growth and recovering corporate sector pricing power. So why are cyclical sectors lagging? It may simply be a digestion phase. However, a different interpretation is that a number of key macro factors fail to confirm the durability of last year's outperformance, suggesting that defensive outperformance could last. Concerns that the current global inventory cycle may not morph into a broad-based upturn in global final demand continue to linger: the global credit impulse remains anemic, the Fed and China are tightening monetary policy and commodity markets are cracking (Chart 3). The lack of any meaningful improvement in Chinese loan demand signals that the economy may be quick to cool as the authorities tap the breaks on credit growth. It would take a decisive depreciation in the U.S. dollar to boost the relative profit fortunes of capital spending-dependent cyclical sectors on a sustainable basis. On a more positive note, the Fed's benign forward guidance last week bears close attention. If the U.S. dollar loses upside support, particularly with the ECB contemplating a retreat from full throttle easing, it could change the investment landscape. By reminding markets that their inflation target is symmetric, the Fed signaled it will be willing to tolerate a modest inflation overshoot, which is positive for risk assets in the short run. A softer U.S. dollar would take the pressure off of developing countries, support commodity prices, and bolster our cyclical sector sales models and Cyclical Macro Indicators. However, Chart 4 shows that the objective message from our models remains consistent with continued defensive sector outperformance. With a more protectionist U.S. Administration, we remain reluctant to position exclusively for a much weaker dollar. The ongoing underperformance of emerging market equities relative to U.S. and global benchmarks reinforces that foreign-sourced profit growth continues to lag (Chart 5). Positioning for cyclical sector earnings outperformance requires healthier profits abroad, to spur a new capital investment cycle. Chart 4Heeding The Message From Our Models... Chart 5... And The Markets We will look to selectively add cyclical exposure when the objective message from our Indicators provides confirmation that earnings-driven outperformance lies ahead. At the moment, there is no such confirmation. In fact, the elevated reading in the SKEW index continues to signal that a defensive posture will optimize portfolio performance (Chart 5). In sum, we continue to characterize the broad market's current momentum as an overshoot phase, with additional technical upside potential, but the rally is starting to fray around the edges. In this environment, holding a mostly defensive basket with selective beta exposure is still recommended. Importantly, within the defensive universe, there are tweaks to be made, especially if the U.S. dollar stops rising. Fade The Pharmaceuticals Rebound Health care has been the second strongest of the eleven broad sectors year-to-date, contrary to popular perception. That is in line with the flattening yield curve, cresting in inflation expectations and a modest correction in oil prices (Chart 6), all of which have revived the allure of non-cyclical sectors. Moreover, our Cyclical Macro Indicator (CMI) for the health care sector remains firm, supported by the ongoing large pricing power advantage. Relative value is the most attractive it has been in five years. While the latter provides little timing help, it indicates low risk, especially with technical conditions still deeply oversold (Chart 7). Chart 6Health Care Is Storming Back Chart 7Still Cheap And Oversold The heavyweight pharmaceutical group has led the sector's tactical charge, recouping the ground lost, in relative performance terms, leading up to the U.S. election. While we were caught off guard by the severity of the pullback last September/October, we refrained from selling into an oversold market and noted our intention to lighten positions whenever the inevitable relief rally occurred. The time has come to execute on this thesis. Pharmaceutical stocks are very cheap and have discounted a hostile regulatory environment. The relative forward P/E is well below its historic mean, even though both 12-month and 5-year relative forward earnings growth expectations are depressed (Chart 8). Typically, the latter would serve to artificially inflate valuations. These conditions exist even though free cash flow growth remains strong; merger activity has been solid, albeit ebbing in recent months; and companies have used excess capital to reduce total shares outstanding (Chart 8). In other words, relative forward earnings would have to decline substantially to validate these expectations. Is this plausible? Much depends on the regulatory environment. While details of the U.S. Administration's proposal to replace the Affordable Care Act have started to leak out, final details are still elusive and legislative action is not imminent. So far, it appears as if a worst case scenario would see an increase in the number of uninsured Americans, with a rising cost of insurance (to the benefit of managed care companies). According to the Department of Health & Human Services, the uninsured rate of the U.S. population nearly halved from 16% in 2010 to 9% in 2015. That led to a lift in the number of procedures performed and bolstered hospital bottom lines. Hospitals are a major pharmaceutical buying group. Higher utilization rates fed increased pharmaceutical demand for a number of years. However, drug spending growth has dropped off, and if the legion of uninsured patients rises anew in the coming years, then hospital utilization rates will decline, taking drug consumption growth down with it. Moreover, Trump wants to streamline the FDA's approval process, which would ultimately boost the number of high margin new drugs coming to market. Drug stocks boomed back in the mid-1990s, the last time FDA approval rates accelerated meaningfully (Chart 9). Chart 8Full Capitulation Chart 9Full Capitulation But at the same time, if government is given leeway to negotiate drug prices directly with drug companies, then pricing power will continue to converge down toward overall corporate sector pricing power, especially if drug consumption rates ease (Chart 9). At the moment, drug consumption growth remains above the rate of overall consumption growth, but that is much slower than during the boom following the introduction of the Affordable Care Act. Retail sales at pharmacies are growing robustly, and hospitals are still adding staff, signaling that they continue to position for expansion, i.e. rising procedure volumes (Chart 10). On the downside, the strong U.S. dollar is a big drag on top-line growth. Drug imports exceed exports by a wide margin, resulting in a negative trade balance and a drag on U.S. drug company profits, all else equal. The combination of a sales growth deceleration and adequate channel inventories has capped drug output growth (Chart 10). That is a productivity and profit margin headwind. Against this background, the industry will need an external assist to deliver profit outperformance. Relative profit estimates rise when disinflationary forces reign supreme, as measured by the NFIB planned price hikes series (shown inverted, Chart 11). This measure of future corporate pricing power intentions has rolled over, but broader measures of inflation are creeping higher. Ergo, drug earnings forecasts may be challenged to keep pace with the overall corporate sector. Chart 10... But Growth Rates Are Slowing Chart 11Mixed Signals The good news is that even though U.S. dollar strength is an export drag, the negative drug trade balance suggests that it will hurt other industries more. Indeed, a rising currency often coincides with profit outperformance (Chart 11). There is not enough evidence that exogenous factors will offset slowing domestic drug consumption growth. In all, the case for a further and sustained relative performance recovery has weakened, and we are taking advantage of this year's oversold bounce to move to the sidelines. Bottom Line: Trim the S&P pharmaceuticals index to neutral. This position was deep in the money initially, but last year's downdraft pushed it into a loss position of 10%. BLBG: S5PHARX-JNJ, PFE, MRK, BMY, LLY, AGN, ZTS, MYL, PRGO, MNK. Restaurants: Increasing Appetite The broad consumer discretionary sector has been treading water, largely owing to fears that a border adjustment tax (BAT) will undermine the retailing sub-component. This consolidation has restored value and created an attractive technical entry point (Chart 12, bottom panel). Importantly, industry earnings fundamentals are on the upswing. Our consumer discretionary sector Cyclical Macro Indicator has perked up (Chart 12), supported by an increase in wages, and more recently, the decline in oil prices. The latter is freeing up disposable income, which consumers have an incentive to spend given that household net worth (HNW) has climbed to all-time highs as a percent of disposable income (Chart 13). Chart 12A Good Place To Shop Chart 13Piggyback The Wealth Effect While we remain overweight housing related equities (homebuilders and home improvement retailers) in addition to our upbeat view on the media and advertising complex, a buying opportunity has surfaced in the neglected S&P restaurants index. We booked gains on an underweight position and lifted exposure to neutral back in late-October. Since then, value has improved further, while leading sales indicators continue to firm. Stronger consumer finances should flow into the casual dining industry. Sales have already started to reaccelerate, and should climb further based on the leading message from HNW (Chart 14). The lower income, $15K-$35K, cohort is also feeling increasingly confident, according to the latest Conference Board survey data (Chart 14). Meanwhile, the National Association of Restaurants Performance Index has regained momentum (Chart 15), signaling increased activity and rising confidence among restaurateurs. While the gap between the cost of dining out and dining in remains wide, it has begun to narrow, which is a plus for store traffic, all else equal. Chart 14Buy Into Weakness Chart 15At A Turning Point Domestically... Chart 16... And Globally? Our restaurants profit margin proxy (comprising restaurants CPI versus a blend of the industry's wage bill and food commodity costs) is trending higher. That is notable because it has a good track record in leading relative earnings growth estimates (Chart 15). Nevertheless, it is not all good news. International exposure remains a headache. Typically, soft EM currencies warn of translation drags on foreign sourced revenue (Chart 16). This cycle, there is an offset, as EM interest rates have come down, which is a plus for domestic demand (Chart 16). Thus, the headwind from outside the U.S. should abate as the year progresses. Adding it all up, factors are falling into place for a playable rally in the under-owned and unloved S&P restaurants index. This group offers attractive quasi-cyclical defensive exposure to replace the S&P pharmaceuticals index, without the political and regulatory risks. Bottom Line: Redeploy funds from the pharma downgrade and boost the S&P restaurants index to overweight. BLBG: S5REST-MCD, YUM, CMG, SBUX, DRI. Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor small over large caps. Favor growth over value (downgrade alert).
Highlights Global fundamentals - supply, demand and inventories - will support oil prices generally, and will remain bullish for the evolution toward backwardated forward curves, even as the Fed's interest-rate normalization policy supports the USD's broad trade-weighted index (TWI). This will cause the oil-USD divergence noted in earlier research to persist.1 Energy: Overweight. We are once again long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI, after the resting order placed on March 9/17 was elected on March 13/17 at -$0.12/bbl. Our oil-balances modeling indicates storage will draw throughout the rest of this year and next. Base Metals: Neutral. Spot copper prices remain subdued despite strikes at Peru's Cerro Verde and Chile's Escondida mines. Meanwhile, export-license talks continue in Indonesia at the Grasberg mine. When a market fails to rally on supportive news, it normally is a bearish indicator. An unexpected surge in LME copper stocks partly offset supply-side concerns. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold will remain weak, as markets discount the timing and size of further rate hikes. We remain long volatility, with our long-put/long-call spread combination in June, recommended on February 23/17, up 29.5%. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Indications of higher output of corn and beans in South America from the USDA, and a well-supported USD keep us bearish. Lower planting intentions - to be reported at month-end - could support corn. Feature Markets got a rare "two-fer" yesterday. The first, a long-anticipated bullish oil inventory report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). The second, a fully priced follow-through on the Fed's recent forward guidance in the form of a 25bp hike in overnight rates, which, while important to oil markets, will continue to be secondary to the fundamental adjustments that will be reflected in subsequent EIA reports. Not unexpectedly, U.S. commercial oil inventories drew hard last week - more than 8mm bbl (including SPR), with crude stocks accounting for 1.1 mm bbl - following weeks of builds, which forced many a long from the market. The balance of the draws will shift to crude within the next month, as U.S. refiners come back off performing routine maintenance. With the year-end surge from OPEC's Gulf producers now fully absorbed, we expect to see a sustained draw in OECD storage this year. This will force inventories toward the five-year average levels sought by OPEC and non-OPEC producers in their production-cutting agreement last year (Chart of the Week). In our balances model, we have global supply up 0.5 mm b/d in 2017 yoy and demand up 1.5 mm b/d on average. For 2018, we have supply up 1.5 mm b/d on average vs. 2017, and demand up 1.6 mm b/d. This will produce the draws in OECD inventories anticipated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia when they led the negotiations between OPEC and non-OPEC oil-producing states that will produce these supply deficits (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekOil Markets Will Tighten This Year And Next Chart 2OECD Inventories Will Draw Sharply The Fed - And The USD - Still Matter, But Not As Much The 25bp hike in overnight rates was perhaps the most strongly telegraphed messaging from FOMC members in post-GFC history. If nothing else, the Fed is unambiguously signaling its intent to normalize interest-rate policy, which, all else equal, will be supportive of the USD's TWI. We do not believe the Fed is intent on raising real rates, which will somewhat temper the rates normalization policy of the Fed. This will allow the synchronized global growth we now see - along with a synchronized increase in global inflation rates - to continue, and will prevent an overly strong USD from crimping demand ex-U.S. - particularly in the EM markets. Indeed, we continue to expect strong growth in EM oil demand, which we proxy by non-OECD oil consumption (Chart 3). Therefore, while the evolution of the USD will remain important to the evolution of oil prices, we do not expect it to dominate that evolution as it has post-GFC to the end of 1Q16. As can be seen in Chart 4, which shows Brent prices as a function of the USD TWI, this relationship has weakened some, after fundamentals - chiefly supply destruction and demand growth - reacted to the lower prices brought on by the market-share war declared by OPEC in November 2014. Chart 3EM Growth Will Drive Oil Demand Chart 4USD Will Not Dominate Oil-Price Evolution However, we do not expect this relationship to break down entirely: Indeed, it has been remarkably durable since 2000, when oil prices - like the USD - became random-walking economic variables (Chart 5).2 We do think the market is in a transition phase - chiefly from being over-supplied to tighter, given the physical deficits we expect - with price levels capable of following a more stable path with less volatility. This will translate into even greater volatility in the forward curves for oil prices, which we believe will become more backwardated as markets finally get evidence storage is drawing (Charts 6). We continue to expect WTI prices to trade between $45 and $65/bbl, with a central tendency of $55/bbl this year and next. Chart 5Expect The USD To Be Less Determinant ##br##For Oil Prices Chart 6We Continue To Expect Backwardation ##br##In Oil Forwards Back In The Backwardation Trade We are once again long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI, after the resting order placed on March 9/17 was elected on March 13/17 at -$0.12/bbl. We are including a stop-loss on this recommendation of -$0.36/bbl (i.e., the Dec/17 vs. Dec/18 spread goes into a -$0.48/bbl contango), given this is a strategic recommendation and we are willing to incur larger losses given our high-conviction view of the evolution of the WTI forward curve. As the above analysis indicates, we strongly expect storage to draw throughout the rest of this year and next. This will produce backwardated markets - prompt-delivery prices exceed deferred-delivery prices - and tighten markets globally. We recently exited the exact same trade on February 23/17, when we entered it at -$0.11/bbl (in contango), and exited at +$0.96/bbl, for a gain of +$1.07/bbl (972.7%). This is evidence of the volatility we continue to expect as the forward curve transitions to a backwardated structure. Bottom Line: The oil market is performing as we expect, with supply cuts in the face of strong demand growth producing a physical deficit. This will lead to a backwardation in the forward curves for WTI and Brent, which we are capitalizing on by re-establishing our long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI position. While the USD will continue to exert an influence on oil prices, we continue to believe this will be secondary to the evolution of prices. Fundamentals will drive price discovery going forward. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean-Reversion," dated March 2, 2017, and "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil," dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean-Reversion," published March 2, 2017, referenced above. In that article we examine the evolution of oil prices from a mean-reverting series to a difference-stationary series. We considered the possibility the KSA - Russia production agreement could deepen, allowing these states to exert more control over the evolution of prices. This is not foregone, by any means, but it is useful to consider the implications of supply contracting as a result of their detente, and the return of a more inelastic supply curve. In such a market, small adjustments to the supply side can have profound effects on prices - assuming demand remains inelastic - and allow these states to regain a measure of control over oil market fundamentals. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights Once the Brexit starting gun is fired, the EU27's high-level guidelines and red lines will create more vulnerabilities and uncertainties for the U.K. than for the euro area. The BoE will be more boxed in than the ECB. Brexit trades have more legs. We describe four structural disruptors to economies and financial markets (on page 6). Our favourite structural investment themes are Personal Product equities, euro/yuan, and real estate in Spain, Ireland and Germany. Feature "Many in Great Britain expected a major calamity... but what happened was near enough nothing ." The citation above perfectly describes the 9 months that have elapsed since the U.K.'s June 23 2016 vote to exit the EU. In fact, it refers to the 9 months that elapsed after Britain declared war on Germany on September 3 1939 - a period of calm, militarily speaking, which became known as the 'Phoney War'.1 But outside the military sphere a lot did happen in the Phoney War. Most notably, a propaganda war ensued. On the night of September 3 1939 alone, the Royal Air Force dropped 6 million leaflets over Germany titled 'Note to the German People'. Chart of the WeekOne Big Correlated Trade: Pound/Euro And Eurostoxx600 Vs. FTSE100 Brexit Phoney War And The Markets Fast forward 77 years. The 9 months since the Brexit vote has also been a period of calm, economically speaking. Indeed, the U.K. economy has sailed along remarkably smoothly. And this has fuelled a propaganda war for those who believe that Brexit's economic impact will be near enough nothing. But outside the economic sphere, a lot has happened in the Brexit Phoney War: The pound has slumped 12% versus the euro and 17% versus the dollar. The FTSE100 has surged 16%, substantially outperforming the 8% gain in the Eurostoxx600 The U.K. 10-year gilt yield is down 40 bps when the equivalent German bund yield is up 40 bps and the equivalent U.S. Treasury yield is up 90 bps. These relative moves appear to reflect different asset class stories, but it is crucial to realise that: All of these relative moves are just one big correlated trade. The relative moves in bond yields have just tracked the expected differences in central bank policy rates two years ahead (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3). This is exactly in line with the theory that a bond yield just equals the expected average interest rate over the bond's lifetime. Chart I-2Difficult Brexit = Gilt Yields Fall Vs. Bund Yields Chart I-3Difficult Brexit = Gilt Yields Fall Vs. T-Bond Yields Likewise, the moves in pound/dollar and pound/euro have also closely tracked the same expected differences in central bank policy rates (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5). Again, this is exactly in line with theory. Over short horizons, the biggest driver of exchange rates is fixed income cross-border portfolio flows - which always seek out the highest yield adjusted for hedging costs. Chart I-4Difficult Brexit = Pound/Euro Falls Chart I-5Difficult Brexit = Pound/Dollar Falls In turn, FTSE100 performance versus the Eurostoxx600 has near-perfectly tracked the inverse direction of pound/euro. Once more, this is exactly as theory would suggest. The FTSE100 and Eurostoxx600 are just a collection of multinational dollar-earning companies quoted in pounds and euros respectively. So when pound/euro weakens, the dollar earnings increase more in FTSE100 index terms than in Eurostoxx600 index terms, resulting in Eurostoxx600 underperformance (Chart of the Week). Now that the Brexit battle is about to begin in earnest, what will happen to these Brexit trades? Brexit Battle Begins It is not our intention here to forecast all the twists and turns of the Brexit battle. We will leave that to a later report. Instead, we just want to list the likely opening salvos. With Parliamentary approval now sealed, Theresa May is due to trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty in the week commencing March 27 and thereby formally begin the Brexit battle. Expect the first EU27 response within 48 hours, probably through the President of the European Council, Donald Tusk. In this response, Tusk may also give the date for the first European Council 'Brexit' summit. This EU27 Brexit summit will take place within 8 weeks of the Article 50 trigger, and likely after the two-round French Presidential Election in April/May. At the Brexit summit, the EU27 will establish its strategy, high-level guidelines and red lines for the Brexit negotiations. The European Council will present these negotiating guidelines to the European Commission. Drawing upon its own legal and policy expertise, the Commission will then draft a mandate which sets out more technical details of each area of negotiation. Next, the Council of the EU2 must approve this draft mandate by qualified majority vote (obviously excluding the U.K.) Once approved, the European Commission can begin the detailed negotiations with the U.K., keeping within the final mandate's guidelines. But what does all this mean for investors? The preceding analysis showed that the dominant driver for all Brexit trades is the expected difference in central bank policy interest rates two years ahead. Recall that not long ago the BoE was vying with the Fed to be the first to hike rates in this cycle, while the ECB was likely to ease further. But after the Brexit vote and the resulting uncertainty about the U.K.'s position in the world, the tables have turned. The EU27's high-level negotiating guidelines and red lines are likely to create more vulnerabilities and uncertainties for the U.K. than for the euro area. And now, these vulnerabilities and uncertainties are amplified by Scotland First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, calling for a second referendum on Scottish Independence. For central bank policy, this means that the BoE will be hamstrung; whereas, absent any tail-events, the ECB can continue to back away from its extreme dovishness - a process that Draghi verbally started at the ECB Press Conference last week. Therefore, at least into the early summer, stay: Overweight U.K. gilts versus German bunds. Long euro/pound. Long FTSE100 versus Eurostoxx600 (or Eurostoxx50). Long U.K. Clothes and Apparel equities versus the market (Chart I-6). Short U.K. Real Estate equities versus the market (Chart I-7). But a word of warning for risk control. Remember that all five positions are in effect just one big correlated trade. So they will all work together, or they will all not work together! Chart I-6Difficult Brexit = U.K. Clothes And Apparel Outperforms Chart I-7Difficult Brexit = U.K. Real Estate Equities Underperform Four Disruptors The final section this week takes a wider-angle view of the world, and briefly highlights four structural disruptors to economies and financial markets in the coming years. Disruptor 1: Protectionism. Since the Great Recession, an extremely polarised distribution of economic growth has left most people's standard of living stagnant - despite seemingly decent headline economic growth and job creation (Chart I-8). Looking to find a scapegoat, economic nationalism and protectionism have resonated very strongly with voters in the U.K. and U.S. - resulting in Brexit and President Donald Trump. Other voters could follow in the same vein. But history teaches us that protectionism ends up hurting many more people than it helps. Disruptor 2: Technology. The bigger danger is that people are misdiagnosing the illness. The vast majority of middle-income job losses are not due to globalization, but due to technology. Specifically, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is replacing secure middle-income jobs and displacing workers into insecure low-income manual jobs - like bartending and waitressing - which AI cannot (yet) replace (Table I-1). And AI's impact on middle-income jobs is only in its infancy.3 The worry is that by misdiagnosing the illness as globalization and wrongly taking a protectionist medicine, the illness will intensify, rather than improve. Chart I-8Disruptor 1: Protectionism Table I-1Disruptor 2: Technology Disruptor 3: Debt super-cycles have reached exhaustion. The protectionist medicine carries a further danger. Major emerging market economies are coming to the end of structural credit booms and need to wean themselves off their credit addictions (Chart I-9). At this point of vulnerability, aggressive protectionism risks tipping these emerging economies into a sharp slowdown. Chart I-9Disruptor 3: Debt Super-Cycles Have Reached Exhaustion Disruptor 4: Equities are overvalued. Disruptors one, two and three come at a time when equities are valued to generate feeble total nominal returns over the next decade (Chart I-10). Risk premiums are extremely compressed. And if investors suddenly demand that risk premiums rise to average historical levels, it necessarily requires equity prices to adjust downwards. Chart I-10Disruptor 4: Equities Are Overvalued The long-term investment message is crystal clear. With the four disruptors in play, we strongly advise long-term investors not to follow passive (equity) index-tracking strategies. Instead, we advise long-term investors to stick to bespoke structural investment themes. Our favourite structural investment themes are Personal Product equities, euro/yuan, and real estate in Spain, Ireland and Germany. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President European Investment Strategy dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 C N Trueman 'The Phoney War'. 2 The Council of the EU should not be confused with the European Council. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Superstar Economy: Part 2," dated January 19, 2017, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model This week's trade is to short Netherlands equities, but wait until after the election result. 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-11 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 - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Global stocks and bonds have priced in a goldilocks scenario - strong growth and low inflation/interest rates. In the short term, global bond yields are set to rise further. Risk assets, especially EM ones, are vulnerable on the back of higher bond yields. Thereafter, global bond yields will roll over decisively as inflation worries subside. Risk assets will probably recover some lost ground in this phase. Toward the end of this year, growth disappointments in EM/China will resurface and EM risk assets will sell off again. Feature The near-term risks to emerging markets (EM) and global stocks over the next three months or so are potential inflation anxieties in the U.S. and around the world, and a further rise in U.S./global interest rate expectations. Yet looking beyond the short-term, it is not clear that the rise in global inflation will be lasting. Timing zigzags in financial markets is almost impossible. However, if we were to try to speculate on potential swings in financial markets over the next 12 months, our prediction would be that the current growth acceleration will soon lead to heightened inflation worries, and global bond yields will climb further. Having already rallied a lot, global share prices will likely relapse, with EM risk assets being hardest hit on the back of rising U.S. bond yields. Thereafter, there will likely be a period of calm when inflation worries subside due to growth disappointments, and bond yields roll over decisively. Risk assets will probably recover some lost ground in this phase. Yet this calm phase might not last too long as EM/China growth will relapse considerably again toward the end of this year. In short, another global growth scare driven by EM/China is likely to transpire later this year. Any potential U.S. trade protectionist measures will play into this scenario - augmenting U.S. inflation expectations initially when adopted and then, when implemented, dampening global growth. Please note that this is the view of BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy service, which differs from BCA's house view that is cyclically positive on global stocks/risk assets. Neither the inflation fears/higher interest rates episode nor the growth scare phase that we believe is in the cards later this year are bullish for EM risk assets. Therefore, we maintain that the risk-reward for EM risk assets is extremely unattractive at the current juncture, even if global growth stays firm for now. More Upside In Bond Yields Inflation has been accelerating in the U.S. and China: The average of U.S. trimmed-mean CPI and PCE, median CPI and market-based core CPI inflation has risen above 2% (Chart I-1). The individual components are shown in Chart I-2. Chart I-1U.S. Inflation Measures Are In Uptrend Chart I-2Broad-Based Rise In U.S. Inflation BCA's U.S. wage tracker - a mean of four different wage series - is also accelerating (Chart I-3, top panel), signaling a tightening labor market. Wages are critical to inflation dynamics because not only are wages the largest cost component of a business but also higher wages entail more consumer spending, making it easier for companies to raise prices. That said, what drives cost-push inflation is not wages but unit labor costs. In the U.S., unit labor costs have been rising signaling accumulating pressure on businesses to raise prices (Chart I-3, bottom panel). In China, core (ex-food and energy) consumer, retail and trimmed mean consumer inflation are in an uptrend (Chart I-4). Chart I-3U.S. Wages And Unit Labor ##br##Costs Argue For More Inflation Upside Chart I-4China: Inflation Is Picking Up However, disposable income (a proxy for wages) growth in China remains subdued, given economic growth has been very weak (Chart I-5, top panel). Hence, there are no imminent wage pressures in China like there are in the U.S. That said, unit labor costs in China are still rising because output per hour (productivity) growth has decelerated notably (Chart I-5, bottom panel). Real (adjusted for inflation) interest rates have not yet increased much and remain low worldwide. As global growth conditions remain robust and inflation data surprise on the upside, interest rates both in nominal and real terms will likely rise. In the U.S., 10-year Treasury yields adjusted for the average consumer price inflation (currently running at 2.0%) stand at 0.35% (Chart I-6, top panel). Consistently, U.S. 10- and 5-year TIPS yields are 0.6% and 0.2%, respectively (Chart I-6, bottom panel). Provided U.S. growth remains robust and the labor market continues to improve, there are no reasons for U.S. TIPS yields to stay at these low levels. Chart I-5China: Wage Proxy And Unit Labor Costs Chart I-6U.S. Real Yields Are Low A strong U.S. dollar could have been an impediment to a potential rise in real rates, but year-to-date the greenback has been tame. In addition, U.S. share prices and high-yield corporate bonds are handling the news of Federal Reserve tightening well. All of this opens a window for both nominal and real U.S. bond yields to rise in the near term. On the whole, either the U.S. dollar will spike soon or U.S. interest rates will climb further. The latter will eventually cause the greenback to appreciate. This will be especially troublesome for EM risk assets. In China, the real deposit rate has turned negative (Chart I-7, top panel). In the past, when the real deposit rate was negative, the central bank hiked interest rates (Chart I-7, bottom panel). If households do not get a more attractive deposit rate, they will opt for foreign currency, real assets like property or riskier investments domestically. All of this entails negative consequences for China's financial stability. Considering the above as well as improved growth in China and higher bond yields globally, we expect mainland policymakers to tolerate marginally higher interest rates. Notably, China's onshore domestic corporate bond yields, swap rates and the interbank repo rate have already been rising since last autumn - a trend that will likely persist for now (Chart I-8). Chart I-7China: Real Deposit Rates Have Turned ##br##Negative China: Real Deposit Rate Is Negative Chart I-8China: Interest ##br##Rates Are In Uptrend We do not have strong conviction on how persistent and pervasive the nascent inflation uptrend will be in the U.S. and China. Inflation is driven by numerous structural and cyclical variables, and they often work in opposite directions. The outlook for these variables is not identical to draw a definite conclusion about the inflation trajectory in the long run. In this report, we cover just one aspect of inflation - how liquidity and money relate to and drive consumer prices (please see the section below). Bottom Line: Odds are that there could be a global inflation/interest rates scare in the near term, and bond yields will continue rising in the next two to three months. Monetary-Liquidity Approach To Inflation As Milton Friedman famously stated: Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output. Yet a relevant question is which monetary aggregates do really impact inflation. Identifying specific monetary aggregates that impact inflation will help us gauge the outlook for the latter. Central bank liquidity provisioning to banks does not necessarily cause inflation to rise. It is money/credit creation by commercial banks that generates higher inflation. In any banking system, it is commercial banks that create loans. Central banks emit and supply banks with liquidity - commercial banks' reserves held at the central bank - but the monetary authorities do not create money directly, except when they finance the government or non-bank organizations directly or buy financial assets from them. Money is created by commercial banks when they originate loans. Similarly, money is destroyed when a loan is repaid to a bank. Commercial banks do not need savings and/or deposits to originate loans. They create a deposit themselves when they grant a loan. Yet banks require liquidity (reserves at the central bank) to settle their payments with other banks. Banks seek liquidity in various ways, such as by attracting deposits, borrowing money from the central bank and in interbank markets as well as raising funds abroad, among other methods. When a bank attracts deposits, these deposits constitute outflows of deposits from other banks, or a drainage of cash in circulation that was once a deposit at another bank and was cashed out. In short, these deposits do not fall out of the sky, and do not constitute new deposits/savings in the banking system and the economy. On the whole, when a commercial bank extends a loan it creates a new deposit, and thereby new money - i.e. it increases money supply. When a bank attracts a deposit, it does not create a new deposit or new money. The existing money/deposit simply moves from one bank to another, or from cash to deposit. The amount of money supply does not change. A bank does not need liquidity (reserves at the central bank) for each loan it generates. It requires liquidity (reserves at the central bank) only to settle its balance with other banks or to meet minimum reserve requirements. If a bank creates a loan but still has excess reserves at the central bank, it might not require liquidity to "back up" the loan.1 This is the reason why quantitative easing programs implemented by central banks in the advanced countries did not produce high inflation. Even though central banks conducting QEs - the Fed, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan - supplied a lot of banking system liquidity, and commercial banks' reserves at the central bank skyrocketed, commercial banks initially were reluctant to originate new loans. Where are we presently in money/credit cycles in major economies? Chart I-9 demonstrates broad money growth for the U.S., the euro area, China and EM ex-China. Broad money growth is still strong across the world. In addition, there is a reasonable, albeit not perfect, correlation between broad money and inflation as depicted in Chart I-10. In China, money aggregates in 2015-16 were distorted by the LGFV debt swap. Outside this episode, there is a reasonable relationship, as one would expect: broad money growth explains swings in inflation. The key message from this chart is that the rise in inflation is possible in the near term but is unlikely to prove sustainable and lasting in these largest three world economies if broad money growth continues downshifting. The reason behind the drop in broad money growth is a notable slowdown in bank loans in the U.S. and China (Chart I-11). Chart I-9Broad Money Growth Across World Chart I-10Broad Money Growth And Inflation Chart I-11Bank Loan Growth Slowdown In The U.S. And China It is a safe bet that with more upside in global and local interest rates, bank loan growth is likely to slump in China/EM. Furthermore, given the credit bubble in China and the authorities' efforts to contain risks, odds are that bank loan and overall credit growth will decelerate by the end of this year. On another note, the sheer size of the credit bubble in China is also corroborated by the amount of outstanding broad money. In common currency (U.S. dollar) terms, the outstanding amount of broad money (M2) is almost two times larger in China than M2 in the U.S. and M3 in the euro area (Chart I-12). This is despite the fact that China's nominal GDP is US$11 trillion, smaller than U.S. GDP of US$19 trillion, and comparable to euro area GDP of US$12 trillion. In fact, the outstanding broad money supply in China in absolute U.S. dollar terms is only slightly less than the combined broad money supply in the U.S. and euro area. Chart I-13 illustrates broad money as a share of country GDP in all three economies. The upshot is that Chinese commercial banks have created much more money relative to GDP than U.S. and euro area banks. Chart I-12China's Money Supply Is ##br##Enormous In U.S. Dollars And... Chart I-13...Relative To GDP The question is why China has not had high inflation despite such immense money overflow. The answer is that China has been investing a lot, and the supply of goods and services in China has risen very rapidly too. That said, this money has created a property market bubble in China. We will discuss/debate the issues surrounding China's money, credit and savings in a forthcoming China Debate piece with our BCA colleagues. Bottom Line: What ultimately drives economic cycles and inflation is money created by commercial banks, not central bank liquidity provisioning to banks. China/EM broad money growth is still unsustainably strong and it will fall further. Growth Scare Before Year End? Chart I-14China: Corporate Bond Prices Are Falling If EM/China credit growth decelerates, as we expect to happen toward the end of this year, it will not only cap inflation but also cause a growth scare. Although U.S. and euro area growth could soften a notch from current levels, the main downside to global growth stems from EM/China, as we have repeatedly written. Given China's onshore corporate bonds rallied dramatically in 2015-'16 on the back of massive investor-buying, a further drop in these bond prices might trigger an exodus of funds and a meaningful push-up in corporate bond yields. In fact, the price of onshore corporate bonds continues to make new lows, and is already down 8% from its peak in November 2015 (Chart I-14). Chart I-15U.S. And German Bond Prices More Downside? This will in turn cause corporate bond issuance and other non-bank financing to slump. This will occur at time when bank loan growth is already decelerating, and the authorities are aiming to reduce speculative activity in the financial system via a regulatory clampdown. Ultimately, higher borrowing costs along with regulatory tightening of banks' off-balance-sheet operations will cause a slowdown in China's domestic credit flows in the second half of 2017. The rest of EM will decelerate on the back of a China slowdown, which will reverberate via lower mainland imports and declining commodities prices. In addition, the banking systems in many EMs have not adjusted following the credit boom of the preceding years. Unhealthy banking systems and higher global interest rates will cause further retrenchment in domestic credit creation. Bottom Line: A renewed slump in China/EM growth later this year will trigger growth disappointments globally. Investment Strategy It seems global stocks and bonds have priced in a goldilocks scenario - strong growth and low inflation/interest rates. DM bond yields will likely rise further. Remarkably, both U.S. and German 30-year bond prices have already fallen by 23% from their July highs and there might be more downside (Chart I-15). BCA's Relative Risk Indicator for U.S. stocks versus U.S. Treasurys is over-extended at a very high level (Chart I-16). When this indicator has historically been at similar levels underweighting stocks versus bonds has paid off. Notably, when inflation is rising equity multiples should shrink. This has often been the case in the U.S., though not lately (Chart I-17). Chart I-16U.S. Stocks-To-Bonds Relative Risk Indicator Chart I-17Rising Inflation = Compressing Multiples Chart I-18A Number Of EM Currencies Are Facing Resistance EM risk assets warrant an underweight position across equities, credit and currencies. The list of our country allocation within the EM universe for stocks, credit and local bonds is provided on page 14. Commodities prices in the near term are at risk from a strong U.S. dollar and later in the year from a slowdown in Chinese growth. Several EM currencies are at a critical technical juncture (Chart I-18). We expect these resistance levels not to be broken. We recommend shorting a basket of the following EM currencies versus the U.S. dollar: MYR, IDR, TRY, ZAR, BRL, CLP and COP. On a relative basis, we overweight RUB, MXN, THB, TWD, INR, PLN, HUF and CZK. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 For more detailed discussion on the process of money and credit creation, please refer to Trilogy of Special Reports on money/loan creation, savings and investment, titled, "Misconceptions About China's Credit Excesses" dated October 26, 2016, "China's Money Creation Redux And The RMB", dated November 23, 2016 and "Do Credit Bubbles Originate From High National Savings?", dated January 18, 2017, links available on page 16. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Geopolitics will not spoil the stock rally yet; European election risks remain overstated; In China, look beyond the National Party Congress; China's reforms could re-launch in 2018 ... ... But India's reforms are gaining momentum now. Feature The global economy continues to surprise to the upside, with the latest round of global purchasing managers' indices (PMIs) confirming that the business cycle continues to accelerate (Chart 1). In the context of firming global growth, the Fed's decision to hike rates may not produce as violent of a reaction from the dollar as last year, giving way to further upside in stocks. And while investors continue to fret about valuations, U.S. stocks are expensive only relative to history, not relative to competing assets, as our colleague Lenka Martinek of the U.S. Investment Strategy service points out (Chart 2).1 Chart 1Because I'm Happy Chart 2U.S. Stocks Pricey By History, Not Peers What geopolitical news could break up the party over the next six months? Europe: As we argued three weeks ago, the European electoral calendar is unusually busy (Table 1).2 However, we have also posited in our 2017 Strategic Outlook that Europe will be a red herring this year, allowing risk assets to "climb the wall of worry."3 The first test of this thesis comes today, with the Dutch general elections taking place. The polls suggest that the Dutch electorate is not following the populist trend of the Brexit referendum and U.S. election (Chart 3), but rather in the footsteps of the little noticed Austrian presidential election in December, which saw the populist presidential candidate defeated. Dutch Euroskeptics, who have led the polling throughout the last twelve months, are bleeding support as election day approaches. Meanwhile, in France, Marine Le Pen is struggling to keep momentum going with only a month and a half to the first round. Thus far, our thesis on Europe is holding. Table 1Busy Calendar For Europe This Year Chart 3Dutch Euroskeptics Are An Overstated Threat The U.S.: Investors will finally get to put numbers to President Trump's rhetoric when the White House announces its budget on March 16. As we argued last week, President Trump is who we thought he was: an economic populist looking to shake up America's status quo. That suggests he will err on the side of greater deficits and large middle-class tax cuts. We do not think Congress will bar his way, as it has rarely restrained a Republican president from profligacy (Chart 4). We could be wrong, but it is unclear if a more fiscally responsible budget would be negative for the markets. On one hand, it may disappoint optimistic growth projections, but on the other, it would mean that the Fed would have no reason to err on the side of more rate hikes in 2017. Meanwhile, while we continue to fear protectionism's impact on the market, it is unlikely that the Trump White House will focus on trade when so many domestic priorities are looming this summer. Russia: As we argued in a Special Report with the Emerging Markets Strategy group last week, Russia may be entering a low-beta paradigm - escaping from its close embrace with oil prices - due to the combination of orthodox monetary policy, modest structural reforms, and growing confidence in its geopolitical predicament.4 This is not the time for President Putin to rattle nerves in the West. He does not want to give Europe and the U.S. a reason to cooperate. We therefore expect Russia's geopolitical risk premium to continue to decline, a boon for European risk assets (Chart 5). Chart 4Budgets: Republican Presidents##br## Get What They Want Chart 5Russia's Calm##br## Is Europe's Profit From a tactical perspective, we believe that the confluence of geopolitical forces supports our continued overweight of developed-market equities versus those of emerging markets. Within developed markets, the BCA House View is to prefer euro-area equities due to overstated geopolitical risks and favorable valuations relative to the U.S. equity market. BCA's Global Investment Strategy has pointed out that euro-area equities are one standard deviation undervalued relative to the U.S., when one applies U.S. sector weights to them (Chart 6). In addition, BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy service believes that Treasury yields have more room to rise, with growth putting upward pressure on inflation and the Fed in a rate-hike cycle. This makes sense to us given that no major geopolitical risk is materializing and considerable upside risk exists in U.S. growth due to Trump's populist policies. Chart 6European Stocks Still A Buy Relative To U.S. In what follows, we take a break from poring over geopolitical risks in Europe and the U.S. and focus on emerging markets. Since January, very few investors have asked us about EM politics, save for the occasional question about Brazil. However, the two Asian giants - China and India - are both a source of risk: the first a downside, left-tail risk and the second an upside, right-tail risk. China: What Comes After The Party Congress This Fall? Since 2013, we have been outspoken in our low expectations for China's structural reforms.5 This view was confirmed with a series of stimulus efforts that displaced reforms, including the local government debt swap program in 2014 and extensive fiscal and monetary easing in 2015 and especially 2016.6 The upside of weak reforms was better-than-expected growth in the short run, as stimulus took effect. Indeed, China has pulled off a remarkable economic turnaround since early last year: infrastructure and housing investment have increased, the weaker yuan has boosted exports, and the global recovery in commodity prices has helped producer prices to recover, easing deflationary pressures (Chart 7). Chart 7Deflationary Pressures Easing Chart 8Stimulus Dropped Off Accordingly, Chinese policymakers, who are attempting to strike a balance between stimulus and restructuring, have begun leaning against the economy's gathering momentum. Government spending has collapsed now that a 6.5% GDP growth "floor" has been established (Chart 8). A new round of property market regulatory tightening began last fall, though it has had little impact so far. Also, the People's Bank of China has begun draining some liquidity (Chart 9). Signals coming out of the "Two Sessions" over the past two weeks, namely the National People's Congress, suggest that the Chinese leadership is content with the current state of affairs. Policymakers set their growth targets for 2017 a little lower than last year's targets and a little higher than last year's actual performance (Table 2).7 It is a line so thin that it is almost imperceptible. They do not want significant change. Chart 9PBoC Draining Liquidity Table 2China's Economic Targets For 2017 This stance fits with a deeper desire to keep the economy on an even keel during a pivotal year for Chinese politics. The legislative session took place under the shadow of the Communist Party's impending 19th National Party Congress - the "midterm" meeting of the party that happens every five years and features extensive promotions, rotations, and retirements for the party leadership. This year's congress promises to be especially influential because of Xi Jinping's ascendancy and the fact that around 70% of the upper tier of leaders will be replaced. Chart 10, which we have been showing clients over the past year to dampen expectations of stimulus, reveals that the party congress is not normally an excuse to throw open the floodgates of credit and government spending. Rather, it is a reason to avoid anything that might rock the boat, whether stimulus or reform. Chart 10Not Much Evidence Of Aggressive Stimulus Ahead Of Five-Year Party Congresses Thus while government spending has declined, it should be expected to rise again if growth slows down too much for too long. There may be a period of slowdown and market jitters before the leaders reach for the fiscal lever again, but the "Socialist Put" remains in place. Meanwhile, we are not surprised that structural reforms continue to suffer. It is not that China has eschewed all reforms but rather that its reforms have focused on centralizing power for the ruling party and alleviating some outstanding social grievances. These are positive in themselves but they do not address the key concerns of foreign investors relating to economic openness, financial stability, and the role of the state. The recent imposition of capital controls and a host of non-tariff barriers in the name of "state security" exemplify a negative trend. The delayed rollout of the property tax is also a sign of Beijing's proclivity to delay policies that may be financially risky.8 And Beijing has only tentatively attempted to cut back state-owned enterprises. Simply put, a push to overhaul any significant sector or sub-sector does not fit Beijing's priorities at the moment. However, if growth, debt, or asset prices should climb too rapidly, then we expect countermeasures to tamp them down. Even on the geopolitical front - where we have a high conviction view that tail risks to financial markets are higher than the market perceives them to be, both in China and the broader Asia Pacific - there have been some signs of the U.S. and China playing ball on a shared desire for "stability," at least for the moment.9 While we expect a negative geopolitical shock, the market will only believe it when it sees it. All of the above suggest that China will focus on "maintaining stability" this year even more than usual due to the party congress. This is clearly bullish, especially given improving U.S. and global growth. However, the mantra of "stability" and "party congress" should not prevent investors from looking beyond October or November of this year. Chart 11China Needs More##br## Credit For Same Growth Chart 12China Gets Old ##br##Before It Gets Rich Even assuming that China experiences no significant internal or external economic shocks from now until this fall, it is important to remember that China's growth potential is still slowing for structural reasons. Productivity is collapsing and credit dependency is rising (Chart 11). The slowdown stems from deep shifts such as the end of the debt supercycle in the U.S. (weak external demand), the tipping point in Chinese demographics (higher dependency ratio) (Chart 12), and the extremely rapid build-up in corporate debt (Chart 13). Chart 13Corporate Debt Skyrockets Chart 14As Good As It Gets This is what leads our colleague Mathieu Savary, of BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy, to surmise that China is at the peak of its current economic mini-cycle. This is "as good as it gets," as he shows in Chart 14. Barring a situation in which Xi somehow fails to consolidate power at the party congress, the market impact will depend on which of two scenarios follows: First scenario: Xi achieves a dominant position in all party and state organs, yet 2018 sees a continuation of the current pattern of mini-cycles of stimulus, lackluster reform, and foreign policy aggressiveness. Xi implicitly deems the strategic cost of reform too great, as we argued he would do over the past four years, and dedicates his stint in office to the accumulation of power. Perhaps a successor will be able to use these powers to enact painful reforms in the mid-2020s; that is not Xi's immediate concern. This is short-term bullish for global and Chinese growth, long-term bearish for Chinese assets. Second scenario: Xi achieves a dominant position and uses his power to reinvigorate the country's stalled reforms. Hints of big measures emerge in the wake of the party congress in November or December, and January 2018 begins with a bang. This would necessarily mean that Xi accepts slower growth, or even that he imposes it through tighter fiscal policy, real credit control, SOE failures, and aggressive overcapacity cuts. However, Chinese productivity would begin to recover. This is short-term bearish for Chinese and global growth. However, it is the most bullish outcome for the long-term performance of Chinese assets. In China's current state - with capital controls newly reinstituted (Chart 15), Xi lauding the "central role" of SOEs in development, and Xi's administration still focused on purging the party and controlling the media - the second scenario admittedly seems far-fetched. Chart 15Are Capital Controls Working? Moreover, Xi seems averse to risky experiments at home that could weaken the country in the face of unprecedented strategic threats from the United States and Japan. Nevertheless, a 2018 reform push should not be dismissed out of hand. Why? Because an overbearing state, credit excesses, and weak productivity really do threaten the sustainability of the Chinese economy and hence the Communist Party's grip on power. Xi must keep them in check, as the current gestures toward tighter policy indicate. The government has overseen a massive monetary and credit expansion to protect the country from faltering external demand since 2008. As the current account surplus has declined, the country's massive savings have built up at home in the form of debt (Chart 16).10 Yet the investment avenues are restricted by the role of the state. As a result, the inefficient state-supported sector is getting propped up while the shadow financial sector grows wildly and creates murky systemic risks that are difficult to monitor and control. The PBoC has undertaken further extraordinary actions to keep financial conditions loose (Chart 17). Chart 16Savings Invested At Home Chart 17PBoC Lends A Helping Hand What signposts should investors watch for to see which path Xi will take after the party congress? Jockeying ahead of the party congress: The latest NPC session saw some political maneuvering. Several sixth generation leaders made appearances and spoke to media.11 Xi's supposed favorite, Chen Min'er, Party Secretary of Guizhou, distinguished himself by cutting reporters short at a press conference. Meanwhile former President Hu Jintao appeared publicly alongside his apprentice, Hu Chunhua, Party Secretary of Guangdong. Elite party gatherings in the summer, especially any retreat at Beidaihe, should be watched closely for any clues of who may be up and who down, and what general policy trajectory may be forthcoming. Xi's future: First, will Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang establish clear successors for their top two positions in 2022?12 A failure to do so will suggest that Xi intends to stay in power beyond his de facto term limit of 2022. This would mean that Xi will prioritize his own future over painful structural reforms. On the other hand, a clear commitment to a leadership transition in five years may re-focus the Xi-Li administration towards their initial commitment to economic restructuring. National Financial Work Conference: This conference is held every five years, usually connected with a major new financial reform or regulatory push, and due sometime in 2017. The government is looking into serious changes to financial regulation - including the creation of a super-ministry to house the various regulatory agencies. This, or the broader attempt to ensure adequate capitalization of banks, could be behind the delay. New central banker: Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, in office since 2002, may step down this fall. He could be replaced with another technocrat to little fanfare, but his exit introduces the opportunity for shaking up the PBoC regime as a whole. Other new officials: A slew of other appointments and reshuffles will take place this year as a generation of leaders born before the Revolution retires. A new director of the state economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission, was just named, while late last year a new finance minister took his post. These officials have yet to make their mark. Their statements should be watched closely for any shifts in economic policy emphasis. Time frames for reforms: The market is still waiting for concrete proposals and time frames for major reform initiatives, particularly opening up to foreign competition and restructuring state-owned enterprises. Overcapacity cuts have also had mixed results. We do not expect major advances on big structural reforms this year due to the party congress, but details that can be gleaned about the process and timetables could be important. Bottom Line: Watch for signs of a renewed reform drive after the nineteenth National Party Congress. Xi is not going to reverse what he has done so far. And China is not going to become a market economy on the ideal western model. But a pivot point could be in the cards next year for China to pursue some pro-efficiency reforms that it has already set out for itself in a more resolute way. Xi's decision to stay in power beyond 2022 would be bearish for reforms as it would incentivize the current "Socialist Put" model of policymaking over a genuine paradigm shift. India: What Comes After Modi's Big Win? Prime Minister Narendra Modi has won a crushing victory in India's most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, positioning himself, his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and National Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition very well for the 2019 general elections. Policymaking is going to become easier for the ruling party - though there are still serious political and economic constraints. We have been long Indian equities relative to EM equities since the "Modi wave" began with Modi's victory in the Lok Sabha or lower house in 2014.13 The end of the commodity bull market signaled an opportunity for India, which imports about a third of its energy. The decline of global trade also heralded the outperformance of domestic demand-driven economies like India. Further, Modi's sweeping victory held out the promise for a reform agenda of tighter monetary and fiscal policy that would reduce inflation and make room for private investment to grow. This would make Indian risk assets attractive, especially relative to other EMs, which were at that time either lagging at reforms or failing to undertake them entirely. Since then we have seen Modi rack up a key legislative victory - the passage of the Goods and Services Tax, in the process of implementation - and engineer a surprise "demonetization" effort late last year to increase bank deposits, bring the country's gray markets into the open, and flush out crime and corruption.14 The ruling coalition's gains in Uttar Pradesh and a few other state elections this year are a striking vindication of popular support after this highly unconventional and controversial maneuver.15 Uttar Pradesh is the most important of these elections. It was slated to be a grand testing ground for Modi well before demonetization. It is the most populous Indian state, with about 200 million people, and the third largest state economy (producing about 10% of GDP). It is the second-poorest state, with a GDP per capita of about $730, it has the highest proportion of "scheduled castes" (untouchables), and ranks around the middle of states in terms of the Hindu share of population - all challenges for the landed, pro-business, Hindu nationalist BJP (Map 1). Politically, aside from its inherent heft in population and centrality, Uttar Pradesh sends the most representatives of any state to India's upper house (31 seats), the Rajya Sabha, where Modi lacks a majority. It is thus a key source of federal power and an important state ally. Map 1Modi's Saffron Wave Takes The Indian Core Given the above, it is hugely bullish that Modi's BJP romped to a historic victory in the state election, winning 312 out of 403 seats (about 39.7% of the vote), up from 47 seats previously. His coalition rose to 324 seats total (Chart 18). The BJP now has the largest majority of any party in the state since 1980. These results were not anticipated. A close election was predicted and opinion polls had BJP winning 157 seats, short of the 202 needed for a majority. This was only slightly ahead of its closest rival, an alliance made up of the local Samajwadi Party and its national partner, the left-leaning Indian National Congress (INC). Exit polls even suggested that the Samajwadi-INC coalition had edged ahead of the BJP. The immediate takeaway is that Modi will have better luck governing Uttar Pradesh itself now that the state government is on his side. Individual states hold the key to reform in India because of the country's size and socio-economic disparities. The state will now be expected to implement Modi's policies faithfully and push approved policies forward on its own. The second takeaway is that while Uttar Pradesh will not give Modi control of India's upper house of parliament, the Rajya Sabha, it will give him a better position there. The BJP has 56 seats in the upper house (fewer than the INC's 59), and the ruling coalition has 74, out of a total of 250. The coalition needs 52 seats for a simple majority. Uttar Pradesh will deliver 10 seats at most by the 2019 general election. Modi would have to win almost every seat of the 56 non-allied seats coming open between now and 2019 in order to win the upper house by that time (Chart 19). That is unlikely, but Modi is moving in the right direction and an upper-house majority cannot be ruled out in the long run. Chart 18Modi's Big Win In Uttar Pradesh Chart 19Modi's National Position Improves Of course, Modi has already shown with the Goods and Services Tax that he can pass very difficult legislation through the upper house without controlling a majority there. This achievement last year was perhaps an even greater surprise than the victory in Uttar Pradesh, which reinforces it. Modi also has a secret weapon: in case of a national emergency, however defined, he can call a joint session of parliament, where his coalition would carry the day. This is now more likely because it is the Indian president who is responsible for calling a joint session, and Modi is now more likely to get his candidate into that position due to the win in Uttar Pradesh. President Pranab Mukherjee, who is affiliated with the INC, will step down on July 25. Though Modi does not have all the votes in the electoral college to choose the president outright, smaller parties may fall in line now that the BJP has so much national momentum.16 Controlling the presidency will also give Modi greater influence over constitutional obstacles and gradually over the legal system. Separately, in August, Modi's alliance will be able to choose the vice president as well. More broadly, the Uttar Pradesh election marks a victory for Modi's style of appealing to voter demand for greater economic development as a general priority over longstanding religious and caste grievances that frequently determine electoral outcomes in state elections. This is a hugely significant indication for India's economic structural reform and nation building. Bottom Line: Modi's victory in Uttar Pradesh is proof that for all of India's sprawling inefficiencies, its political system is capable of responding to the large public demand for economic development. Do not underestimate reform momentum now. Modi's political capital remains high. Investment Conclusions The conventional wisdom has for decades been that China is better at reforming its economy because of its authoritarian regime, whereas India democratized too early and has thus lagged at reforms. We have never agreed with this simplistic view of economic reforms. Structural reforms are always and everywhere painful. As such, they require political capital. As our "J-Curve of Structural Reforms" posits, reforms deplete political capital as the pain spreads through the economy and opposition mounts among both the elite and the common man (Chart 20). Eventually, the government is faced with a "danger zone" in which the pain of reforms lingers, the benefits remain beyond the horizon, and all political capital is exhausted. Many leaders chose to water down the reforms, or back off from them altogether, at this point. Chart 20The J-Curve Of Structural Reform On the surface, authoritarian regimes have massive political capital with which to burst through the danger zone of reform. But this assumption is not entirely correct. In China's case, the political capital for reform came after disastrous performances by the "conservative" political forces. Reformers in China were buoyed by the failures of the "Cultural Revolution" (which ended in 1976) and the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. Each political and social crisis gave the reformers an opening - following a consolidation period - to pursue controversial economic reforms at the expense of "conservative" forces. The fruit of these reform efforts has been the growth of China's middle class. And while this middle class expects reforms in the delivery and quality of public services, it is not interested in seeing a slowdown in economic growth, no matter how temporary or healthy it may be. As such, Chinese leaders are faced with a significant hurdle to their reform preference: how to convince the public that a slowdown is needed in order to restructure the economy. We are unsure whether the upcoming party congress will make a difference. However, we can see a scenario where President Xi decides to pursue market-friendly reforms because he sees an increase in his political capital. In particular, he may feel that he has cemented his personal dominance over his intra-party rivals and that the aggressive foreign and trade policy emanating from the Trump White House gives him a foil to blame for any downturn in growth. Reform would also be a return to Xi's original agenda, and would conform to the playbook of former president Jiang Zemin, whose precedents Xi has followed in some other areas. Given Xi's modus operandi, a post-consolidation reform drive would be executed relatively effectively and would therefore present short-term risks to Chinese and hence global growth, despite the long-term improvement. Markets are definitely not expecting such a policy pivot at the moment. China bulls are content with the current reforms, while China bears see no chance of the Xi administration changing tack. While we are just beginning to see the potential for a turn in Chinese policymaking towards reforms, India is a much clearer example of a reformist administration. Modi will feel empowered by the Uttar Pradesh election, a political recapitalization of sorts. Foreign investment will likely continue cheering Modi's ongoing revolution (Chart 21). The question now is whether Modi intends to use the infusion of political capital for genuine reforms. After all, the economy is not looking up (Chart 22). Chart 21Foreign Investors Cheer On Modi Chart 22Indian Economy Still Weak The evidence is mixed. First, Modi has not maintained strictness on fiscal spending and the budget deficit is creeping back to where it was when he took over the reins (Chart 23). Rising government spending along with higher commodity prices suggest that inflation will continue making a comeback (Chart 24). Poor food production is also driving up inflation. And higher spending and inflation pose a key threat to the sustainability of the reform agenda, since rising government bond yields will crowd out private investment. Chart 23Losing Budgetary Discipline? Chart 24Inflation Makes A Comeback Second, the RBI will be less likely to pursue a tighter monetary policy with both political influence and weak growth pressing on it. Moreover, Indian stocks are not all that cheap. In 2014, valuations were favorable and the backdrop included cheap commodities, fiscal prudence, and Modi's electoral success. Today, India is trading at its historical mean relative to EM (Chart 25), but using the equal sector weighted P/E ratio, by which India was very cheap back in 2014, India is at a 52% premium now (Chart 26). Chart 25Indian Stocks Trading##br## At Mean Against EM Chart 26Indian Stocks Pricey##br## Versus EM Sector-Weighted We are therefore taking this opportunity to close our long India / short EM trade for a 28% gain (since May 2014). We will reassess Modi's structural reform priorities in future research and gauge whether a new entry point is warranted. We remain optimistic on India in the long run as Modi certainly has the political capital for reforms. The question is whether he plans to use it. Meanwhile, we remain skeptical about China's long-term trajectory. To become fully optimistic about Chinese risk assets in absolute terms, we need to see the Xi administration chose short-term pain for long-term gain. For the time being, China continues to repress its structural problems rather than deal with them head on, relying on minimal openness, high and rising leverage, and state-owned banks and companies. India may be lagging in its reform effort, but it has at least established market reforms as a priority. And the Modi administration has built political capital through the slow and painful democratic process. Over the long term, India's approach is more sustainable. If President Xi wastes the opportunity afforded to him by the upcoming party congress, we suspect that China will face a much higher probability of left-tail economic risks than India over the long term. Matt Gertken, Associate Editor mattg@bcaresearch.com Marko Papic, Senior Vice President marko@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri, Research Analyst jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "How Expensive Are U.S. Stocks?," dated March 13, 2017, available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Climbing The Wall Of Worry In Europe," dated February 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy and Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Russia: Entering A Lower-Beta Paradigm," dated March 8, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Reflections On China's Reforms," dated December 11, 2013, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Taking Stock Of China's Reforms," dated May 13, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com, and "China: The Socialist Put And Rising Government Leverage" in Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Introducing: The Median Voter Theory," dated June 8, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy, "Messages From The People's Congress," dated March 9, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see Chong Koh Ping, "No plans for NPC to discuss property tax," Straits Times, March 5, 2017, available at www.straitstimes.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "How To Play The Proxy Battles In Asia," dated March 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Does China Have A Debt Problem Or A Savings Problem?" dated February 24, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 China's leadership is typically referred to in terms of "generations," with Mao Zedong and his peers the first generation, Deng Xiaoping and his cohort the second, Jiang Zemin the third, Hu Jintao the fourth, and Xi Jinping the fifth. The fifth generation was born in the early 1950s, the sixth generation was born in the early 1960s. 12 Xi may tweak retirement norms to let close allies, like Wang Qishan, the anti-graft attack dog, stay on the Politburo Standing Committee. This might also suggest that Xi himself intends to overstay his age limit in 2022. 13 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Long Modi, Short Jokowi," dated August 28, 2014, available at gps.bcaresearch.com, and Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "Long Indian / Short Indonesian Stocks," dated July 30, 2014, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 14 Please see "India: Demonetization And Opportunities In Equities," in Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "EM: Untenable Divergences," dated December 21, 2016, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 15 Though the mixed results also indicate persistent regional differences. Modi's coalition won seats in Uttarakhand and Manipur but lost them in Goa and Punjab. Gujarat, Modi's home state, will hold elections later this year. Himachal Pradesh will also vote this year and will be a subsequent testing ground. 16 Please see Gaurav Vivek Bhatnagar, "BJP Sweep in UP Will Impact Decision on President, Rajya Sabha Numbers," The Wire, March 12, 2017, available at https://thewire.in/116044/bjp-sweep-will-impact-decision-president/
Highlights Fed: The Fed will deliver another rate hike tomorrow, but we do not expect a signal that a higher trajectory for the funds rate is necessary. The Fed wants to see higher inflation expectations and will remain as accommodative as possible until that happens. Maintain a below-benchmark allocation to U.S. Treasuries within global fixed income portfolios. ECB: The ECB opened the door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance last week, although the talk of a rate hike is premature. A 2018 taper is the more probable scenario, likely to be introduced at the September 2017 policy meeting. This will raise longer-dated European bond yields and widen spreads for both Peripheral European government debt and Euro Area corporate bonds. Reduce Euro Area IG to below-benchmark. U.S. High-Yield: U.S. junk bond spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade U.S. High-Yield from neutral to overweight. Feature Chart of the WeekStill A Positive Backdrop ##br##For U.S. Corporates After a run of smooth sailing for the markets so far in 2017, investors will have a lot of event risk to chew over this week. A slew of central bank meetings - the Fed on Wednesday followed by the Bank of England, Bank of Japan and Swiss National Bank all on Thursday - provide opportunities for policymakers to respond to the rising trends in global growth and inflation. Only the Fed is expected to make a change, though, delivering a now fully priced rate hike. Throw in the Dutch elections on Wednesday and the G20 finance ministers meeting in Germany at the end of the week and there are plenty of potentially market-moving headlines that can hit the tape. While there has been selling pressure on all global bonds during the bear phase since last July, U.S. Treasuries still remain most exposed to additional losses in the near term given the combination of improving growth, booming asset markets, a whiff of Trumpian "animal spirits" and a Fed that still appears to be playing catch-up to the overall positive U.S. macro backdrop. A bigger potential move in yields could occur if and when the European Central Bank (ECB) shifts to a less accommodative monetary stance - a taper of asset purchases first, not a rate hike, in our view - although that will likely require more evidence that medium-term Euro Area inflation expectations are sustainably moving back to the ECB's 2% target (Chart of the Week). For now, we continue to see a more negative near-term environment for U.S. Treasuries over core European debt, and a more positive environment for U.S. corporate bonds than European equivalents. As we have discussed in recent Weekly Reports, the time is coming for a shift out of core European government debt into U.S. Treasuries, although we prefer to wait for that switch until after the French elections. After the recent back-up in U.S. High-Yield spreads that has restored some value to junk bonds, however, we are upgrading our allocation to U.S. High-Yield this week to above-benchmark, while downgrading Euro Area Investment Grade corporate bonds to neutral from above-benchmark. Simply put, we prefer to take our growth-sensitive spread risk in U.S. corporates over European equivalents. Fed Vs. ECB: Dawn Of Hawkish? Some investors and financial media pundits have been asking if the Fed has fallen "behind the curve" with regards to U.S. monetary policy, especially after another solid Payrolls report and with U.S. inflation expectations holding firm despite a pullback in oil prices. In our view, being a little bit behind the curve is exactly where the Fed wants to be, allowing the economic upturn to blossom and inflation expectations to continue drifting towards the Fed's 2% target. We do not anticipate that the Fed will shift to a more aggressively hawkish stance this week, with no signal that rates will rise in 2017 more than is currently projected (three times by year-end). However, we do expect some acknowledgement of the positive macro backdrop both in the U.S. and abroad, justifying the need to move sooner by hiking now. This is especially true with the U.S. dollar still well off the 2017 peak and not providing much of a tightening in monetary conditions that could postpone a Fed rate hike. Any surprise shift higher in the Fed's interest rate projections (the "dots") would not be taken well by the Treasury market, particularly after last week's European Central Bank (ECB) meeting where a message that was merely less dovish than expected sent European bond yields sharply higher. A more hawkish shift by either central bank would be premature right now, as bond markets are not yet signaling that significantly higher real interest rates are necessary. It is important to note that most of the rise in Treasury yields since last July, and virtually all of the rise in German Bund yields, has come from rising inflation expectations rather than higher real yields (Chart 2 & Chart 3). Also, the market expectation for the real terminal policy rate - where interest rates should end up at the end of the tightening cycle - remains around 0% in the U.S. and -1% in Europe, using our proxy measure of the 5-year Overnight Index Swap (OIS) rate, 5-years forward minus the equivalent forward inflation rate from the TIPS and CPI swap markets (bottom panel of both charts). In other words, markets are only expecting a cyclical rise in interest rates in response to faster inflation, not a structural rise in interest rates because of faster potential economic growth. Chart 2Rising Inflation Explains ##br##Most Of The Rise In U.S. Yields... Chart 3...And All Of The Rise##br## In European Yields On that front, the winds are shifting in a fashion that is more bearish for Treasuries, at least in the near term. In Chart 4, we show the relationship between inflation expectations and oil prices for the U.S. and Euro Area. As can be seen in the bottom panel, the correlation between oil and expectations remains high in the Euro Area, but has fallen to zero in the U.S., where inflation expectations are increasingly influenced by domestic price pressures (i.e. rising wage growth and faster core inflation). Chart 4U.S. Inflation Now Not Just About Oil, ##br##Unlike Europe This remains a key element underpinning of our current below-benchmark call on U.S. Treasuries, particularly versus core European bonds. U.S. yields are likely to have more upside from higher inflation expectations with the Fed likely to stay as accommodative as possible by hiking rates at a slower pace than inflation is rising. At some point, monetary policy will become restrictive, particularly if the U.S. dollar bull market resumes with gusto as the Fed is delivering additional rate hikes and expectations for U.S. growth and inflation moderate, capping the current cyclical rise in Treasury yields. We are still some time away from that point, however. Bottom Line: The Fed will deliver another rate hike tomorrow, but we do not expect a signal that a higher trajectory for the funds rate is necessary. The Fed wants to see higher inflation expectations, and will remain as accommodative as possible until that happens. Maintain a below-benchmark allocation to U.S. Treasuries within global fixed income portfolios. ECB Begins The Path To Tapering The ECB last week put a relatively positive spin on the Euro Area economy, while declaring that the worst of the deflationary pressures have passed. President Draghi sounded less downbeat on the Euro Area economy than he has for some time, citing the broadening Euro Area economic upturn that was pushing down unemployment and absorbing economic slack. The ECB only slightly raised its growth forecast for 2017 and 2018, though, raising both figures by 0.1 percentage points to 1.8% and 1.7%, respectively. This would still be sufficient to remove additional slack from the economy, with the ECB currently estimating trend growth of around 1% in the Euro Area. A look at the details of those projections showed that real consumer spending is only expected to grow by 1.4% this year and next, even as the Euro Area unemployment rate is projected to fall below 9% in 2018 on the back of steady job gains. Capital spending is also expected to pick up in the next couple of years, but the projections were downgraded slightly from previous forecasts. These numbers seem a bit too cautious compared to the recent improvements seen in consumer and business confidence in the Euro Area (Chart 5), and to the more positive tone on the economy expressed in the ECB policy statement and in Draghi's press conference following the meeting. Perhaps this is simply central bank prudence at work, particularly in an environment where there is still considerable uncertainty about politics within the Euro Area and global trade in the Trumpian era. Whatever the reason, it now seems likely that growth will at least match, if not exceed, the relatively low bar set by the ECB. This is important, as the central bank is already projecting that the Euro Area will reach full employment by 2019, when the unemployment rate is projected to fall to 8.4%. The ECB expects wage pressures to rise as a result, helping boost core inflation up to 1.8% within two years (Chart 6). This would be consistent with the rising path of interest rates currently discounted in the Euro Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve where rates are now expected to start going up in the middle of next year, with the negative rate era ending in 2019 (bottom panel). Chart 5ECB Too Pessimistic On ##br##Euro Area Growth? Chart 6ECB Will Not Hike Rates Before ##br##Full Employment Is Reached The ECB knows that interest rates will have to rise if its core inflation forecast pans out, as this would almost certainly mean that headline inflation and inflation expectations would be at the ECB target of "at or just below" 2%. Yet it is still too soon to discuss that scenario, with core inflation struggling to surpass 1% and the 5-year CPI swap rate, 5-years forward at similar levels. The ECB did slightly alter its forward guidance in its policy statement to suggest that it was now much less likely that additional monetary easing would be needed to boost growth, and that it would no longer be necessary to use "all instruments" to fight deflation in Europe. This was taken as a hawkish surprise by the markets, particularly after media reports indicated that some members of the ECB discussed raising interest rates before the tapering of the ECB's asset purchases. As we discussed in our previous Weekly Report, the current backdrop in Europe looks similar in many respects to the U.S. prior to the "Taper Tantrum" episode in 2013.1 We see the ECB following a similar path to what the Fed did during the Tantrum, by signaling a tapering of asset purchases several months in advance, then raising interest rates after the taper is complete. Many clients have asked us if it is possible for the ECB to raise short-term interest rates before starting a tapering of asset purchases. This question also came up at last week's ECB meeting, and President Draghi reiterated the view that rates would be expected to "remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, and well past the horizon of our net asset purchases." This fits with the ECB's unemployment and inflation scenarios, which do not project a return to full employment - which would justify a rate hike - until 2019. A rate hike too soon would result in an unwanted tightening in financial conditions in Europe that could threaten the current economic upturn. We do not believe that investors could neatly separate the impact of a rate hike from that of a taper. A tightening is a tightening, as can be seen in the strong correlation of our Euro Area months-to-hike measure and the term premium on 10yr German Bund yields in recent years (Chart 7).2 If the ECB were to deliver a rate hike, even a modest one of less than the typical 25bp increment, while maintaining the current pace of bond buying, it would send a contradictory message given the ECB's benign inflation outlook for the next couple of years. Clearly, the market is already a bit confused, as the months-to-hike has been rapidly declining, even as shorter-dated bond yields in core Europe stay low and the term premium on longer-dated government debt has stopped rising. We still see a taper next year as a more likely scenario, to be announced at the September 2017 ECB meeting, with a rate hike to occur within 6-12 months of the completion of the taper. This would allow the ECB to reduce the pace of monetary expansion in line with a less deflationary backdrop in Europe, while leaving the rate hike for a more traditional move when full employment is reached in 2019. In Chart 8, we present some potential tapering scenarios and what it would mean for the growth rate of the ECB's monetary base. We show the base case for this year of €60bn/month in asset purchases that ends in December (a "full-stop" with no tapering), along with alternative scenarios of a pace of tapering that reduces the bond buying to zero within six months (i.e. a €10bn/month reduction until June 2018) and with a full taper over 12 months (i.e. a €5bn/month reduction until December 2018). We also show an additional scenario where the ECB decides to extend the asset purchases into 2018 at the same current pace of €60bn/month. Chart 7A Rate Hike Before Tapering ##br##Is A Confusing Message Chart 8Taper Or Not, ECB Effect ##br##On Bund Yields Fading... The bottom panels of Chart 8 show the annual growth rate of the monetary base under the different scenarios, and how that maps into longer-term German bond yields through a widening term premium. Importantly, the growth rate of the ECB's monetary base would decelerate even if there was no taper next year, which would put upward pressure on European bond yields. Unless the ECB is willing to raise the pace of bond buying next year, which would only occur if there was an unexpected downturn in the Euro Area economy before full employment is reached, then the writing is on the wall for Euro Area government bond yields. They are moving higher. The same goes for Peripheral European debt and even Euro Area Investment Grade corporate debt, which the ECB has also been buying. A slowing pace of ECB buying will put upward pressure on both yields and spreads next year (Chart 9), although a better Euro Area economy that improves corporate profits and tax revenues will help mitigate the rise in yields. It is possible that the ECB could alter the composition of its purchases while tapering, choosing to continue to buy more shorter-dated bonds to limit the potential of an unwanted rise in the Euro. As can be seen in Chart 10, the typical indicators that correlate to the EUR/USD currency pair - the relative balance sheets of the Fed and ECB, and the 2-year interest rate differential between European and U.S. interest rates - are still pointing to an extended period of Euro weakness. It would take a combination of rate hikes in Europe and rate cuts in the U.S. to turn EUR/USD around on a sustainable basis. While the tapering announcement will likely push the Euro immediately higher, such a move will not last without a more fundamental change in relative interest rates. Chart 9...And For European ##br##Spread Product, Too Chart 10Tapering Will Not Sustainably ##br##Boost The Euro Bottom Line: The ECB opened to door slightly to a less-accommodative policy stance last week, although the talk of a rate hike is premature. A 2018 taper is the more probable scenario, likely to be introduced at the September 2017 policy meeting. This will raise longer-dated European bond yields and widen spreads for both Peripheral European government debt and Euro Area corporate bonds. Reduce Euro Area Investment Grade to below-benchmark. The Value Is Back In U.S. High-Yield One of our key themes for 2017 is that the uptrend in the U.S. High-Yield default rate is due for a pause.3 With the first quarter of the year nearly complete, all the indicators that make up our U.S. Default Rate Model are showing noticeable improvement (Chart 11). Interest coverage remains elevated A strong U.S. Manufacturing PMI points to a rebound in after-tax cash flow Lending standards have rolled over and are now just barely in "net tightening" territory An improving sales/inventory ratio portends a return to positive industrial production growth Job cut announcements have fallen back to 2011 levels on a trailing 12-month basis Chart 11Default Rate Indicators Are Showing Improvement Meantime, even though the default outlook continues to improve, junk spreads have actually widened during the past couple of weeks. The average option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index has widened from a low of 344bps up to 378bps (Chart 12). Some of that spread increase is likely attributable to declining oil prices, as energy sector credits have indeed underperformed the overall index. However, the underperformance of the energy sector did start before the sharp drop in oil prices (Chart 12, bottom panel). In any event, our commodity strategists are not expecting the current decline in oil prices to persist and their estimates show that the oil market has recently shifted from an environment of excess supply to one of excess demand. U.S. crude oil inventories are poised to decline later this month and the OPEC / non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Russia at the end of last year should be met with high compliance.4 If this view is correct, then the energy sector will not drag overall junk spreads wider in the months ahead. The combination of wider junk spreads and an improving default outlook has led to an increase in our preferred gauge of value for high-yield bonds - the default-adjusted spread (Chart 13). The default-adjusted spread is calculated by subtracting an ex-ante estimate of default losses from the average spread on the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index. Chart 12Energy Contributed To Junk Sell-Off Chart 13Some Value Returns To High-Yield To arrive at an estimate of default losses we use the Moody's baseline forecast for the default rate and our own forecast for the recovery rate based on the historical relationship between recoveries and defaults. With the release of February's default report, the Moody's baseline default rate forecast fell to 3.14% for the next 12 months. Based on this forecast, we estimate that the recovery rate will be 44%. Combining the default and recovery rate forecasts gives an estimate for default losses of 3.14% x (1- 0.44) = 176bps for the next 12 months. Since the average option-adjusted spread of the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. High-Yield index is currently 378bps, we calculate the default-adjusted spread to be: 378 bps - 176bps = 202bps. A default-adjusted spread of 202bps is 60bps higher than the reading of 142bps that prevailed just last week. This 60bps spread advantage makes a considerable difference in terms of projected excess returns. Chart 14 shows the relationship between 12-month excess returns and the starting default-adjusted spread. We observe a reasonably strong correlation and note that, using a linear regression, an extra 60bps of spread translates to an extra +251bps of excess return on average over a 12-month period. Chart 1412-Month Excess High-Yield Returns Vs. Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread (2002 - Present) Table 1 provides more detail in terms of what excess returns have historically been associated with different levels of the default-adjusted spread. We see that when the default-adjusted is between 100 bps and 150bps, high-yield bonds earn positive excess returns 64% of the time over the following 12 months. When the default-adjusted spread is between 200bps and 250bps, high-yield earns a positive 12-month excess return 71% of the time. Table 112-Month High-Yield Excess Returns & Ex-Ante Default-Adjusted Spread Given our upbeat assessment of the trend in defaults and a wider junk spread than we have seen in a while, we think it is a good time to upgrade high-yield from neutral to overweight. The key near-term risk to this view is that the Fed will be more hawkish than we anticipate at this week's meeting. If the Fed's median forecast is revised up to four hikes in 2017, then it is possible that the recent bout of junk spread widening will have a bit further to run. However, given still-low inflation readings, the Fed would eventually be forced to back away from its hawkish rhetoric and support renewed spread tightening. In our view, the main risk to upgrading junk this week is that we are a bit too early. Bottom Line: U.S. junk bond spreads have widened even though default rate indicators continue to show improvement. With valuations now looking more attractive, we upgrade U.S. High-Yield from neutral to overweight. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com Ryan Swift, Vice President U.S. Bond Strategy rswift@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Will The Hawks Walk The Talk?", dated March 7, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com 2 Last week, we presented the Euro Area months-to-hike measure. We discovered that our measure was not calibrated for the current era of negative interest rates in Europe, and the months-to-hike indicated was actually signaling the "months until interest rates turned positive." We have since corrected our methodology to show the months until one full 25bp rate hike was priced in from the current negative levels, which is what is shown in Chart 7 of this report. This does not change the direction of the months-to-hike indicator, but it does bring forward to date of the first rate hike versus what was presented last week. 3 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, "Seven Fixed Income Themes For 2017", dated December 20, 2016, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Fed's Pre-Emptive Hike Will Hit Gold, Not Oil", dated March 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns