Geopolitics
Feature It has been a Geopolitical Strategy tradition, since our launch in 2012, to include our best and worst forecasts of the year in our end-of-year Strategic Outlook monthly reports.1 Since we have switched over to a weekly publication schedule, we are making this section of our Outlook an individual report.2 It will also be the final publication of the year, provided that there is no global conflagration worthy of a missive between now and January 10, when we return to our regular publication schedule. The Worst Calls Of 2017 A forecasting mistake is wasted if one learns nothing from the error. Alternatively, it is an opportunity to arm oneself with wisdom for the next fight. This is why we take our mistakes seriously and why we begin this report card with the zingers. Overall, we are satisfied with our performance in 2017, as the successes below will testify. However, we made one serious error and two ancillary ones. Short Emerging Markets Continuing to recommend an overweight DM / underweight EM stance was the major failure this year (Chart 1). More specifically, we penned several bearish reports on the politics of Brazil, South Africa, and Turkey throughout the year to support our view.3 What did we learn from our mistake? The main driving forces behind EM risk assets in 2017 have been U.S. TIPS yields and the greenback (Chart 2). Weak inflation data and policy disappointments as the pro-growth, populist economic policy of the Trump Administration stalled mid-year supported the EM carry trade throughout the year. The post-election dollar rally dissipated, while Chinese fiscal and credit stimulus carried over into 2017 and buoyed demand for EM exports. Chart 1The Worst Call Of 2017: Long DM / Short EM
The Worst Call Of 2017: Long DM / Short EM
The Worst Call Of 2017: Long DM / Short EM
Chart 2How Long Can The EM Carry Trade Survive?
How Long Can The EM Carry Trade Survive?
How Long Can The EM Carry Trade Survive?
Our bearish call was based on EM macroeconomic and political fundamentals. On one hand, our fundamental analysis was genuinely wrong. Emerging markets were buoyed by Chinese stimulus and a broad-based DM recovery. On the other hand, our fundamental analysis was irrelevant, as the global "search-for-yield" overwhelmed all other factors. Chart 3The Dollar Ought ##br##To Rebound
The Dollar Ought To Rebound
The Dollar Ought To Rebound
Chart 4Chinese Monetary Conditions Point##br## To Slowing Industrial Activity
Chinese Monetary Conditions Point To Slowing Industrial Activity
Chinese Monetary Conditions Point To Slowing Industrial Activity
Going forward, it is difficult to see this combination of factors emerge anew. First, the U.S. economy is set to outperform the rest of the world in 2018, particularly with the stimulative tax cut finally on the books, which should be dollar bullish (Chart 3). Second, downside risks to the Chinese economy are multiplying (Chart 4) as policymakers crack down on the shadow financial sector and real estate (Chart 5). BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy has shown that EM currencies are already flagging risks to global growth. Their "carry canary indicator" - EM currencies vs. the JPY - is forecasting a sharp deceleration in global growth within the next two quarters (Chart 6). Chart 5Chinese Growth ##br##Slowing Down?
Chinese Growth Slowing Down?
Chinese Growth Slowing Down?
Chart 6After Carry Trades Lose Momentum,##br## Global IP Weakens
After Carry Trades Lose Momentum, Global IP Weakens
After Carry Trades Lose Momentum, Global IP Weakens
That said, we have learned our lesson. We are closing all of our short EM positions and awaiting January credit numbers from China. If our view on Chinese financial sector reforms is correct, these figures should disappoint. If they do not, the EM party can continue. "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin" In our defense, the title of our first Weekly Report of the year belied the nuanced analysis within.4 We argued that the Trump administration would begin its relationship with China with a "symbolic punitive measure," but that it would then "seek high-level negotiations toward a framework for the administration's relations with China over the next four years." This was largely the script followed by the White House. We also warned clients that it would be the "lead up to the 2018 or 2020 elections" that truly revealed President Trump's protectionist side. Nonetheless, we were overly bearish about trade protectionism throughout 2017. First, President Trump did not name China a currency manipulator. Second, the border adjustment tax (BAT), which we thought had a 55% chance of being included in tax reform, really was dead-on-arrival. Third, the "Mar-A-Lago Summit" consensus lasted through the summer, buoying companies with relative exposure to China relative to the S&P 500 (Chart 7).5 Chart 7Second Worst Call Of 2017:##br## Alarmism On Protectionism
Second Worst Call Of 2017: Alarmism On Protectionism
Second Worst Call Of 2017: Alarmism On Protectionism
Why did we get the Trump White House wrong on protectionism? There are three possibilities: Constraints error: We strayed too far from our constraints-based model by focusing too much on preferences of the Trump Administration. While we are correct that the White House lacks constraints when it comes to trade, tensions with North Korea this year - which we forecast correctly - were a constraint on an overly punitive trade policy against China. Preferences error: We got the Trump administration preferences wrong. Trade protectionism is the wool that Candidate Trump pulled over his voters' eyes. He is in fact an establishment Republican - a pluto-populist - with no intention of actually enacting protectionist policies. Timing error: We were too early. Year 2018 will see fireworks. Unfortunately for our clients, we have no idea which error we committed. But Trump's national security speech on Dec. 18 maintained the protectionist threat, and there are several key deadlines coming up that should reveal which way the winds are blowing: New Year: Trump will have to decide on January 12 and February 3 whether to impose tariffs on solar panels and washing machines, respectively, under Section 201 of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974. This ruling will have implications for other trade items. End of Q1: NAFTA negotiations have been extended through the end of Q1 2018. As we recently posited, the abrogation of NAFTA by the White House is a 50-50 probability.6 The question is whether the Trump administration follows this up with separate bilateral talks with Canada and Mexico, or whether it moves beyond NAFTA to clash directly with the WTO instead.7 The U.K. Election (Although We Got Brexit Right!) Our forecasting record of U.K. elections is abysmal. We predicted that Theresa May would preserve her majority in the House of Commons, although in our defense we also noted that the risks were clearly skewed to the downside given the movement of the U.K. median voter to the left.8 We are now 0 for 2, having also incorrectly called the 2015 general election (we expected the Tories to fail to reach the majority in that election).9 On the other hand, we correctly sounded the alarm on Brexit, noting that the probability was much closer to 50% than what the market was pricing at the time.10 What gives? The mix of U.K.'s first-past-the-post system and the country's unique party distribution makes forecasting elections difficult. Because the Tories are essentially the only right-of-center party in England, they tend to outperform their polls and win constituencies with a low-plurality of votes. As such, in 2017, we ignored the strong Labour momentum in the polls, expecting that it would stall. It did not (Chart 8). That said, our job is not to call elections, but to generate alpha by focusing on the difference between what the market is pricing in and what we believe will happen. If elections are a catalyst for market performance - as was the case with the French one this year - we track them closely in a series of publications and adjust our probabilities as new data comes in. For U.K. assets this year, by contrast, getting the Brexit process right was far more relevant than the general election. Our high conviction view that the EU would not be punitive, that the U.K. would accept all conditions, and that the May administration would essentially stick to the "hard Brexit" strategy it defined in January ended up being correct.11 This allowed us to call the GBP bottom versus the USD in January (Chart 9). Chart 8Third Worst Call Of 2018: The U.K. Election
Third Worst Call Of 2018: The U.K. Election
Third Worst Call Of 2018: The U.K. Election
Chart 9But We Got Brexit - And Cable! - Right
But We Got Brexit - And Cable! - Right
But We Got Brexit - And Cable! - Right
What did we learn from our final error? Stop trying to forecast U.K. elections! The Best Calls Of 2017 The best overall call in 2017 was to tell clients to buy the S&P 500 in April and never look back. Our "Buy In May And Enjoy Your Day!" missive on April 26 was preceded by our analysis of global geopolitical risks and opportunities.12 In these, we concluded that "Political Risks Are Overstated In 2017" and "Understated In 2018."13 As such, the combination of strong risk asset performance and low volatility did not surprise us. It was our forecast (Chart 10). U.S. Politics: Tax Cuts & Impeachment Not only did we forecast that President Trump would manage to successfully pass tax reform in 2017, but we also correctly called the GOP's fiscal profligacy.14 We get little recognition for the latter in conversations with clients and colleagues, but it was a highly contentious call, especially after seven years of austere rhetoric from the fiscal conservatives supposedly running the Republican Party. We were also correct that impeachment fears and the ongoing Mueller Investigation would have little impact on U.S. assets.15 Chart 11 shows that the U.S. dollar and S&P 500 barely moved with each Trump-related scandal (Table 1). Chart 10The Best Call Of 2017: Getting The Market Right
The Best Call Of 2017: Getting The Market Right
The Best Call Of 2017: Getting The Market Right
Chart 11No Real Impact From Trump Imbroglio
BCA Geopolitical Strategy 2017 Report Card
BCA Geopolitical Strategy 2017 Report Card
By correctly identifying the ongoing "Trump Put" in the market, we were able to remain bullish on U.S. equities throughout the year and avoid calling any pullbacks. Table 1An Eventful Year 1 Of The Trump Presidency
BCA Geopolitical Strategy 2017 Report Card
BCA Geopolitical Strategy 2017 Report Card
Europe (All Of It) Our performance forecasting European politics and markets has been stellar this year. Instead of reviewing each call, the list below simply summarizes each report: "After Brexit, N-Exit?" - Although technically a call made in 2016, our view that Brexit would cause a surge in support for the EU was a view for 2017.16 Several anti-establishment populists failed to perform in line with their 2015-2016 polling, particularly Geert Wilders in the Netherlands. "Will Marine Le Pen Win?" - We definitely answered this question in the negative, going back to November 2016.17 This allowed us to recommend clients go long the euro vs. the U.S. dollar (Chart 12). Moreover, we argued that regardless of who won the election, the next French government would embark on structural reforms.18 As a play on our bullish view of France, we recommended that clients overweight French industrials vs. German ones (Chart 13). "Europe's Divine Comedy: Italy In Purgatorio" - We correctly assessed that Italian Euroskpetics would migrate towards the center on the question of the euro. However, we missed recommending the epic rally in Italian equities and bonds that should have naturally flowed from our political view.19 "Fade Catalan Risks" - Based on our 2014 net assessment, we concluded that the Catalan independence drive would be largely irrelevant for the markets.20 This proved to be correct this year. "Can Turkey Restart The Immigration Crisis?" - Earlier in the year, clients became nervous about a potential diplomatic breakdown between the EU and Turkey leading to a renewal of the immigration crisis.21 We reiterated our long-held view that the immigration crisis did not end because of Turkish intervention, but because of tighter European enforcement. Throughout the year, we were proven right, with Europeans becoming more and more focused on interdiction. Chart 12Second Best Call Of 2017: The Euro...
Second Best Call Of 2017: The Euro...
Second Best Call Of 2017: The Euro...
Chart 13...And France In Particular
...And France In Particular
...And France In Particular
China: Policy-Induced Financial Tightening Throughout 2016-17, in the lead-up to China's nineteenth National Party Congress, we argued that the stability imperative would ensure an accommodative-but-not-too-accommodative policy stance.22 In particular, we highlighted the ongoing impetus for anti-pollution controls.23 This forecast broadly proved to be correct, as the government maintained stimulus yet simultaneously surprised the markets with financial and environmental regulatory crackdowns throughout the year. Once these regulatory campaigns took off, we argued that they would remain tentative, since the truly tough policies would have to wait until after the party congress. At that point, Xi Jinping could re-launch his structural reform agenda, primarily by intensifying financial sector tightening.24 Over the course of the year, this political analysis began to be revealed in the data, with broad money (M3) figures suggesting that money growth decelerated sharply in 2017 (Chart 14). In addition, we correctly called several moves by President Xi Jinping at the party congress.25 Chart 14Third Best Call Of 2017:##br## Chinese Reforms? (We Will See In 2018!)
Third Best Call Of 2017: Chinese Reforms? (We Will See In 2018!)
Third Best Call Of 2017: Chinese Reforms? (We Will See In 2018!)
Our view that Chinese policymakers will restart reforms after the party congress is now becoming more widely accepted, given Xi's party congress speech Oct. 18 and the news from the December Politburo meeting.26 Where we differ from the market is in arguing that Beijing's bite will be worse than its bark. We are concerned that there is considerable risk to the downside and that stimulus will come much later than investors think this time around. Our China view was largely correct in 2017, but the real market significance will be felt in 2018. There are still several questions outstanding, including whether the crackdown on the financial sector will be as growth-constraining as we think. As such, this is a key view that will carry over into 2018. Thankfully, we should know whether we are right or wrong by the March National People's Congress session and the data releases shortly thereafter. North Korea - Both A Tail Risk And An Overstated Risk We correctly identified North Korea as a key 2017 geopolitical risk in our Strategic Outlook and began signaling that it was no longer a "red herring" as early as April 2016.27 In April 2017, we told clients to prepare for safe haven flows due to the likelihood that tensions would increase as the U.S. established a "credible threat" of war, a playbook that the Obama administration most recently used against Iran.28 While we flagged North Korea as a risk that would move the markets, we also signaled precisely when the risk became overstated. In September, we told clients that U.S. Treasury yields would rise from their lows that month as investors realized that the North Korean regime was constrained by its paltry military capability.29 At the same time, we gave President Trump an A+ for his performance establishing a credible threat, a bet that worked not only on Pyongyang, but also on Beijing. Since this summer, China has begun to ratchet up economic pressure against North Korea (Chart 15). Chart 15Fourth Best Call Of 2017: North Korea
Fourth Best Call Of 2017: North Korea
Fourth Best Call Of 2017: North Korea
Middle East And Oil Prices BCA Research scored a big win this year with our energy call. It would be unfair for us to take credit for that view. Our Commodity & Energy Strategy as well as our Energy Sector Strategy deserve all the credit.30 Nonetheless, we helped our commodity teams make the right calls by: Correctly forecasting that Saudi-Iranian and Russo-Turkish tensions would de-escalate, allowing OPEC and Russia to maintain the production-cut agreement;31 Emphasizing risks to Iraqi production as tensions shifted from the Islamic State to the Kurdish Regional Government; Highlighting the likely continued decline, but not sharp cut-off, of Venezuelan production, due to the regime's ability to cling to power even as the conditions of production worsened.32 In addition, we were correct to fade various concerns regarding renewed tensions in Qatar, Yemen, and Lebanon throughout the year. Despite the media narrative that the Middle East has become a cauldron of instability anew, our long-held view that all the players involved are constrained by domestic and material constraints has remained cogent. In particular, our view that Saudi Arabia would engage in serious social reforms bore fruit in 2017, with several moves by the ruling regime to evolve the country away from feudal monarchy.33 Going forward, a major risk to our view is the Trump administration policy towards Iran, our top Black Swan risk for 2018. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri, Research Analyst jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com Ekaterina Shtrevensky, Research Assistant ekaterinas@bcaresearch.com 1 Due to the high volume of footnotes in this report, we have decided to include them at the end of the document. For a review of our past Strategic Outlooks, please visit gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 For the rest of our 2018 Outlook, please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Five Black Swans In 2018," dated December 6, 2017, and "Three Questions For 2018," dated December 13, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Turkey: Military Adventurism And Capital Controls," dated December 7, 2016, "South Africa: Back To Reality," dated April 5, 2017, "Brazil: Politics Giveth And Politics Taketh Away," dated May 24, 2017, "South Africa: Crisis Of Expectations," dated June 28, 2017, "Update On Emerging Markets: Malaysia, Mexico, And The United States Of America," dated August 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Trump, Day One: Let The Trade War Begin," dated January 18, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "G19," dated July 12, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "NAFTA - Populism Vs. Pluto-Populism," dated November 10, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 7 The outcome at the WTO Buenos Aires summit last week offered a possible way out of confrontation between the Trump administration and the WTO. It featured Europe and Japan taking a tougher line on trade violations, namely China, to respond to the Trump administration grievances that, unaddressed, could escalate into a full-fledged Trump-WTO clash. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "How Long Can The 'Trump Put' Last?" dated June 14, 2017 and "U.K. Election: The Median Voter Has Spoken," dated June 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "U.K. Election Preview," dated February 26, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy Special Report, "With Or Without You: The U.K. And The EU," dated March 17, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "The 'What Can You Do For Me?' World?" dated January 25, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Buy In May And Enjoy Your Day!" dated April 26, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 13 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Political Risks Are Overstated In 2017," dated April 5, 2017 and "Political Risks Are Understated In 2017," dated April 12, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 14 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "U.S. Election: Outcomes And Investment Implications," dated November 9, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 16 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "After BREXIT, N-EXIT?" dated July 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 17 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Will Marine Le Pen Win?" dated November 16, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The French Revolution," dated February 3, 2017 and "Climbing The Wall Of Worry In Europe," dated February 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 19 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Europe's Divine Comedy Part II: Italy In Purgatorio," dated June 21, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy Special Report, "Secession In Europe: Scotland And Catalonia," dated May 14, 2014 and "Why So Serious?" dated October 11, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 21 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Five Questions On Europe," dated March 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 22 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Throwing The Baby (Globalization) Out With The Bath Water (Deflation)," dated July 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 23 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "De-Globalization," dated November 9, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 24 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy We," dated June 28, 2017, "Update On Emerging Markets: Malaysia, Mexico, And The United States Of America," dated August 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 25 We argued in our 2017 Strategic Outlook that while Xi's faction would gain a majority on the Politburo Standing Committee, he would maintain a reasonable balance and refrain from excluding opposing factions from power. We expected that factional struggle would flare back up into the open (as with the ouster of Sun Zhengcai), and that Xi would retire anti-corruption chief Wang Qishan, but not that Xi would avoid promoting a successor for 2022 to the Politburo Standing Committee. 26 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 27 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy "North Korea: A Red Herring No More?" in Monthly Report, "Partem Mirabilis," dated April 13, 2016 and "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 28 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," dated April 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 29 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Can Equities And Bonds Continue To Rally?" dated September 20, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 30 If you are an investor with even a passing interest in commodities and oil, you must review the work of our colleagues Robert Ryan and Matt Conlan. 31 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "Forget About The Middle East?" dated January 13, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 32 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Venezuela: Oil Market Rebalance Is Too Little, Too Late," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 33 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The Middle East: Separating The Signal From The Noise," dated November 15, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Investors should expect little policy initiative out of the U.S. Congress after tax cuts; Polarization is likely to rise substantively in 2018, gridlocking Congress; Chinese policymakers are experimenting with growth-constraining reforms; Global growth has peaked; underweight emerging markets in 2018; Go long energy stocks relative to metal and mining equities. Feature Last week we published Part I of our 2018 Key Views.1 In it, we presented our five "Black Swans" for 2018: Lame Duck Trump: President Trump realizes his time in the White House is going to be short and seeks relevance abroad. He finds it in jingoism towards Iran - throwing the Middle East into chaos - and protectionism against China. A Coup In North Korea: Chinese economic pressure overshoots its mark and throws Pyongyang into a crisis. Kim Jong-un is replaced, but markets struggle to ascertain whether the successor is a moderate or a hawk. Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn: Markets cheer the higher probability of "Bremain" and then remember that Corbyn is a genuine socialist. Italian Election Troubles: Markets are fully pricing in the sanguine scenario of "much ado about nothing," which is our view as well. But is there really anything to cheer in Italy? If not, then why is the Italian market the best performing in all of DM? Bloodbath In Latin America: Emerging markets stall next year as Chinese policymakers tighten financial regulations. As the tide pulls back, Mexico and Brazil are caught swimming naked. These are not our core views. As black swans, they are low-probability events that may disturb markets in 2018. Our core view remains that geopolitical risks were overstated in 2017 and will be understated in 2018 (Charts 1 & 2). Most importantly, U.S. politics will be a tailwind to global growth while Chinese politics will be a headwind to global growth. While the overall effect may be neutral, the combination will be bullish for the U.S. dollar and bearish for emerging markets.2 Chart 12018 Will See Risks Dominate...
2018 Will See Risks Dominate...
2018 Will See Risks Dominate...
Chart 2...As Global Growth Concerns Reemerge
...As Global Growth Concerns Reemerge
...As Global Growth Concerns Reemerge
This week, we turn to the three questions that we believe will define the year for investors: Is A Civil War Coming To America? Is The Ghost Of Deng Xiaoping Haunting China? Will Geopolitical Risk Shift To The Middle East? Is A Civil War Coming To America? On a recent visit to Boston and New York we were caught off guard by how alarmed several large institutional clients were about the risk of severe social unrest in the U.S. We share this concern about the level of polarization in the U.S. and expect social instability to rise over the coming years (Chart 3).3 When roughly 40% of both Democrats and Republicans believe that their political competitors pose a "threat to the nation's well-being," we have entered a new paradigm (Chart 4). Chart 3Inequality Fuels Political Polarization
Inequality Fuels Political Polarization
Inequality Fuels Political Polarization
Chart 4"A Threat To The Nation's Well-Being?" Really?!
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Where we differ from some of our clients is in assessing the likely trigger for the unrest and its investment implications over the next 12 months. If the Democrats take the House of Representatives in the November 6 midterm election, as is our low-conviction view at this early point, then we would expect them eventually to impeach President Trump in 2019.4 Even then, it is not clear that the Senate would have the necessary 67 votes to convict Trump of the articles of impeachment (whatever they prove to be) and hence remove him from power. Republicans are likely to increase their majority in the Senate, even if they lose the House, because more Democratic senators are up for re-election in 2018. Therefore well over a dozen Republican senators would have to vote to remove a Republican president from power. For that to happen, Trump's popularity with Republican voters would have to go into a free fall, diving well below 60% (Chart 5). Meanwhile, we do not buy the argument that hordes of gun-wielding "deplorables" would descend upon the liberal coasts in case of impeachment. There may well be significant acts of domestic terrorism, particularly in the wake of any removal of Trump from office, but they would likely be isolated and unable to galvanize broader support. Our clients should remember, however, that ultra-right-wing militant groups are not the only perpetrators of domestic terrorism.5 Any acts of violence or social unrest are likely to draw press coverage and analytical hyperbole. But our left-leaning clients in the Northeast are likely overstating the sincerity of support for President Trump. President Trump won 44.9% of the Republican primary votes, but he averaged only 35% of the vote in the early days when the races were the most competitive. Given that only 25% of Americans identify as Republicans (Chart 6), it is fair to say that only about a third of that figure - 8%-10% of all U.S. voters - are Trump loyalists. Many conservative voters simply wanted change and were willing to give an outsider a chance (much as their liberal counterparts did in 2008!). Of that small percentage of genuine Trump fans, it is highly unlikely that a large share would seriously contemplate taking arms against the state in order to keep their leader in power against the constitutional impeachment process. Especially given that President Trump would be replaced by a genuine conservative, Vice President Mike Pence.6 Chart 5We Are A Long Way Away##BR##From Trump's Demise
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Chart 6Party Identifications##BR##Are Shrinking
Party Identifications Are Shrinking
Party Identifications Are Shrinking
As such, we believe that it is premature to speak of a total breakdown of social order in America. It is notable that such a conversation is taking place, but other forms of polarization and social unrest are far more likely to be relevant at the moment. In terms of policy, we would expect gridlock in Congress if Democrats take the House and begin focusing on impeachment. In fact, gridlock may already be upon us, as we see little agreement between the Trump administration, its loyalists in Congress, and establishment Republican Senators like Dan Sullivan (R, Alaska), Cory Gardner (R, Colorado), Joni Ernst (R, Iowa), Susan Collins (R, Maine), Ben Sasse (R, Nebraska), and Thom Tillis (R, North Carolina). These six Senators are all facing reelection in 2020 and are likely to evolve into Democrats-in-all-but-name. If President Trump's overall popularity continues to decline, we would not be surprised if one or two (starting with Collins) even take the dramatic step of leaving the Republican Party for the 2020 election. Essentially, establishment Republicans will become effective Democrats ahead of the midterms. Post-midterm election, with Democrats potentially taking over the House, the legislative process will grind to a complete halt. Government shutdowns, debt ceiling fights, failure of proactive policymaking to deal with crises and natural disasters, will all rise in probability. As President Trump faces greater constraints in Congress, we can see him becoming increasingly reliant on his executive authority to create policy. He would not be unique in this way, as President Obama did the same. While Trump's executive policy will be pro-business, unlike Obama's, uncertainty will rise regardless. The business community will not be able to take White House policies seriously amidst impeachment and a potential Democratic wave-election in 2020. Whatever executive orders Trump signs into power over the next three years, chances are that they will be immediately reversed in 2020. What about the markets? The Mueller investigation and heightened level of polarization could create drawdowns in equity markets throughout the year. However, impeachment proceedings are not likely to begin in 2018 and have never carried more weight with investors than market fundamentals (Chart 7).7 True, the Watergate scandal under President Richard Nixon triggered a spike in volatility and a fall in equities. However, the scandal alone did not cause the correction, rather it was a combination of factors, including the second devaluation of the dollar, rapid increases in price inflation, massive insurance fraud, recession, and a global oil shock.8 Chart 7AFundamentals, Not Impeachment,##BR##Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
Chart 7BFundamentals, Not Impeachment,##BR##Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
What about the impact on the U.S. dollar? Does Trump-related political instability threaten the dollar's status as the chief global reserve currency and a major financial safe haven? The data suggest not. We put together a list of events in 2017 that could be categorized as "unorthodox, Trump-related, political risk" (Table 1). We specifically left out geopolitical events, such as the North Korean nuclear crisis, so as not to dilute our dataset's focus on domestic intrigue. As Chart 8 illustrates, the U.S. dollar rose slightly, on average, a week after each event relative to its average weekly return prior to the crisis. While this may not be a resounding vote of confidence for the greenback (gold performed better), there is no evidence that investors are betting on a paradigm shift away from the dollar as the global reserve currency. Table 1An Eventful Year 1 Of Trump Presidency
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Chart 8Trump Is Not A U.S. Dollar Paradigm Shift
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
If investors should not worry about investment-relevant social strife in the U.S. in 2018, then when should they worry? Well, if Trump is actually removed from office, a first in U.S. history, at a time of extreme polarization, and in a country with easy access to arms and at least a strain of domestic terrorism, then 2019-20 will at least be a time for concern. Even without Trump's removal, we worry about unrest beyond 2018. We expect the ideological pendulum to shift to the left by the 2020 election. If our sister service - BCA's Global Investment Strategy - is correct, then a recession is likely to begin in late 2019.9 A combination of low popularity, market turbulence, and economic recession would doom Trump's chances of returning to the White House. But they would also be toxic for the candidacy of a moderate Democrat and would possibly propel a left-wing candidate to the presidency. Four years under a left-wing, socially progressive firebrand may be too much for many far-right voters to tolerate. Given America's demographic trends (Chart 9), these voters will realize that the writing is on the wall, that the window of opportunity to lock in their preferred policies has been firmly shut. The international context teaches us that disenchanted groups contemplate "exit" when the strategy of "voice" no longer works. How this will look in the U.S. is unclear at this point. Bottom Line: Investors should continue to fade impeachment-related, and Mueller investigation-related, pullbacks in the markets or the U.S. dollar in 2018. Our fears of U.S. social instability are mostly for the medium and long term. Fundamentals drive the markets and U.S. fundamentals remain solid for now. As our colleague Peter Berezin has pointed out, there is no imminent risk of a U.S. recession (Chart 10) and the cyclical picture remains bright (Chart 11).10 Chart 9A Changing America
A Changing America
A Changing America
Chart 10No Imminent Risk Of A U.S. Recession
No Imminent Risk Of A U.S. Recession
No Imminent Risk Of A U.S. Recession
Chart 11U.S. Cyclical Picture Is Bright
U.S. Cyclical Picture Is Bright
U.S. Cyclical Picture Is Bright
Where BCA's Geopolitical Strategy diverges from the BCA House View, however, is in terms of the global growth picture. While we recognize that there are no imminent risks of a global recession, we do believe that the policy trajectory in China is being obfuscated by positive global economic projections. To this risk we now turn. Is The Ghost Of Deng Xiaoping Haunting China? Our view that Chinese President Xi Jinping would reboot his reform agenda after the nineteenth National Party Congress this October is beginning to bear fruit. Investors are starting to realize that the policy tightening of 2017 was not a one-off event but a harbinger of what to expect in 2018. China's economic activity is slowing down and the policy outlook is getting less accommodative (Chart 12).11 To be clear, we never bought into the 2013 Third Plenum "reform" hype, which sought to resurrect the ghost of Deng Xiaoping and his decision to open China's economy at the Third Plenum in 1978.12 Nor will we buy into any similar hype around the upcoming Third Plenum in 2018. Instead, we focus on policymaker constraints. And it seems to us that the constraints to reform in China have fallen since 2013. The severity of China's financial and economic imbalances, the positive external economic backdrop, the desire to avoid confrontation with Trump, and the Xi administration's advantageous moment in the Chinese domestic political cycle, all suggest to us that Xi will be driven to accelerate his agenda in 2018. Broadly, this agenda consists of revitalizing the Communist Party regime at home and elevating China's national power and prestige abroad. More specifically it entails: Re-centralizing power after a perceived lack of leadership from roughly 2004-12; Improving governance, to rebuild the legitimacy and popular support of the single-party state, namely by fighting corruption; Restructuring the economy to phase out the existing growth model, which relies excessively on resource-intensive investment while suppressing private consumption (Chart 13). Chart 12China's Economic Prospects Are Dimming
China's Economic Prospects Are Dimming
China's Economic Prospects Are Dimming
Chart 13Excess Investment Is A Real Problem
Excess Investment Is A Real Problem
Excess Investment Is A Real Problem
The October party congress showed that this framework remains intact.13 First, Xi was elevated to Mao Zedong's status in the party constitution, which makes it much riskier for vested interests to flout his policies. Second, he declared the creation of a "National Supervision Commission," which will expand the anti-corruption campaign from the Communist Party to the administrative bureaucracy at all levels. Third, he recommitted to his economic agenda of improving the quality of economic growth at the expense of its pace and capital intensity. What does this mean for the economy in 2018? We expect government policy to become a headwind, after having been a tailwind in 2016-17. As Xi and the top-decision-making Politburo officially stated on December 9, the coming year will be a "crucial year" for advancing the most difficult aspects of the agenda: Financial risk: Financial regulation will continue to tighten, not only on banks and shadow lenders but also on the property sector, which Chinese officials claim will see a new "long-term regulatory mechanism" begin to be enacted (perhaps a nationwide property tax) (Chart 14). Local governments will face greater central discipline over bad investments, excessive debt, and corruption. The new leadership of the People's Bank of China, and of the just-created "Financial Stability and Development Commission," will attempt to establish their credibility in the face of banks that will be clamoring for less readily available liquidity.14 Green industrial restructuring: State-owned enterprises (SOEs) will continue to face stricter environmental regulations and cuts to overcapacity. This is in addition to tighter financial conditions, SOE restructuring initiatives, and an anti-corruption campaign that puts top managers under the microscope. SOEs that have not been identified as national champions, or otherwise as leading firms, will get squeezed.15 What are the market implications? First and foremost, the status quo in China is shifting, which is at least marginally negative for China's GDP growth, fixed investment, capital spending, import volumes, and resource-intensity. Real GDP should fall to around 6%, if not below, rather than today's 7%, while the Li Keqiang index should fall beneath the 2013-14 average rate of 7.3%. Second, a smooth and seamless conclusion of the 2016-17 upcycle cannot be assumed. The government's heightened effectiveness in economic policy will stem in part from an increase in political risk: the expansion of the anti-corruption campaign and Xi Jinping's personal power.16 The linking of anti-corruption probes with general policy enforcement means that any lack of compliance could result in top officials being ostracized, imprisoned, or even executed. Xi's measures will have sharper teeth than the market currently expects. Local economic actors (small banks, shadow lenders, local governments, provincial SOEs) will behave more cautiously. This will create negative growth surprises not currently being predicted by leading economic indicators (Chart 15). Chart 14Property Tightening##BR##Continues
Property Tightening Continues
Property Tightening Continues
Chart 15Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests##BR##A Benign Slowdown In Growth
Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests A Benign Slowdown In Growth
Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests A Benign Slowdown In Growth
Chinese economic policy uncertainty, credit default swaps, and equity volatility should trend upward, as investors become accustomed to sectors disrupted by government scrutiny and a government with a higher tolerance for economic pain (Chart 16). How should investors play this scenario? Despite the volatility, we still expect Chinese equities, particularly H-shares, to outperform the EM benchmark, assuming the economy does not spiral out of control and cause a global rout. Reforms will improve China's long-term potential even as they weigh on EM exports, currencies, corporate profits and share prices. On a sectoral basis, BCA's China Investment Strategy has shown that China's health care, tech, and consumer staples sectors (and arguably energy) all outperformed China's other sectors in the wake of the party congress, as one would expect of a reinvigorated reform agenda (Chart 17). These sectors should continue to outperform. Going long the MSCI Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Leaders index, relative to the broad market, is one way to bet on more sustainable growth.17 Chart 16Stability Continues##BR##After Party Congress?
Stability Continues After Party Congress?
Stability Continues After Party Congress?
Chart 17China's Reforms Will Create##BR##Some Winners And Losers
China's Reforms Will Create Some Winners And Losers
China's Reforms Will Create Some Winners And Losers
More broadly, investors should prefer DM over EM equities, since emerging markets (especially Latin America) will suffer from a slower-growing and less commodity-hungry China (Chart 18). Within the commodities complex, investors should expect crosswinds, with energy diverging upward from base metals that are weighed down by China.18 Chart 18Who Is Exposed To China?
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
What are the risks to this view? How and when will we find out if we are wrong? Chart 19All Signs Pointing To Headwinds Ahead
All Signs Pointing To Headwinds Ahead
All Signs Pointing To Headwinds Ahead
First, the best leading indicators of China's economy are indicators of money and credit, as BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy and China Investment Strategy have shown.19 The credit and broad money (M3) impulses have finally begun to tick back up after a deep dip, suggesting that in six-to-nine months the economy, which has only just begun to slow, will receive some necessary relief (Chart 19). The question is how much relief? Strong spikes in these impulses, or in the monetary conditions index or housing prices, would indicate that stimulus is still taking precedence over reform. Second, our checklist for a reform reboot, which we have maintained since April and is so far on track, offers some critical political signposts for H1 2018 (Table 2).20 For instance, if China is serious about deleveraging, then authorities will restrain bank lending at the beginning of the year. A sharp increase in credit growth in Q1 would greatly undermine our thesis (while likely encouraging exuberance globally).21 Also, in March, the National People's Congress (NPC), China's rubber-stamp parliament, will hold its annual meeting. NPC sessions can serve to launch new reform initiatives (as in 1998 and 2008) or new stimulus efforts (as in 2009 and 2016). This year's legislative session is more important than usual because it will formally launch Xi Jinping's second term. The event should provide more detail on at least a few concrete reform initiatives. If the only solid takeaways are short-term growth measures and more infrastructure investment, then the status quo will prevail. Table 2China Reform Checklist
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
By the end of May, an assessment of the concrete NPC initiatives and the post-NPC economic data should indicate whether China's threshold for economic pain has truly gone up. If not, then any reforms that the Xi administration takes will have limited effect. It is important to note that our view does not hinge on China's refraining from stimulus altogether. We do not expect Beijing to self-impose a recession. Rather, we expect stimulus to be of a smaller magnitude than in 2015-16. We also expect the complexion of fiscal spending to continue to become less capital intensive as it is directed toward building a social safety net (Chart 20). Massive old-style stimulus should only return if the economy starts to collapse, or closer to the sensitive 2020-21 economic targets timed to coincide with the anniversary of the Communist Party.22 Chart 20China's Fiscal Spending Is Becoming Less Capital Intensive
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Bottom Line: The Xi administration has identified financial instability, environmental degradation, and poverty as persistent threats to the regime and is moving to address them. The consequences are, on the whole, likely to be negative for growth in the short term but positive in the long term. We expect China to see greater volatility but to benefit from better long-term prospects. Meanwhile China-exposed, commodity-reliant EMs will suffer negative side-effects. Will Geopolitical Risk Shift To The Middle East? The U.S. geopolitical "pivot to Asia" has been a central theme of our service since its launch in 2012.23 The decision to geopolitically deleverage from the Middle East and shift to Asia was undertaken by the Obama administration (Chart 21). Not because President Obama was a dove with no stomach to fight it out in the Middle East, but because the U.S. defense and intelligence establishment sees containing China as America's premier twenty-first century challenge. Chart 21U.S. Has Deleveraged From The Middle East
U.S. Has Deleveraged From The Middle East
U.S. Has Deleveraged From The Middle East
The grand strategy of containing China has underpinned several crucial decisions by the U.S. since 2011. First, the U.S. has become a lot more aggressive about challenging China's military expansion in the South China Sea. Second, the U.S. has begun to reposition military hardware into East Asia. Third, Washington concluded a nuclear deal with Tehran in 2015 - referred to as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPA) - in order to extricate itself from the Middle East and focus on China.24 President Trump, however, while maintaining the pivot, has re-focused his rhetoric back on the Middle East. The decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, while largely accepting a fait accompli, is an unorthodox move that suggests that this administration's threshold for accepting chaos in the Middle East is a lot lower. Our concern is that the Trump administration may set its sights on Iran next. President Trump appears to believe that the U.S. can contain China, coerce North Korea into nuclear negotiations, and reverse Iranian gains in the Middle East at the same time. In our view, he cannot. The U.S. military is stretched, public war weariness remains a political constraint, regional allies are weak, and without ground-troop commitments to the Middle East Trump is unlikely to change the balance of power against Iran. All that the abrogation of the JCPA would do is provoke Iran, which could lash out across the Middle East, particularly in Iraq where Tehran-supported Shia militias remain entrenched. Investors should carefully watch whether Trump approves another six-month waiver for the Iran Freedom and Counter-Proliferation Act (IFCA) of 2012. This act imposes sanctions against all entities - whether U.S., Iranian, or others - doing business with the country (Table 3). In essence, IFCA is the congressional act that imposed sanctions against Iran. The original 2015 nuclear deal did not abrogate IFCA. Instead, Obama simply waived its provisions every six months, as provided under the original act. Table 3U.S. Sanctions Have Global Reach
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy remains overweight oil. As our energy strategists point out, the last two years have been remarkably benign regarding unplanned production outages. Iran, Libya, and Nigeria all returned production to near-full potential, adding over 1.5 million b/d of supply back to the world markets (Chart 22). This supply increase is unlikely to repeat itself in 2018, particularly as geopolitical risks are likely to return in Iraq, Libya, and Nigeria, and already have in Venezuela (Chart 23). Chart 22Unplanned Production Outages Are At The Lowest Level In Years
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Nigeria is on the map once again with the Niger Delta Avengers vowing to renew hostilities with the government. Nigeria's production has been recovering since pipeline saboteurs knocked it down to 1.4 million b/d in the period from May 2016 to June 2017, but rising tensions could threaten output anew. And Venezuela remains in a state of near-collapse.25 Iraq is key, and three risks loom large. First, as we have pointed out since early 2016, the destruction of the Islamic State is exposing fault lines between the Kurds - who have benefited the most from the vacuum created by the Islamic State's defeat - and their Arab neighbors.26 Second, remnants of the Islamic State may turn into saboteurs since their dream of controlling a Caliphate is dead. Third, investors need to watch renewed tensions between the U.S. and Iran. Shia-Sunni tensions could reignite if Tehran decides to retaliate against any re-imposition of economic sanctions by Washington. Not only could Tehran retaliate against Sunnis in Iraq, throwing the country into another civil war, but it could even go back to its favorite tactic from 2011: threatening to close the Straits of Hormuz. Another critical issue to consider is how the rest of the world would respond to the re-imposition of sanctions against Iran. Under IFCA, the Trump administration would be able to sanction any bank, shipping, or energy company that does business with the country, including companies belonging to European and Asian allies. If the administration pursued such policy, however, we would expect a major break between the U.S. and Europe. It took Obama four years of cajoling, threatening, and strategizing to convince Europe, China, India, Russia, and Asian allies to impose sanctions against Iran. For many economies this was a tough decision given reliance on Iran for energy supplies. A move by the U.S. to re-open the front against Iran, with no evidence that Tehran has failed to uphold the nuclear deal itself, would throw U.S. alliances into a flux. The implications of such a decision could therefore go beyond merely increasing the geopolitical risk premium. Chart 23Iraq, Libya, And Venezuela Are##BR##At Risk Of Production Disruptions In 2018
Iraq, Libya, And Venezuela Are At Risk Of Production Disruptions In 2018
Iraq, Libya, And Venezuela Are At Risk Of Production Disruptions In 2018
Chart 24Buy Energy,##BR##Short Metals
Buy Energy, Short Metals
Buy Energy, Short Metals
Bottom Line: BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy has set the average oil price forecast at $67 per barrel for 2018.27 We believe that the upside risk to this view is considerable. As a way to parlay our relatively bearish view on the Chinese economy with the bullish oil view of our commodity colleagues, we would recommend that our clients go long global energy stocks relative to metal and mining equities (Chart 24). Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "2018 Key Views, Part I: Five Black Swans," dated December 6, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Geopolitics - From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Populism Blues: How And Why Social Instability Is Coming To America," dated June 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 On June 14, James Hodkinson, a left-wing activist, attacked Republican members of Congress while practicing baseball for the annual Congressional Baseball Game for Charity. 6 A very sophisticated client in New York asked us whether we believed that National Guard units, who are staffed from the neighborhoods they would have to pacify in case of unrest, would remain loyal to the federal government in case of impeachment-related unrest. Our high-conviction view is that they would. First, the U.S. has a highly professionalized military with a strong history of robust civil-military relations. Second, if the Alabama National Guard remained loyal to President Kennedy in the 1963 University of Alabama integration protests - the so-called "Stand in the Schoolhouse Door" incident - then we certainly would expect "Red State" National Guard units to remain loyal to their chain-of-command in 2017. That said, the very fact that we do not consider the premise of the question to be ludicrous suggests that we are in a genuine paradigm shift. 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 The "Saturday Night Massacre," which escalated the crisis in the White House, occurred in October, the same month that OPEC launched an oil embargo and caused the oil shock. The U.S. economy was already sliding into recession, which technically began in November. 9 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Timing Of The Next Recession," dated June 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "When To Get Out," dated December 8, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Northeast Asia: Moonshine, Militarism, And Markets," dated May 24, 2017, and Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Reflections On China's Reforms," in "The Great Risk Rotation - December 2013," dated December 11, 2013, and Special Report, "Taking Stock Of China's Reforms," dated May 13, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 13 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Party Congress Ends ... So What?" dated November 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 14 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "The Wrath Of Cohn," dated July 26, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Xi Jinping: Chairman Of Everything," dated October 25, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 16 For instance, the decision to stack the country's chief bank regulator (the CBRC) with some of the country's toughest anti-corruption officials is significant and will bode ill not only for corrupt regulators but also for banks that have benefited from cozy relationships with them. This is not a neutral development with regard to bank lending. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Geopolitics - From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 17 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Messages From The Market, Post-Party Congress," dated November 16, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 18 Note that these eco-reforms will reduce supply, which could offset - at least in part - the lower demand from within China. Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Shifting Gears In China: The Impact On Base Metals," dated November 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. The status of China's supply-side reforms suggests that steel, coking coal, and iron ore prices are most likely to decline from current levels; please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "China's 'De-Capacity' Reforms: Where Steel & Coal Prices Are Headed," dated November 22, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 19 Please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "Ms. Mea Challenges The EMS View," dated October 19, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com, and China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle," dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Political Risks Are Understated In 2018," dated April 12, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 21 It is primarily credit excesses that a reform-oriented government would seek to rein in, while fiscal spending may have to increase to try to compensate for slower credit growth. 22 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 23 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Power And Politics In East Asia: Cold War 2.0?" dated September 25, 2012, and "Brewing Tensions In The South China Sea: Implications," dated June 13, 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 24 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Out Of The Vault: Explaining The U.S.-Iran Détente," dated July 15, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 25 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Energy Sector Strategy Special Report, "Venezuela: Oil Market Rebalance Is Too Little, Too Late," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 26 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Scared Yet? Five Black Swans For 2016," dated February 10, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 27 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy, "Key Themes For Energy Markets In 2018," dated December 7, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Investors should expect little policy initiative out of the U.S. Congress after tax cuts; Polarization is likely to rise substantively in 2018, gridlocking Congress; Chinese policymakers are experimenting with growth-constraining reforms; Global growth has peaked; underweight emerging markets in 2018; Go long energy stocks relative to metal and mining equities. Feature Last week we published Part I of our 2018 Key Views.1 In it, we presented our five "Black Swans" for 2018: Lame Duck Trump: President Trump realizes his time in the White House is going to be short and seeks relevance abroad. He finds it in jingoism towards Iran - throwing the Middle East into chaos - and protectionism against China. A Coup In North Korea: Chinese economic pressure overshoots its mark and throws Pyongyang into a crisis. Kim Jong-un is replaced, but markets struggle to ascertain whether the successor is a moderate or a hawk. Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn: Markets cheer the higher probability of "Bremain" and then remember that Corbyn is a genuine socialist. Italian Election Troubles: Markets are fully pricing in the sanguine scenario of "much ado about nothing," which is our view as well. But is there really anything to cheer in Italy? If not, then why is the Italian market the best performing in all of DM? Bloodbath In Latin America: Emerging markets stall next year as Chinese policymakers tighten financial regulations. As the tide pulls back, Mexico and Brazil are caught swimming naked. These are not our core views. As black swans, they are low-probability events that may disturb markets in 2018. Our core view remains that geopolitical risks were overstated in 2017 and will be understated in 2018 (Charts 1 & 2). Most importantly, U.S. politics will be a tailwind to global growth while Chinese politics will be a headwind to global growth. While the overall effect may be neutral, the combination will be bullish for the U.S. dollar and bearish for emerging markets.2 Chart 12018 Will See Risks Dominate...
2018 Will See Risks Dominate...
2018 Will See Risks Dominate...
Chart 2...As Global Growth Concerns Reemerge
...As Global Growth Concerns Reemerge
...As Global Growth Concerns Reemerge
This week, we turn to the three questions that we believe will define the year for investors: Is A Civil War Coming To America? Is The Ghost Of Deng Xiaoping Haunting China? Will Geopolitical Risk Shift To The Middle East? Is A Civil War Coming To America? On a recent visit to Boston and New York we were caught off guard by how alarmed several large institutional clients were about the risk of severe social unrest in the U.S. We share this concern about the level of polarization in the U.S. and expect social instability to rise over the coming years (Chart 3).3 When roughly 40% of both Democrats and Republicans believe that their political competitors pose a "threat to the nation's well-being," we have entered a new paradigm (Chart 4). Chart 3Inequality Fuels Political Polarization
Inequality Fuels Political Polarization
Inequality Fuels Political Polarization
Chart 4"A Threat To The Nation's Well-Being?" Really?!
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Where we differ from some of our clients is in assessing the likely trigger for the unrest and its investment implications over the next 12 months. If the Democrats take the House of Representatives in the November 6 midterm election, as is our low-conviction view at this early point, then we would expect them eventually to impeach President Trump in 2019.4 Even then, it is not clear that the Senate would have the necessary 67 votes to convict Trump of the articles of impeachment (whatever they prove to be) and hence remove him from power. Republicans are likely to increase their majority in the Senate, even if they lose the House, because more Democratic senators are up for re-election in 2018. Therefore well over a dozen Republican senators would have to vote to remove a Republican president from power. For that to happen, Trump's popularity with Republican voters would have to go into a free fall, diving well below 60% (Chart 5). Meanwhile, we do not buy the argument that hordes of gun-wielding "deplorables" would descend upon the liberal coasts in case of impeachment. There may well be significant acts of domestic terrorism, particularly in the wake of any removal of Trump from office, but they would likely be isolated and unable to galvanize broader support. Our clients should remember, however, that ultra-right-wing militant groups are not the only perpetrators of domestic terrorism.5 Any acts of violence or social unrest are likely to draw press coverage and analytical hyperbole. But our left-leaning clients in the Northeast are likely overstating the sincerity of support for President Trump. President Trump won 44.9% of the Republican primary votes, but he averaged only 35% of the vote in the early days when the races were the most competitive. Given that only 25% of Americans identify as Republicans (Chart 6), it is fair to say that only about a third of that figure - 8%-10% of all U.S. voters - are Trump loyalists. Many conservative voters simply wanted change and were willing to give an outsider a chance (much as their liberal counterparts did in 2008!). Of that small percentage of genuine Trump fans, it is highly unlikely that a large share would seriously contemplate taking arms against the state in order to keep their leader in power against the constitutional impeachment process. Especially given that President Trump would be replaced by a genuine conservative, Vice President Mike Pence.6 Chart 5We Are A Long Way Away##BR##From Trump's Demise
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Chart 6Party Identifications##BR##Are Shrinking
Party Identifications Are Shrinking
Party Identifications Are Shrinking
As such, we believe that it is premature to speak of a total breakdown of social order in America. It is notable that such a conversation is taking place, but other forms of polarization and social unrest are far more likely to be relevant at the moment. In terms of policy, we would expect gridlock in Congress if Democrats take the House and begin focusing on impeachment. In fact, gridlock may already be upon us, as we see little agreement between the Trump administration, its loyalists in Congress, and establishment Republican Senators like Dan Sullivan (R, Alaska), Cory Gardner (R, Colorado), Joni Ernst (R, Iowa), Susan Collins (R, Maine), Ben Sasse (R, Nebraska), and Thom Tillis (R, North Carolina). These six Senators are all facing reelection in 2020 and are likely to evolve into Democrats-in-all-but-name. If President Trump's overall popularity continues to decline, we would not be surprised if one or two (starting with Collins) even take the dramatic step of leaving the Republican Party for the 2020 election. Essentially, establishment Republicans will become effective Democrats ahead of the midterms. Post-midterm election, with Democrats potentially taking over the House, the legislative process will grind to a complete halt. Government shutdowns, debt ceiling fights, failure of proactive policymaking to deal with crises and natural disasters, will all rise in probability. As President Trump faces greater constraints in Congress, we can see him becoming increasingly reliant on his executive authority to create policy. He would not be unique in this way, as President Obama did the same. While Trump's executive policy will be pro-business, unlike Obama's, uncertainty will rise regardless. The business community will not be able to take White House policies seriously amidst impeachment and a potential Democratic wave-election in 2020. Whatever executive orders Trump signs into power over the next three years, chances are that they will be immediately reversed in 2020. What about the markets? The Mueller investigation and heightened level of polarization could create drawdowns in equity markets throughout the year. However, impeachment proceedings are not likely to begin in 2018 and have never carried more weight with investors than market fundamentals (Chart 7).7 True, the Watergate scandal under President Richard Nixon triggered a spike in volatility and a fall in equities. However, the scandal alone did not cause the correction, rather it was a combination of factors, including the second devaluation of the dollar, rapid increases in price inflation, massive insurance fraud, recession, and a global oil shock.8 Chart 7AFundamentals, Not Impeachment,##BR##Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
Chart 7BFundamentals, Not Impeachment,##BR##Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
Fundamentals, Not Impeachment, Drive Markets
What about the impact on the U.S. dollar? Does Trump-related political instability threaten the dollar's status as the chief global reserve currency and a major financial safe haven? The data suggest not. We put together a list of events in 2017 that could be categorized as "unorthodox, Trump-related, political risk" (Table 1). We specifically left out geopolitical events, such as the North Korean nuclear crisis, so as not to dilute our dataset's focus on domestic intrigue. As Chart 8 illustrates, the U.S. dollar rose slightly, on average, a week after each event relative to its average weekly return prior to the crisis. While this may not be a resounding vote of confidence for the greenback (gold performed better), there is no evidence that investors are betting on a paradigm shift away from the dollar as the global reserve currency. Table 1An Eventful Year 1 Of Trump Presidency
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Chart 8Trump Is Not A U.S. Dollar Paradigm Shift
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
If investors should not worry about investment-relevant social strife in the U.S. in 2018, then when should they worry? Well, if Trump is actually removed from office, a first in U.S. history, at a time of extreme polarization, and in a country with easy access to arms and at least a strain of domestic terrorism, then 2019-20 will at least be a time for concern. Even without Trump's removal, we worry about unrest beyond 2018. We expect the ideological pendulum to shift to the left by the 2020 election. If our sister service - BCA's Global Investment Strategy - is correct, then a recession is likely to begin in late 2019.9 A combination of low popularity, market turbulence, and economic recession would doom Trump's chances of returning to the White House. But they would also be toxic for the candidacy of a moderate Democrat and would possibly propel a left-wing candidate to the presidency. Four years under a left-wing, socially progressive firebrand may be too much for many far-right voters to tolerate. Given America's demographic trends (Chart 9), these voters will realize that the writing is on the wall, that the window of opportunity to lock in their preferred policies has been firmly shut. The international context teaches us that disenchanted groups contemplate "exit" when the strategy of "voice" no longer works. How this will look in the U.S. is unclear at this point. Bottom Line: Investors should continue to fade impeachment-related, and Mueller investigation-related, pullbacks in the markets or the U.S. dollar in 2018. Our fears of U.S. social instability are mostly for the medium and long term. Fundamentals drive the markets and U.S. fundamentals remain solid for now. As our colleague Peter Berezin has pointed out, there is no imminent risk of a U.S. recession (Chart 10) and the cyclical picture remains bright (Chart 11).10 Chart 9A Changing America
A Changing America
A Changing America
Chart 10No Imminent Risk Of A U.S. Recession
No Imminent Risk Of A U.S. Recession
No Imminent Risk Of A U.S. Recession
Chart 11U.S. Cyclical Picture Is Bright
U.S. Cyclical Picture Is Bright
U.S. Cyclical Picture Is Bright
Where BCA's Geopolitical Strategy diverges from the BCA House View, however, is in terms of the global growth picture. While we recognize that there are no imminent risks of a global recession, we do believe that the policy trajectory in China is being obfuscated by positive global economic projections. To this risk we now turn. Is The Ghost Of Deng Xiaoping Haunting China? Our view that Chinese President Xi Jinping would reboot his reform agenda after the nineteenth National Party Congress this October is beginning to bear fruit. Investors are starting to realize that the policy tightening of 2017 was not a one-off event but a harbinger of what to expect in 2018. China's economic activity is slowing down and the policy outlook is getting less accommodative (Chart 12).11 To be clear, we never bought into the 2013 Third Plenum "reform" hype, which sought to resurrect the ghost of Deng Xiaoping and his decision to open China's economy at the Third Plenum in 1978.12 Nor will we buy into any similar hype around the upcoming Third Plenum in 2018. Instead, we focus on policymaker constraints. And it seems to us that the constraints to reform in China have fallen since 2013. The severity of China's financial and economic imbalances, the positive external economic backdrop, the desire to avoid confrontation with Trump, and the Xi administration's advantageous moment in the Chinese domestic political cycle, all suggest to us that Xi will be driven to accelerate his agenda in 2018. Broadly, this agenda consists of revitalizing the Communist Party regime at home and elevating China's national power and prestige abroad. More specifically it entails: Re-centralizing power after a perceived lack of leadership from roughly 2004-12; Improving governance, to rebuild the legitimacy and popular support of the single-party state, namely by fighting corruption; Restructuring the economy to phase out the existing growth model, which relies excessively on resource-intensive investment while suppressing private consumption (Chart 13). Chart 12China's Economic Prospects Are Dimming
China's Economic Prospects Are Dimming
China's Economic Prospects Are Dimming
Chart 13Excess Investment Is A Real Problem
Excess Investment Is A Real Problem
Excess Investment Is A Real Problem
The October party congress showed that this framework remains intact.13 First, Xi was elevated to Mao Zedong's status in the party constitution, which makes it much riskier for vested interests to flout his policies. Second, he declared the creation of a "National Supervision Commission," which will expand the anti-corruption campaign from the Communist Party to the administrative bureaucracy at all levels. Third, he recommitted to his economic agenda of improving the quality of economic growth at the expense of its pace and capital intensity. What does this mean for the economy in 2018? We expect government policy to become a headwind, after having been a tailwind in 2016-17. As Xi and the top-decision-making Politburo officially stated on December 9, the coming year will be a "crucial year" for advancing the most difficult aspects of the agenda: Financial risk: Financial regulation will continue to tighten, not only on banks and shadow lenders but also on the property sector, which Chinese officials claim will see a new "long-term regulatory mechanism" begin to be enacted (perhaps a nationwide property tax) (Chart 14). Local governments will face greater central discipline over bad investments, excessive debt, and corruption. The new leadership of the People's Bank of China, and of the just-created "Financial Stability and Development Commission," will attempt to establish their credibility in the face of banks that will be clamoring for less readily available liquidity.14 Green industrial restructuring: State-owned enterprises (SOEs) will continue to face stricter environmental regulations and cuts to overcapacity. This is in addition to tighter financial conditions, SOE restructuring initiatives, and an anti-corruption campaign that puts top managers under the microscope. SOEs that have not been identified as national champions, or otherwise as leading firms, will get squeezed.15 What are the market implications? First and foremost, the status quo in China is shifting, which is at least marginally negative for China's GDP growth, fixed investment, capital spending, import volumes, and resource-intensity. Real GDP should fall to around 6%, if not below, rather than today's 7%, while the Li Keqiang index should fall beneath the 2013-14 average rate of 7.3%. Second, a smooth and seamless conclusion of the 2016-17 upcycle cannot be assumed. The government's heightened effectiveness in economic policy will stem in part from an increase in political risk: the expansion of the anti-corruption campaign and Xi Jinping's personal power.16 The linking of anti-corruption probes with general policy enforcement means that any lack of compliance could result in top officials being ostracized, imprisoned, or even executed. Xi's measures will have sharper teeth than the market currently expects. Local economic actors (small banks, shadow lenders, local governments, provincial SOEs) will behave more cautiously. This will create negative growth surprises not currently being predicted by leading economic indicators (Chart 15). Chart 14Property Tightening##BR##Continues
Property Tightening Continues
Property Tightening Continues
Chart 15Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests##BR##A Benign Slowdown In Growth
Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests A Benign Slowdown In Growth
Our Composite LKI Indicator Suggests A Benign Slowdown In Growth
Chinese economic policy uncertainty, credit default swaps, and equity volatility should trend upward, as investors become accustomed to sectors disrupted by government scrutiny and a government with a higher tolerance for economic pain (Chart 16). How should investors play this scenario? Despite the volatility, we still expect Chinese equities, particularly H-shares, to outperform the EM benchmark, assuming the economy does not spiral out of control and cause a global rout. Reforms will improve China's long-term potential even as they weigh on EM exports, currencies, corporate profits and share prices. On a sectoral basis, BCA's China Investment Strategy has shown that China's health care, tech, and consumer staples sectors (and arguably energy) all outperformed China's other sectors in the wake of the party congress, as one would expect of a reinvigorated reform agenda (Chart 17). These sectors should continue to outperform. Going long the MSCI Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Leaders index, relative to the broad market, is one way to bet on more sustainable growth.17 Chart 16Stability Continues##BR##After Party Congress?
Stability Continues After Party Congress?
Stability Continues After Party Congress?
Chart 17China's Reforms Will Create##BR##Some Winners And Losers
China's Reforms Will Create Some Winners And Losers
China's Reforms Will Create Some Winners And Losers
More broadly, investors should prefer DM over EM equities, since emerging markets (especially Latin America) will suffer from a slower-growing and less commodity-hungry China (Chart 18). Within the commodities complex, investors should expect crosswinds, with energy diverging upward from base metals that are weighed down by China.18 Chart 18Who Is Exposed To China?
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
What are the risks to this view? How and when will we find out if we are wrong? Chart 19All Signs Pointing To Headwinds Ahead
All Signs Pointing To Headwinds Ahead
All Signs Pointing To Headwinds Ahead
First, the best leading indicators of China's economy are indicators of money and credit, as BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy and China Investment Strategy have shown.19 The credit and broad money (M3) impulses have finally begun to tick back up after a deep dip, suggesting that in six-to-nine months the economy, which has only just begun to slow, will receive some necessary relief (Chart 19). The question is how much relief? Strong spikes in these impulses, or in the monetary conditions index or housing prices, would indicate that stimulus is still taking precedence over reform. Second, our checklist for a reform reboot, which we have maintained since April and is so far on track, offers some critical political signposts for H1 2018 (Table 2).20 For instance, if China is serious about deleveraging, then authorities will restrain bank lending at the beginning of the year. A sharp increase in credit growth in Q1 would greatly undermine our thesis (while likely encouraging exuberance globally).21 Also, in March, the National People's Congress (NPC), China's rubber-stamp parliament, will hold its annual meeting. NPC sessions can serve to launch new reform initiatives (as in 1998 and 2008) or new stimulus efforts (as in 2009 and 2016). This year's legislative session is more important than usual because it will formally launch Xi Jinping's second term. The event should provide more detail on at least a few concrete reform initiatives. If the only solid takeaways are short-term growth measures and more infrastructure investment, then the status quo will prevail. Table 2China Reform Checklist
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
By the end of May, an assessment of the concrete NPC initiatives and the post-NPC economic data should indicate whether China's threshold for economic pain has truly gone up. If not, then any reforms that the Xi administration takes will have limited effect. It is important to note that our view does not hinge on China's refraining from stimulus altogether. We do not expect Beijing to self-impose a recession. Rather, we expect stimulus to be of a smaller magnitude than in 2015-16. We also expect the complexion of fiscal spending to continue to become less capital intensive as it is directed toward building a social safety net (Chart 20). Massive old-style stimulus should only return if the economy starts to collapse, or closer to the sensitive 2020-21 economic targets timed to coincide with the anniversary of the Communist Party.22 Chart 20China's Fiscal Spending Is Becoming Less Capital Intensive
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Bottom Line: The Xi administration has identified financial instability, environmental degradation, and poverty as persistent threats to the regime and is moving to address them. The consequences are, on the whole, likely to be negative for growth in the short term but positive in the long term. We expect China to see greater volatility but to benefit from better long-term prospects. Meanwhile China-exposed, commodity-reliant EMs will suffer negative side-effects. Will Geopolitical Risk Shift To The Middle East? The U.S. geopolitical "pivot to Asia" has been a central theme of our service since its launch in 2012.23 The decision to geopolitically deleverage from the Middle East and shift to Asia was undertaken by the Obama administration (Chart 21). Not because President Obama was a dove with no stomach to fight it out in the Middle East, but because the U.S. defense and intelligence establishment sees containing China as America's premier twenty-first century challenge. Chart 21U.S. Has Deleveraged From The Middle East
U.S. Has Deleveraged From The Middle East
U.S. Has Deleveraged From The Middle East
The grand strategy of containing China has underpinned several crucial decisions by the U.S. since 2011. First, the U.S. has become a lot more aggressive about challenging China's military expansion in the South China Sea. Second, the U.S. has begun to reposition military hardware into East Asia. Third, Washington concluded a nuclear deal with Tehran in 2015 - referred to as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPA) - in order to extricate itself from the Middle East and focus on China.24 President Trump, however, while maintaining the pivot, has re-focused his rhetoric back on the Middle East. The decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, while largely accepting a fait accompli, is an unorthodox move that suggests that this administration's threshold for accepting chaos in the Middle East is a lot lower. Our concern is that the Trump administration may set its sights on Iran next. President Trump appears to believe that the U.S. can contain China, coerce North Korea into nuclear negotiations, and reverse Iranian gains in the Middle East at the same time. In our view, he cannot. The U.S. military is stretched, public war weariness remains a political constraint, regional allies are weak, and without ground-troop commitments to the Middle East Trump is unlikely to change the balance of power against Iran. All that the abrogation of the JCPA would do is provoke Iran, which could lash out across the Middle East, particularly in Iraq where Tehran-supported Shia militias remain entrenched. Investors should carefully watch whether Trump approves another six-month waiver for the Iran Freedom and Counter-Proliferation Act (IFCA) of 2012. This act imposes sanctions against all entities - whether U.S., Iranian, or others - doing business with the country (Table 3). In essence, IFCA is the congressional act that imposed sanctions against Iran. The original 2015 nuclear deal did not abrogate IFCA. Instead, Obama simply waived its provisions every six months, as provided under the original act. Table 3U.S. Sanctions Have Global Reach
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy remains overweight oil. As our energy strategists point out, the last two years have been remarkably benign regarding unplanned production outages. Iran, Libya, and Nigeria all returned production to near-full potential, adding over 1.5 million b/d of supply back to the world markets (Chart 22). This supply increase is unlikely to repeat itself in 2018, particularly as geopolitical risks are likely to return in Iraq, Libya, and Nigeria, and already have in Venezuela (Chart 23). Chart 22Unplanned Production Outages Are At The Lowest Level In Years
Three Questions For 2018
Three Questions For 2018
Nigeria is on the map once again with the Niger Delta Avengers vowing to renew hostilities with the government. Nigeria's production has been recovering since pipeline saboteurs knocked it down to 1.4 million b/d in the period from May 2016 to June 2017, but rising tensions could threaten output anew. And Venezuela remains in a state of near-collapse.25 Iraq is key, and three risks loom large. First, as we have pointed out since early 2016, the destruction of the Islamic State is exposing fault lines between the Kurds - who have benefited the most from the vacuum created by the Islamic State's defeat - and their Arab neighbors.26 Second, remnants of the Islamic State may turn into saboteurs since their dream of controlling a Caliphate is dead. Third, investors need to watch renewed tensions between the U.S. and Iran. Shia-Sunni tensions could reignite if Tehran decides to retaliate against any re-imposition of economic sanctions by Washington. Not only could Tehran retaliate against Sunnis in Iraq, throwing the country into another civil war, but it could even go back to its favorite tactic from 2011: threatening to close the Straits of Hormuz. Another critical issue to consider is how the rest of the world would respond to the re-imposition of sanctions against Iran. Under IFCA, the Trump administration would be able to sanction any bank, shipping, or energy company that does business with the country, including companies belonging to European and Asian allies. If the administration pursued such policy, however, we would expect a major break between the U.S. and Europe. It took Obama four years of cajoling, threatening, and strategizing to convince Europe, China, India, Russia, and Asian allies to impose sanctions against Iran. For many economies this was a tough decision given reliance on Iran for energy supplies. A move by the U.S. to re-open the front against Iran, with no evidence that Tehran has failed to uphold the nuclear deal itself, would throw U.S. alliances into a flux. The implications of such a decision could therefore go beyond merely increasing the geopolitical risk premium. Chart 23Iraq, Libya, And Venezuela Are##BR##At Risk Of Production Disruptions In 2018
Iraq, Libya, And Venezuela Are At Risk Of Production Disruptions In 2018
Iraq, Libya, And Venezuela Are At Risk Of Production Disruptions In 2018
Chart 24Buy Energy,##BR##Short Metals
Buy Energy, Short Metals
Buy Energy, Short Metals
Bottom Line: BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy has set the average oil price forecast at $67 per barrel for 2018.27 We believe that the upside risk to this view is considerable. As a way to parlay our relatively bearish view on the Chinese economy with the bullish oil view of our commodity colleagues, we would recommend that our clients go long global energy stocks relative to metal and mining equities (Chart 24). Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "2018 Key Views, Part I: Five Black Swans," dated December 6, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Geopolitics - From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Populism Blues: How And Why Social Instability Is Coming To America," dated June 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 On June 14, James Hodkinson, a left-wing activist, attacked Republican members of Congress while practicing baseball for the annual Congressional Baseball Game for Charity. 6 A very sophisticated client in New York asked us whether we believed that National Guard units, who are staffed from the neighborhoods they would have to pacify in case of unrest, would remain loyal to the federal government in case of impeachment-related unrest. Our high-conviction view is that they would. First, the U.S. has a highly professionalized military with a strong history of robust civil-military relations. Second, if the Alabama National Guard remained loyal to President Kennedy in the 1963 University of Alabama integration protests - the so-called "Stand in the Schoolhouse Door" incident - then we certainly would expect "Red State" National Guard units to remain loyal to their chain-of-command in 2017. That said, the very fact that we do not consider the premise of the question to be ludicrous suggests that we are in a genuine paradigm shift. 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 The "Saturday Night Massacre," which escalated the crisis in the White House, occurred in October, the same month that OPEC launched an oil embargo and caused the oil shock. The U.S. economy was already sliding into recession, which technically began in November. 9 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Timing Of The Next Recession," dated June 16, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "When To Get Out," dated December 8, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Northeast Asia: Moonshine, Militarism, And Markets," dated May 24, 2017, and Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Reflections On China's Reforms," in "The Great Risk Rotation - December 2013," dated December 11, 2013, and Special Report, "Taking Stock Of China's Reforms," dated May 13, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 13 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Party Congress Ends ... So What?" dated November 1, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 14 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "The Wrath Of Cohn," dated July 26, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Xi Jinping: Chairman Of Everything," dated October 25, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 16 For instance, the decision to stack the country's chief bank regulator (the CBRC) with some of the country's toughest anti-corruption officials is significant and will bode ill not only for corrupt regulators but also for banks that have benefited from cozy relationships with them. This is not a neutral development with regard to bank lending. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Geopolitics - From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 17 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Messages From The Market, Post-Party Congress," dated November 16, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 18 Note that these eco-reforms will reduce supply, which could offset - at least in part - the lower demand from within China. Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Shifting Gears In China: The Impact On Base Metals," dated November 9, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. The status of China's supply-side reforms suggests that steel, coking coal, and iron ore prices are most likely to decline from current levels; please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "China's 'De-Capacity' Reforms: Where Steel & Coal Prices Are Headed," dated November 22, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 19 Please see BCA Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report, "Ms. Mea Challenges The EMS View," dated October 19, 2017, available at ems.bcaresearch.com, and China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle," dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, "Political Risks Are Understated In 2018," dated April 12, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 21 It is primarily credit excesses that a reform-oriented government would seek to rein in, while fiscal spending may have to increase to try to compensate for slower credit growth. 22 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 23 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Power And Politics In East Asia: Cold War 2.0?" dated September 25, 2012, and "Brewing Tensions In The South China Sea: Implications," dated June 13, 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 24 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Out Of The Vault: Explaining The U.S.-Iran Détente," dated July 15, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 25 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Energy Sector Strategy Special Report, "Venezuela: Oil Market Rebalance Is Too Little, Too Late," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 26 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Scared Yet? Five Black Swans For 2016," dated February 10, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 27 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy, "Key Themes For Energy Markets In 2018," dated December 7, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights Breadth within EM equity markets has been deteriorating both in absolute terms and relative to DM equities. This points to a major top in EM share prices. In Brazil, falling inflation has led to a relapse in nominal GDP growth. This has endangered the already-bad public debt dynamics. Without the social security reforms, the country needs to boost nominal growth to stabilize public debt dynamics. Currency depreciation will likely be required to achieve this. When the Brazilian currency sells off, the nation's financial markets perform poorly. Feature Deteriorating EM Equity Breadth Breadth within EM equity markets has been deteriorating, especially in relative terms, versus DM stock markets. This heralds a major downleg in EM versus DM relative share prices, at a minimum, and a relapse in EM share prices in absolute terms as well. Chart I-1 demonstrates that the relative performance of EM equal-weighted stock index versus the DM equal-weighted share price index has decoupled from the relative performance of EM versus DM market cap-weighted equity benchmarks. Such a gap has emerged for the first time since 1999, when MSCI's equal-weighted equity data became available. Chart I-1EM Equity Outperformance Narrowly Based Versus DM...
EM Equity Outperformance Narrowly Based Versus DM...
EM Equity Outperformance Narrowly Based Versus DM...
Each stock has the same weight in the equal-weighted index, while the regular indexes are market-cap weighted. Hence, an equal-weighted index reflects performance of an average stock while the market cap-weighted ones are skewed by the performances of large-cap stocks. This confirms what many investors already know: that in 2017, EM outperformance versus DM has been largely due to the surge in four large-cap technology stocks in Asia. Comparing EM against the U.S. only on similar measures, the message is identical (Chart I-2). Chart I-3 illustrates the absolute performance of MSCI EM market cap-weighted and MSCI EM equal-weighted equity indexes. It appears that the EM equal-weighted stock index has failed to make new cyclical highs lately. Thereby, it has not confirmed the new high in the EM market-cap weighted equity benchmark (Chart I-3). Chart I-2...And U.S.
...And U.S.
...And U.S.
Chart I-3EM Equal-Weighted Index Did Not ##br##Confirm EM Market-Cap Recent Highs
EM Equal-Weighted Index Did Not Confirm EM Market-Cap Recent Highs
EM Equal-Weighted Index Did Not Confirm EM Market-Cap Recent Highs
Similarly, the rally in share prices of EM banks - an important macro-driven sector of the EM equity universe - has lately paused. As such, it has also not confirmed the new high in the overall EM equity benchmark (Chart I-4). Given EM tech stocks (29% of MSCI benchmark index) are extremely overbought, the EM equity rally can be sustained if leadership rotates to EM financials and commodities stocks, which account for 23% and 14% of market cap, respectively. The failure of both EM financials and commodities stocks to make new cyclical highs of late suggests the EM equity rally is wearing off. The advance-decline line for EM stocks has lately dropped below the 50 line (Chart I-5, top panel). By contrast, the DM measure is still above 50 (Chart I-5, bottom panel). This signals a major bout of EM underperformance versus DM, as well as downside risks to EM's absolute performance. Chart I-4EM Banks Also Did Not Confirm ##br##EM Market-Cap Recent Highs
EM Banks Also Did Not Confirm EM Market-Cap Recent Highs
EM Banks Also Did Not Confirm EM Market-Cap Recent Highs
Chart I-5Poor Advance-Decline Line In EM Equities
Poor Advance-Decline Line In EM Equities
Poor Advance-Decline Line In EM Equities
The weak technical profile for EM equities is consistent with our fundamental assessment that the main risks to global growth and share prices stem from EM/China rather than DM economies. Therefore, EM/China plays will be the first to roll over, while DM stocks will lag. Investors looking for signs of reversal in the rally in global risk assets should monitor EM/China plays. Finally, EM small cap stocks' relative performance against their DM counterparts has not confirmed the EM outperformance based on an aggregate index (Chart I-6). This is a negative signal as well, and heralds new lows in relative performance. This also corroborates that, outside those EM large-cap tech stocks that have gone exponential, the EM equity rally has been much less exuberant and vigorous. More importantly, the EM rally has recently shown signs of fatigue. Bottom Line: Breadth within EM equity markets has been deteriorating both in absolute terms and relative to DM equities. This implies that a major downturn in EM share prices as well as EM risk assets generally is approaching. Investors should stay put/underweight EM risk assets. Brazil: A Political Economy Dilemma The Nominal Impediment We are aware that the pace of economic activity in Brazil is presently gathering speed. Manufacturing, retail sales and hiring are all recovering (Chart I-7). Even capital spending that has been shrinking until recently is now starting to show signs of life. Chart I-6EM Small Caps Have Not Confirmed ##br##EM Large Cap Outperformance
EM Small Caps Have Not Confirmed EM Large Cap Outperformance
EM Small Caps Have Not Confirmed EM Large Cap Outperformance
Chart I-7Brazil: Economic Activity Is Recovering
Brazil: Economic Activity Is Recovering
Brazil: Economic Activity Is Recovering
Nevertheless, Brazil's public debt dynamics remain unsustainable. Nominal GDP growth has declined to its 2015 low - as falling inflation has more than offset the revival in real output (Chart I-8). Besides, real interest rates remain elevated and nominal GDP growth is well below the government's borrowing costs (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Brazil: Real Growth Is Recovering ##br##While Nominal Growth Is Relapsing
Brazil: Real Growth Is Recovering While Nominal Growth Is Relapsing
Brazil: Real Growth Is Recovering While Nominal Growth Is Relapsing
Chart I-9Brazil: Borrowing Costs Are Still High
Brazil: Borrowing Costs Are Still High
Brazil: Borrowing Costs Are Still High
Therefore, without full-fledged social security reforms and/or lowering ex-ante real interest rates substantially, the public debt trajectory will likely spin out of control. Interest rates in real terms are also elevated for the private sector. This suggests that credit stress among companies and households might not recede quickly, and high real interest rates might cap the recovery in loan growth (Chart I-10). Interestingly, Chart I-11 demonstrates that private banks' NPLs (non-performing loans) inversely correlate with nominal GDP growth (nominal GDP is inverted on the chart). This entails that the amelioration in Brazil's NPL cycle is at least due for a pause. Chart I-10Brazil: Bank Loan Growth Is Stabilizing
Brazil: Bank Loan Growth Is Stabilizing
Brazil: Bank Loan Growth Is Stabilizing
Chart I-11Brazil: Nominal GDP & Bank NPLs
Brazil: Nominal GDP & Bank NPLs
Brazil: Nominal GDP & Bank NPLs
In short, to stabilize public and private debt dynamics, higher nominal GDP growth and much lower borrowing costs in real terms are vital. The latter means an unexpected rise in inflation is required. Chart I-12Brazil In the Late 1990s
Brazil In the Late 1990s
Brazil In the Late 1990s
To boost nominal growth considerably and finance government at lower real interest rates, a combination of quantitative easing (QE) and currency depreciation will be needed. This is not a forecast that the Brazilian central bank will certainly implement QE. Rather, our point is that without extensive social security reforms - which are politically unfeasible now (more on this below) - a meaningful currency depreciation and/or public debt monetization by the central bank will be necessary to stabilize public debt dynamics and put the economy on a sustainable expansion path. Remarkably, in the late 1990s, faced with low inflation and weak nominal growth, the Brazilian government opted for large currency devaluation, which boosted nominal GDP growth (Chart I-12). Notably, the currency was devalued despite the large share of public foreign currency debt. This ratio is now very low. Hence, currency depreciation will be less painful now than it was in 1998. A Political Economy Dilemma: Growth Versus Creditors Brazil's elected politicians (congressmen and senators) are facing a political economy dilemma: (a) Should they satisfy interests of government creditors (including foreign investors) - i.e., pursue painful fiscal reforms to make public debt sustainable? Or (b) Should they gratify the electorate - i.e., avoid austerity and stimulate the still-beleaguered economy? To put this in perspective, the economy is just exiting one of the worst recessions of the past century, and the unemployment rate is still at a decade high. Over the next several months, the government of President Michel Temer will try to pass a diluted version of the pension reform bill. The government is desperate to enact this bill to keep financial markets buoyant and preserve the ongoing economic recovery heading into the elections. Being already very unpopular, government officials realize this is the only way their candidate has a chance to get elected in the presidential elections next year. However, the diluted version will not be enough to ensure debt sustainability. Chart I-13Brazil's Median Voter Favors ##br##Anti-Government Candidates
Brazil's Median Voter Favors Anti-Government Candidates
Brazil's Median Voter Favors Anti-Government Candidates
Moreover, many of the government's coalition partners have different incentives. Going into the general elections in October 2018, odds favor that the majority of congressmen and senators will likely vote for avoiding austerity. As a result, the pension reforms draft - even in its diluted form - will likely fail. The median voter in Brazil remains on the left. Chart I-13 reveals that according to the latest polls, 60% of voters support anti-market candidates. Hence, any politician who wants to be elected needs to heed to the electorate. Worsening Fiscal Dynamics Public debt sustainability has been worsening: The primary and overall deficits have lately widened to 2.9% and 9.3% of GDP, respectively (Chart I-14). Public debt sustainability necessitates that the primary fiscal balance swings into a surplus, and borrowing costs drop below nominal GDP. None of these requirements have been satisfied or are likely to be anytime soon. Meanwhile, central government total revenue growth has dwindled (Chart I-15, top panel). In turn, central government net revenue - i.e. excluding transfers to local governments - are mildly contracting due to the increase in revenue transfers to the latter (Chart I-15, bottom panel). Chart I-14Brazil: Fiscal Deficit Has Not Improved
Brazil: Fiscal Deficit Has Not Improved
Brazil: Fiscal Deficit Has Not Improved
Chart I-15Central Government Revenues Are Very Weak
Central Government Revenues Are Very Weak
Central Government Revenues Are Very Weak
Furthermore, the overall fiscal deficit excluding social security is at 6% of GDP and has widened over the past year (Chart I-14, bottom panel). Interest payments account for 32% of government spending and 6.4% of GDP. On the whole, without a large fiscal retrenchment and with real interest rates close to current levels, the gross public debt-to-GDP ratio will likely reach 85% by the end of 2018 and 92% in two years' time - even if nominal GDP growth recovers to 6-6.5%. This puts the impetus solely on the central bank to reflate nominal growth aggressively and/or bring down real interest rates. This can be achieved via currency depreciation or public debt monetization. The outcome of the latter will necessarily be a major drop in the currency's value. This, along with our negative view on commodities prices in general and iron ore prices in particular, prompts us to retain our bearish stance on the Brazilian real. Chart I-16 demonstrates that the currency is highly correlated with iron ore prices, and has no correlation with the level of and changes in the interest rate differential between Brazil and the U.S. Investment Implications The path of least resistance for the Brazilian real is down - it will depreciate more than 2% and 4% that are implied by 6- and 12-month forwards, respectively. Stay short. When the Brazilian currency sells off, the nation's financial markets perform poorly. In particular, Brazil's sovereign and corporate credit spreads are very narrow, and will widen as investors begin doubting public debt sustainability. In turn, currency depreciation will raise the cost of foreign currency debt for the private sector. Dedicated EM investors should underweight Brazilian sovereign and corporate credit relative to their benchmarks. The relapse in narrow money (M1) growth presages downside risk in share prices (Chart I-17). Chart I-16Driver Of BRL: Commodities Not Interest Rates
Driver Of BRL: Commodities Not Interest Rates
Driver Of BRL: Commodities Not Interest Rates
Chart I-17Brazil: M1 Growth And Share Prices
Brazil: M1 Growth And Share Prices
Brazil: M1 Growth And Share Prices
The broad stock market is not particularly cheap, given the magnitude of the rally that has considerably exceeded the EPS recovery. Finally, in the local fixed-income market we continue recommending a bet on yield curve flattening that typically happens when the currency sells off. Foreign investors should wait for currency depreciation to play out before going long local currency government bonds. Local investors should overweight local bonds versus stocks. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Andrija Vesic, Research Assistant andrijav@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights Geopolitical risks were overstated in 2017, but have now become understated; If Donald Trump becomes an early "lame duck" president, he will seek relevance abroad; This could mean a protectionist White House, or increased geopolitical tensions with Iran and North Korea; North Korean internal stability could come into question as economic sanctions begin to bite; Political risks in the U.K. and Italy could rise with markets overly complacent on both; Emerging markets, particularly Brazil and Mexico, will see renewed political risk. Feature Buoyant global growth, political stability in Europe, and steady policymakers' hands in China have fueled risk assets in 2017. As the year draws to a close, investors also have tax cuts in the U.S. to celebrate. Our high conviction view that tax cuts would happen - and that they would be fiscally profligate - is near the finish line.1 In making this call, we ignored the failure to repeal Obamacare, the "wisdom" of old "D.C. hands," and direct intelligence from a source inside the White House circle who swore tax reform would be revenue neutral. Throughout the year, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy remained confident that the GOP would ignore its fiscal conservative credentials and focus on the midterm elections.2 That election is increasingly looking like a bloodbath-in-the-making for the Republican Party (Chart 1). What of the latest opinion polls showing that the tax cuts are unpopular with half of all Americans? The polls also show that a solid one-third of all Americans remain in support of the Republican plan (Chart 2). We suspect - as do Republican strategists - that those are the Republicans who vote in midterm elections. Given the atrociously low turnout in midterm elections - just 36.4% of Americans voted in 2014 - Republicans need their base to turn out in November. The tax cuts are not about the wider American public but the Republican base. Chart 1Midterm Election: A Bloodbath?
Midterm Election: A Bloodbath?
Midterm Election: A Bloodbath?
Chart 2Republican Base Supports Tax Cuts
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
As we close the book on 2017, we look with trepidation towards 2018. Our main theme for next year is that the combination of economic stimulus from the tax cuts in the U.S. and structural reforms in China will create a U.S.-dollar-bullish policy mix that will combine into a headwind for global risk assets, particularly emerging market equities.3 However, in this report, we focus on some of the more exotic risks that investors may have to deal with. In particular we focus on five potential "black swans" - low probability, high market-impact events - that are neither on the market's radar nor the media's. To qualify for our list, the events must be: Unlikely: There must be less than a 20% probability that the event will occur in the next 12 months. Out of sight: The scenario we present should not be receiving media coverage, at least not as a serious market risk. Geopolitical: We must be able to identify the risk scenario through the lens of our geopolitical methodology. Genuinely unpredictable events - such as meteor strikes, pandemics, crippling cyber-attacks, solar flares, alien invasions, and failures in the computer program running the simulation that we call the universe - do not make the cut. Black Swan 1: Lame Duck Trump "Lame duck" presidents - leaders whose popularity late in their term has sunk so low that they can no longer affect policy - are said to be particularly adventurous in the foreign arena. While this adage has a spotty empirical record, there are several notable examples in recent memory.4 American presidents have few constitutional constraints when it comes to foreign policy. Therefore, when domestic constraints rise, U.S. presidents seek relevance abroad. Chart 3The Day After The Midterms, Trump's Overall Popularity Will Matter More Than That Among Republicans
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
President Trump may become the earliest, and lamest, lame duck president in recent U.S. history. While his Republican support remains healthy, his overall popularity is well below the average presidential approval rating at this point in the political cycle (Chart 3). Based on these poll numbers, his party is likely to underperform in the upcoming midterm election (Chart 4). A Democrat-led House of Representatives would have the votes to begin impeachment, which we would then consider likely in 2019. As we have argued in our "impeachment handbook," the market impact of such a crisis would ultimately depend on market fundamentals and the global context, not political intrigue.5 Chart 4Trump Is Becoming A Liability For The GOP
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
President Trump's political capital ahead of the midterm elections is based on his ability to influence Republican legislators. Despite low overall poll numbers, President Trump can use the threat of endorsing primary challengers against conservative peers in Congress to move his agenda in the legislature. He has effectively done this with tax cuts. However, the day after the midterm elections, President Trump's own numbers will matter for the GOP. Given that President Trump will be on the ballot in the 2020 general election, his low approval numbers with non-Republican voters will hang like an albatross around the party's neck. This is a serious issue, particularly given that 22 of the 33 Senators up for reelection in 2020 will be Republican.6 Robust economic growth and a roaring stock market have not boosted Trump's popularity so far. At the same time, a strong economy ready to translate into higher wages is about to be "pump-primed" by stimulative tax cuts (Chart 5). We would expect the result to be a stronger dollar, which should keep the U.S. trade deficit widening well into Trump's second year in office. At some point, this will become a sore political point, given Trump's protectionist rhetoric and his administration's focus on the trade balance as a key measure of U.S. power. Chart 5Wage Pressures Are Building
Wage Pressures Are Building
Wage Pressures Are Building
What kind of adventures would we expect to see President Trump embark on in 2018? There are three prime candidates: China-U.S. trade war: The Trump administration started off with threats against China and then proceeded to negotiations. However, neither the North Korean situation nor the trade deficit has seen substantial improvement, and a lame duck Trump administration would be more likely to resort to serious punitive actions. Even improvements on the Korean peninsula would not necessarily prevent Washington from getting tougher on Beijing over trade, as the Trump administration will be driven by domestic politics. Investors should carefully watch whether the World Trade Organization deems China a "market economy," which could trigger a U.S. backlash, and whether the various investigations by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross result in anti-dumping and countervailing duties being imposed more frequently on specific Chinese exports. Thus far, the empirical evidence suggests that the Trump administration has picked up the pace of protectionist rulings (Chart 6). Notably, the Trump administration claims that the Comprehensive Economic Dialogue has "stalled," and it is reviving deeper, structural demands on Chinese policymakers.7 Iran Jingoism: Rumors that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson may be replaced by CIA Director Mike Pompeo - who would be replaced at the CIA by Senator Tom Cotton - can only mean one thing: the White House has Iran in its sights. Both Pompeo and Cotton are hawks on Iran. The administration may be preparing to shift its focus from North Korea, where American allies in the region are urging caution, to the Middle East, where American allies in the region are urging aggression. Investors should watch whether Tillerson is removed and especially how Congress reacts to President Trump's decision on October 15 to decertify the Iran nuclear agreement (also called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA). The Republican-controlled Congress has until December 15 to reimpose sanctions on Iran that were suspended as part of the deal, with merely a simple majority needed in both chambers. However, President Trump will also have an opportunity, as early as January, to end waivers on a slew of sanctions that were not covered under the JCPOA. North Korea: It would be natural to slot North Korea as first on our list of potential foreign policy adventures for President Trump. However, it does not really fit our qualification of a black swan. North Korea is not "out of sight." Additionally, President Trump has already broken with the tradition of previous administrations by upping the pressure on Pyongyang. In fact, a North Korean black swan would be if President Trump succeeded in breaking the regime in Pyongyang. To that scenario we turn next. Chart 6Trump: Game Changer In U.S. Trade Policy?
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
Bottom Line: Geopolitics has not affected the markets in 2017, with risk assets reaching record highs and the VIX reaching record lows (Chart 7). This was our view throughout the year and we called for investors to "buy in May and have a nice day" as a result of our analysis.8 We do not see this as likely in 2018. The Trump administration has no credible legislative agenda after tax cuts. We expect Congress to stall as we enter the summer primary season and for the GOP to lose the House to the Democrats. President Trump is an astute political analyst and will sense these developments before they happen. There is a good chance that he will attempt to sway the election and pre-empt his lame duck status with an aggressive foreign policy. Chart 72017 Goldilocks: S&P 500 Up, VIX Down
2017 Goldilocks: S&P 500 Up, VIX Down
2017 Goldilocks: S&P 500 Up, VIX Down
Investment implications are twofold. First, we continue to recommend an equally weighted basket of Swiss 10-year bonds and gold as a portfolio hedge.9 Second, risk premium for oil prices should rise in 2018. Not only is the supply-demand balance favorable for oil prices, but geopolitical risks are likely to rise as well. Black Swan 2: A Coup In Pyongyang Our colleague Peter Berezin, BCA's Chief Global Strategist, has suggested that a coup d'état against Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un could be a black swan trigger that spooks the markets.10 While Peter used the scenario as a tongue-in-cheek way to weave Kim into a narrative that tells of a late 2019 recession, we have long raised North Korean domestic politics as the true Korean black swan.11 Here we entertain Peter's idea for three reasons.12 First, China has upped the economic pressure on Pyongyang. Under Kim Jong-un, the North Korean state has attempted some limited economic "opening up," namely to China. But the attempt to finalize the nuclear deterrent has delayed an already precarious process. There has now been a $617 million drop in Chinese imports from the country since the beginning of the year (Chart 8), with coal imports particularly affected (Chart 9). China has also pulled back on tourism. Meanwhile, North Korea's imports of Chinese goods have risen, which suggests that the country's current account balance may be widening. At some point, if these trends continue, Pyongyang will run out of foreign currency with which to purchase Chinese and Russian imports. Chart 8China Is Turning The Screws On Pyongyang...
China Is Turning The Screws On Pyongyang...
China Is Turning The Screws On Pyongyang...
Chart 9...Particularly On Coal Imports
...Particularly On Coal Imports
...Particularly On Coal Imports
Second, Pyongyang is well aware of pressures against the regime. The assassination of Kim Jong-nam - the older half-brother of Kim Jong-un - in February of this year sent a message to the world, but especially to China, which kept Kim Jong-nam around as an alternative to the current Kim. That Pyongyang went to the extreme lengths of poisoning Kim Jong-nam with VX nerve agent in a foreign airport suggests that Kim Jong-un is still worried about threats to his rule.13 If Beijing's economic sanctions continue to tighten in 2018, the military could conceivably see the Supreme Leader's aggressive foreign policy as a risk to regime survival. Third, Pyongyang could miscalculate and create a crisis from which it cannot deescalate. A provocation that disrupts international infrastructure and commerce or kills civilians from the U.S. or Japan could trigger a downward spiral. For instance, an attack against international shipping in the Yellow Sea or Sea of Japan by North Korean submarines would be an unprecedented act that the U.S. and Japan would likely retaliate against.14 We could see the U.S. following the script from Operation Praying Mantis in the Persian Gulf in 1988 - the largest surface engagement by the U.S. Navy since the Second World War. In that incident, the U.S. sunk half of Iran's navy in retaliation for the mining of the guided missile frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts. In the case of North Korea, this would primarily mean taking out its approximately 20 Romeo-class submarines and an unknown number of domestically-produced - Yugoslav-designed - newly built submarines. Such a conflict is not our baseline case, but we assign much higher probability to it than an all-out war on the Korean Peninsula. How would Pyongyang react to the sinking of its submarines? Our best case is that the regime would do nothing. The leadership in Pyongyang is massively constrained by its quantifiable military inferiority. True, North Korea has around 6 million military personnel - about 25% of the total population is under arms - but unfortunately for Pyongyang, this large army is arrayed against one of the most sophisticated defenses ever constructed by man: the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). To support its ground forces, North Korea would have at its disposal only about 20-30 Mig-29s. Countering two dozen jets would be South Korea's combined 177 F-15s and F-16s, plus American forces that would vary in size depending on how many aircraft carriers were deployed in the vicinity. Given that a single American aircraft carrier holds up to 48 fighter jets, North Koreans would quickly find themselves fighting a losing battle. Which is why they may never initiate one. If Kim Jong-un insists on retaliation, the military could remove and replace him with, for instance, his 30-year old sister, who has recently risen in party ranks, or his 36-year old brother Kim Jong-chul, who is apparently not entirely uninvolved in the regime despite living an unassuming life in Pyongyang. What would a regime change mean for the markets? It depends on whether it is successful or not. An unsuccessful coup could lead to a massive purge and likely a total break in Pyongyang's relations with the outside world, including China. This would seriously destabilize North Korea's decision-making. The global community would have to begin contemplating a total war on the Korean peninsula. Alternatively, a successful coup could lead to temporary volatility, yet long-term stability. The military regime in the North may even be open to reunification over the long term, depending on how U.S.-China relations evolve. Bottom Line: China does not want to cripple North Korea or throw a coup. But it is cooperating with sanctions and could therefore trigger one by mistake. At least two regimes have collapsed in the past when facing the pincer movement of economic sanctions and American military pressure - South Africa's apartheid regime in 1991 and Slobodan Miloševic's Yugoslavia in 1999. Kim Jong-un could face a similar fate, particularly if China applies excessive economic pressure. Black Swan 3: Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn There is no election scheduled in the U.K. for 2018, but if one were to be held the ruling Tories would be in trouble (Chart 10). In fact, the combined anti-Brexit forces are currently in a solid lead over the pro-Brexit parties, Conservatives and the U.K. Independence Party (UKIP) (Chart 11). Chart 10Labour Is In The Lead...
Labour Is In The Lead...
Labour Is In The Lead...
Chart 11...As Are Anti-Brexit Forces Writ-Large
...As Are Anti-Brexit Forces Writ-Large
...As Are Anti-Brexit Forces Writ-Large
What could trigger such an election? Ultimately, the final exit deal may prompt a new election. More immediately, the ongoing negotiations over the status of the Irish border would be a prime candidate. As our colleague Dhaval Joshi, head of BCA's European Investment Strategy noted recently, Prime Minister Theresa May's government is propped up by the Northern Irish Unionists to whom May has promised that there will be no hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. This will likely create a crisis as the EU negotiations may inadvertently threaten the Good Friday peace agreement. The Northern Ireland Unionists will not tolerate the border moving to the Irish Sea. This would effectively take Northern Ireland into the EU customs union and single market, and out of the U.K.'s domestic trading zone. It would also embolden Scotland's push for single market access. In essence, the Tory government may collapse because of differences within the U.K.'s "three kingdoms" before it even has the chance to collapse over differences with the EU.15 The market may cheer a Labour-Scottish National Party (SNP) coalition government, a potential winner of an early election, as it would mean that a new referendum on the U.K. leaving the EU could be held. The latest polls suggest that "Bremorse" (remorse for Brexit) has set in, as a clear majority in the U.K. thinks that Brexit was a bad idea (Chart 12). However, we suspect that it would take Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn several months, if not over a year, before he called such a referendum. First, Corbyn is on record supporting a soft Brexit, not a new referendum, and he has only just begun to adjust this position. Second, a soft Brexit is far more difficult to achieve than the hard Brexit of Prime Minister Theresa May since it requires the U.K. to subvert its sovereignty in significant ways (i.e., accepting EU regulation) in order to access the EU Common Market. Third, the most politically palatable way to re-do the referendum is to put a U.K.-EU deal up to the people to decide, which means that Corbyn first has to spend a long time negotiating that deal. Chart 12Bremorse Sets In
Bremorse Sets In
Bremorse Sets In
The market may be disappointed to find out that PM Corbyn is not willing or able to put the question of the U.K.'s EU exit up to a vote right away. Instead, the market would have to deal with Corbyn's economic policies, which are markedly left-wing. Corbyn harkens back to the 110 Propositions pour la France of French President François Mitterrand, if not exactly to the ghastly 1970s of the U.K.'s own history. A brief sample platter of Labour's proposals under Corbyn includes: Increasing the U.K. corporate tax rate to 26% from 20%; Increasing the minimum wage; Forcing companies not to out-source operations; Nationalizing public infrastructure companies. How should investors play a Corbyn victory? We think that the U.K. pound would likely rally on a higher probability of reversing Brexit. However, this "no Brexit" rally would quickly dissipate as PM Corbyn reiterated his promise to fulfill the democratic desire of the population to exit the EU. While Corbyn's negotiating team set to work on getting a better Brexit deal out of Brussels, the market would quickly turn its attention to the reality that Corbyn is not kidding about socialism.16 The result would be a selloff in the pound. Bottom Line: BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy has pointed out that the pound remains well below its fair value (Chart 13). However, as BCA's chief FX strategist Mathieu Savary points out, the valuation technicals may be misleading as the currency has entered a new economic, trade, and political paradigm. A Corbyn premiership is not clearly positive for Brexit, while opening up a completely different question: is the U.K. also exiting the free-market, laissez-faire paradigm that it has helped lead since May 1979? Black Swan 4: Italy Is A Black Swan Hiding In Plain Sight The spread between Italian and German 10-year government bonds has narrowed 72 basis points since April, suggesting that investors have grown comfortable with the risks associated with the Italian election due by May (Chart 14). There are three reasons why we agree with the market: Chart 13Pound Valuation Reflects Post-Brexit Paradigm
Pound Valuation Reflects Post-Brexit Paradigm
Pound Valuation Reflects Post-Brexit Paradigm
Chart 14Investors Not Worried About Italy
Investors Not Worried About Italy
Investors Not Worried About Italy
New electoral rules passed in October make it highly likely that a center-right alliance will take shape between the Forza Italia of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and the mildly Eurosketpic Lega Nord. These two could form a government alone, or in a grand coalition with the center-left Democratic Party (PD) (Chart 15). Both Lega Nord and the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) have moved to the center on the questions of European integration and membership in the currency union; The European migration crisis is over and its supposedly constant impact on Italy is waning (Chart 16). Meanwhile, Italy's economy is on the mend, with its banking sector finally following the Spanish trajectory with a drop in non-performing loans (Chart 17). Chart 15Italy Set For A Hung Parliament
Italy Set For A Hung Parliament
Italy Set For A Hung Parliament
Chart 16Migration Crisis Is Over (Yes, Even In Italy)
Migration Crisis Is Over (Yes, Even In Italy)
Migration Crisis Is Over (Yes, Even In Italy)
Chart 17Italian Recovery Is Just Starting
Italian Recovery Is Just Starting
Italian Recovery Is Just Starting
That said, we continue to warn clients that the underlying support for the common currency is lagging in Italy. The support level is just above 55%, despite a strong rally in the rest of the Euro Area (Chart 18). Similarly, over 40% of Italians appear confident in the country's future outside of the EU (Chart 19). Chart 18Italians Stand Out For Distrust Of Euro
Italians Stand Out For Distrust Of Euro
Italians Stand Out For Distrust Of Euro
Chart 19Italians Not Enthusiastic About EU
Italians Not Enthusiastic About EU
Italians Not Enthusiastic About EU
Our baseline case is that Italian elections will produce a weak and ineffective government, though crucially not a Euroskeptic one. How could we be wrong? Easy: one of the three reasons why we agree with the market could shift. For example, M5S could alter its pledge to remain in the Euro Area and surprisingly win on a Euroskeptic platform. Why would the party do something like that? Because it makes sense! Polls are already showing that M5S's recent moderation on the euro is not paying political dividends, with its support sharply sliding since the summer. With power quickly slipping out of reach for the party, why wouldn't they put a down-payment on the next election by trusting the underlying trend in opinion polling and investing in a Euroskeptic platform that might pay political dividends in the future? If we think that this strategy makes sense based on the data, then the M5S leadership might as well. Chart 20Can MIB Keep Outperforming?
Can MIB Keep Outperforming?
Can MIB Keep Outperforming?
Another scenario is a major terror attack perpetrated by recent migrants from North Africa. Italy has been spared from radical Islamic terror. As such, the country may not be as desensitized to it as other European nations. A strong showing by Lega Nord and the far-right Fratelli d'Italia could force Forza Italia to move to the right as well. On our travels, we have noticed that few investors want to talk about Italy. There is wide acknowledgement of the structural trends pointing to a rise of Euroskepticism in the country, but also an appearance of consensus that this is a problem for a later date. We agree with this consensus, but our conviction is low. Bottom Line: Italian election risk is completely unappreciated by the markets. The country's equity market is one of the best performing this year (Chart 20), while government bonds are pricing in no political risk as the election approaches. We believe that shorting both would present a good hedging opportunity. Black Swan 5: Bloodbath In Latin America Our last black swan risk is not really a black swan to us but a forecast we believe will happen. As we outlined last month, we fear that Chinese policy-induced credit contraction will be negative for emerging markets, as BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy data asserts (Chart 21). BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy has pointed out in its latest missive that its "Carry Canary Indicator" - performance of EM/JPY crosses - is signaling that a sharp deceleration in global growth is coming in Q1 2018 (Chart 22).17 Latin America (especially Chile, Peru, and Brazil) is the region most exposed to the combination of a slowing China and a China-induced drop in commodity prices. Chart 21When China Sneezes, EM Gets The Flu
When China Sneezes, EM Gets The Flu
When China Sneezes, EM Gets The Flu
Chart 22Ominous Signal From EM/JPY
Ominous Signal From EM/JPY
Ominous Signal From EM/JPY
From a political perspective, this is most negative for Brazil and Mexico. Both countries hold elections in 2018, with the Mexican election further complicated by the ongoing NAFTA renegotiations. We believe that the future of NAFTA hangs in the balance, with a high probability that the Trump administration will decide to abrogate the deal.18 Currently, anti-market political forces are in the lead in both countries. In Brazil, no pro-market candidate is leading in the polls (Chart 23). In fact, anti-market options have a 48% lead on the centrists. Granted, there are ten months until the election, but we are skeptical that the Brazilian population will change its mind and support reformers. If the "median voter" in Brazil supported reforms, the current Temer administration would have passed them already. In Mexico, anti-establishment candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador (also known as AMLO) is leading in the polls (Chart 24), as is his new party Morena (Chart 25). If Morena wins the most seats in the Mexican Congress, it will be more difficult for the opposition parties to combine to counter it.19 Chart 23There Is No Pro-Market Option In Brazil
There Is No Pro-Market Option In Brazil
There Is No Pro-Market Option In Brazil
Chart 24AMLO Is In The Lead ...
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
Chart 25...As Is Morena
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
In 2017, we argued that politics were not a tailwind for EM asset performance. Instead, investors chased yield in the favorable economic context of Chinese economic stimulus, low developed market yields, and a weak U.S. dollar. In reality, politics was just as dire in much of EM as it was in prior years of asset underperformance, but the surge of global liquidity in 2018 masked the problems. We do not think the EM rally is sustainable in 2018. As the global economic and market context shifts, investors will start paying attention. Suddenly, political problems will enter into focus. Here we argue that Brazil and Mexico are likely to be the main targets of portfolio outflows, but a strong case could be made for South Africa and Turkey as well.20 Bottom Line: Political risk in Latin America will return. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "U.S. Election: Outcomes & Investment Implications," dated November 9, 2016, and "Constraints & Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Reconciliation And The Markets - Warning: This Report May Put You To Sleep," dated May 31, 2017, "How Long Can The 'Trump Put' Last?" dated June 14, 2017, and "Is King Dollar Back?" dated October 4, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Geopolitics - From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 President Clinton launched the largest NATO military operation against Yugoslavia amidst impeachment proceedings against him while President George H. W. Bush ordered U.S. troops to Somalia a month after losing the 1992 election. Ironically, President George H. W. Bush intervened in Somalia in order to lock in the supposedly isolationist Bill Clinton, who had defeated him three weeks earlier, into an internationalist foreign policy. President George W. Bush ordered the "surge" of troops into Iraq in 2007 after losing both houses of Congress in 2006; President Obama arranged the Iranian nuclear deal after losing the Senate (and hence Congress) to the Republicans in 2014. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Particularly vulnerable, in our view, will be Cory Gardner (R, Colorado), Joni Ernst (R, Iowa), Susan Collins (R, Maine), and Thom Tillis (R, North Carolina). 7 U.S. Treasury Under Secretary for International Affairs David Malpass recently claimed that high-level talks had "stalled" and re-emphasized the U.S.'s structural complaints: "We are concerned that China's economic liberalization seems to have slowed or reversed, with the role of the state increasing ... State-owned enterprises have not faced hard budget constraints and China's industrial policy has become more and more problematic for foreign firms. Huge export credits are flowing in non-economic ways that distort markets." The growing presence of Communist Party cells within corporations is another important structural concern that puts the administration at loggerheads with China's leaders. Please see Andrew Mayeda and Saleha Mohsin, "US Rebukes China For Backing Off Market Embrace," Bloomberg, November 30, 2017, available at www.bloomberg.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Buy In May And Enjoy Your Day!" dated April 26, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market?" dated August 16, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy, "A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II," dated December 1, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see "North Korea: From Overstated To Understated" in BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Strategic Outlook 2016: Multipolarity & Markets," dated December 9, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. A notable coup attempt occurred in 1995-96 in North Hamgyong; something like a coup attempt may have occurred in 2013; and defectors from North Korea have reported various stories of plots and conspiracies against the regime. 12 After all, Peter predicted that Donald Trump would be a serious candidate for the U.S. presidency back in September 2015! 13 Still worried, that is, even after Kim Jong-un's supposed "consolidation of power" in 2013-14 when he executed his influential and China-aligned uncle, Jang Song Thaek, and purged the latter's faction. There were reports of rogue military operations at that time. With low troop morale reported by North Korean defectors, the possibility of insubordination cannot be ruled out. 14 A North Korean submarine sank the South Korean corvette Cheonan in 2010, and North Korean artillery shelled two islands killing South Korean civilians later that year, but these attacks were still within the norm of North Korean provocations. The two countries are still technically at war and have contested maritime as well as land borders. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 16 To help investors get ready for a Corbyn premiership, we thought his appearance on President Nicolás Maduro's weekly radio show would be a good place to start: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eL8_wtS-0I 17 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy, "Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades," dated December 1, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Global Investment Strategy, "NAFTA - Populism Vs. Pluto-Populism," dated November 10, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 19 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Emerging Markets Strategy "Update On Emerging Markets: Malaysia, Mexico, And The United States Of America," dated August 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "South Africa: Crisis Of Expectations," dated June 28, 2017, and "Turkey: Military Adventurism And Capital Controls," dated December 7, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Geopolitical Calendar
Highlights Geopolitical risks were overstated in 2017, but have now become understated; If Donald Trump becomes an early "lame duck" president, he will seek relevance abroad; This could mean a protectionist White House, or increased geopolitical tensions with Iran and North Korea; North Korean internal stability could come into question as economic sanctions begin to bite; Political risks in the U.K. and Italy could rise with markets overly complacent on both; Emerging markets, particularly Brazil and Mexico, will see renewed political risk. Feature Buoyant global growth, political stability in Europe, and steady policymakers' hands in China have fueled risk assets in 2017. As the year draws to a close, investors also have tax cuts in the U.S. to celebrate. Our high conviction view that tax cuts would happen - and that they would be fiscally profligate - is near the finish line.1 In making this call, we ignored the failure to repeal Obamacare, the "wisdom" of old "D.C. hands," and direct intelligence from a source inside the White House circle who swore tax reform would be revenue neutral. Throughout the year, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy remained confident that the GOP would ignore its fiscal conservative credentials and focus on the midterm elections.2 That election is increasingly looking like a bloodbath-in-the-making for the Republican Party (Chart 1). What of the latest opinion polls showing that the tax cuts are unpopular with half of all Americans? The polls also show that a solid one-third of all Americans remain in support of the Republican plan (Chart 2). We suspect - as do Republican strategists - that those are the Republicans who vote in midterm elections. Given the atrociously low turnout in midterm elections - just 36.4% of Americans voted in 2014 - Republicans need their base to turn out in November. The tax cuts are not about the wider American public but the Republican base. Chart 1Midterm Election: A Bloodbath?
Midterm Election: A Bloodbath?
Midterm Election: A Bloodbath?
Chart 2Republican Base Supports Tax Cuts
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
As we close the book on 2017, we look with trepidation towards 2018. Our main theme for next year is that the combination of economic stimulus from the tax cuts in the U.S. and structural reforms in China will create a U.S.-dollar-bullish policy mix that will combine into a headwind for global risk assets, particularly emerging market equities.3 However, in this report, we focus on some of the more exotic risks that investors may have to deal with. In particular we focus on five potential "black swans" - low probability, high market-impact events - that are neither on the market's radar nor the media's. To qualify for our list, the events must be: Unlikely: There must be less than a 20% probability that the event will occur in the next 12 months. Out of sight: The scenario we present should not be receiving media coverage, at least not as a serious market risk. Geopolitical: We must be able to identify the risk scenario through the lens of our geopolitical methodology. Genuinely unpredictable events - such as meteor strikes, pandemics, crippling cyber-attacks, solar flares, alien invasions, and failures in the computer program running the simulation that we call the universe - do not make the cut. Black Swan 1: Lame Duck Trump "Lame duck" presidents - leaders whose popularity late in their term has sunk so low that they can no longer affect policy - are said to be particularly adventurous in the foreign arena. While this adage has a spotty empirical record, there are several notable examples in recent memory.4 American presidents have few constitutional constraints when it comes to foreign policy. Therefore, when domestic constraints rise, U.S. presidents seek relevance abroad. Chart 3The Day After The Midterms, Trump's Overall Popularity Will Matter More Than That Among Republicans
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
President Trump may become the earliest, and lamest, lame duck president in recent U.S. history. While his Republican support remains healthy, his overall popularity is well below the average presidential approval rating at this point in the political cycle (Chart 3). Based on these poll numbers, his party is likely to underperform in the upcoming midterm election (Chart 4). A Democrat-led House of Representatives would have the votes to begin impeachment, which we would then consider likely in 2019. As we have argued in our "impeachment handbook," the market impact of such a crisis would ultimately depend on market fundamentals and the global context, not political intrigue.5 Chart 4Trump Is Becoming A Liability For The GOP
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
President Trump's political capital ahead of the midterm elections is based on his ability to influence Republican legislators. Despite low overall poll numbers, President Trump can use the threat of endorsing primary challengers against conservative peers in Congress to move his agenda in the legislature. He has effectively done this with tax cuts. However, the day after the midterm elections, President Trump's own numbers will matter for the GOP. Given that President Trump will be on the ballot in the 2020 general election, his low approval numbers with non-Republican voters will hang like an albatross around the party's neck. This is a serious issue, particularly given that 22 of the 33 Senators up for reelection in 2020 will be Republican.6 Robust economic growth and a roaring stock market have not boosted Trump's popularity so far. At the same time, a strong economy ready to translate into higher wages is about to be "pump-primed" by stimulative tax cuts (Chart 5). We would expect the result to be a stronger dollar, which should keep the U.S. trade deficit widening well into Trump's second year in office. At some point, this will become a sore political point, given Trump's protectionist rhetoric and his administration's focus on the trade balance as a key measure of U.S. power. Chart 5Wage Pressures Are Building
Wage Pressures Are Building
Wage Pressures Are Building
What kind of adventures would we expect to see President Trump embark on in 2018? There are three prime candidates: China-U.S. trade war: The Trump administration started off with threats against China and then proceeded to negotiations. However, neither the North Korean situation nor the trade deficit has seen substantial improvement, and a lame duck Trump administration would be more likely to resort to serious punitive actions. Even improvements on the Korean peninsula would not necessarily prevent Washington from getting tougher on Beijing over trade, as the Trump administration will be driven by domestic politics. Investors should carefully watch whether the World Trade Organization deems China a "market economy," which could trigger a U.S. backlash, and whether the various investigations by U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross result in anti-dumping and countervailing duties being imposed more frequently on specific Chinese exports. Thus far, the empirical evidence suggests that the Trump administration has picked up the pace of protectionist rulings (Chart 6). Notably, the Trump administration claims that the Comprehensive Economic Dialogue has "stalled," and it is reviving deeper, structural demands on Chinese policymakers.7 Iran Jingoism: Rumors that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson may be replaced by CIA Director Mike Pompeo - who would be replaced at the CIA by Senator Tom Cotton - can only mean one thing: the White House has Iran in its sights. Both Pompeo and Cotton are hawks on Iran. The administration may be preparing to shift its focus from North Korea, where American allies in the region are urging caution, to the Middle East, where American allies in the region are urging aggression. Investors should watch whether Tillerson is removed and especially how Congress reacts to President Trump's decision on October 15 to decertify the Iran nuclear agreement (also called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or JCPOA). The Republican-controlled Congress has until December 15 to reimpose sanctions on Iran that were suspended as part of the deal, with merely a simple majority needed in both chambers. However, President Trump will also have an opportunity, as early as January, to end waivers on a slew of sanctions that were not covered under the JCPOA. North Korea: It would be natural to slot North Korea as first on our list of potential foreign policy adventures for President Trump. However, it does not really fit our qualification of a black swan. North Korea is not "out of sight." Additionally, President Trump has already broken with the tradition of previous administrations by upping the pressure on Pyongyang. In fact, a North Korean black swan would be if President Trump succeeded in breaking the regime in Pyongyang. To that scenario we turn next. Chart 6Trump: Game Changer In U.S. Trade Policy?
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
Bottom Line: Geopolitics has not affected the markets in 2017, with risk assets reaching record highs and the VIX reaching record lows (Chart 7). This was our view throughout the year and we called for investors to "buy in May and have a nice day" as a result of our analysis.8 We do not see this as likely in 2018. The Trump administration has no credible legislative agenda after tax cuts. We expect Congress to stall as we enter the summer primary season and for the GOP to lose the House to the Democrats. President Trump is an astute political analyst and will sense these developments before they happen. There is a good chance that he will attempt to sway the election and pre-empt his lame duck status with an aggressive foreign policy. Chart 72017 Goldilocks: S&P 500 Up, VIX Down
2017 Goldilocks: S&P 500 Up, VIX Down
2017 Goldilocks: S&P 500 Up, VIX Down
Investment implications are twofold. First, we continue to recommend an equally weighted basket of Swiss 10-year bonds and gold as a portfolio hedge.9 Second, risk premium for oil prices should rise in 2018. Not only is the supply-demand balance favorable for oil prices, but geopolitical risks are likely to rise as well. Black Swan 2: A Coup In Pyongyang Our colleague Peter Berezin, BCA's Chief Global Strategist, has suggested that a coup d'état against Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un could be a black swan trigger that spooks the markets.10 While Peter used the scenario as a tongue-in-cheek way to weave Kim into a narrative that tells of a late 2019 recession, we have long raised North Korean domestic politics as the true Korean black swan.11 Here we entertain Peter's idea for three reasons.12 First, China has upped the economic pressure on Pyongyang. Under Kim Jong-un, the North Korean state has attempted some limited economic "opening up," namely to China. But the attempt to finalize the nuclear deterrent has delayed an already precarious process. There has now been a $617 million drop in Chinese imports from the country since the beginning of the year (Chart 8), with coal imports particularly affected (Chart 9). China has also pulled back on tourism. Meanwhile, North Korea's imports of Chinese goods have risen, which suggests that the country's current account balance may be widening. At some point, if these trends continue, Pyongyang will run out of foreign currency with which to purchase Chinese and Russian imports. Chart 8China Is Turning The Screws On Pyongyang...
China Is Turning The Screws On Pyongyang...
China Is Turning The Screws On Pyongyang...
Chart 9...Particularly On Coal Imports
...Particularly On Coal Imports
...Particularly On Coal Imports
Second, Pyongyang is well aware of pressures against the regime. The assassination of Kim Jong-nam - the older half-brother of Kim Jong-un - in February of this year sent a message to the world, but especially to China, which kept Kim Jong-nam around as an alternative to the current Kim. That Pyongyang went to the extreme lengths of poisoning Kim Jong-nam with VX nerve agent in a foreign airport suggests that Kim Jong-un is still worried about threats to his rule.13 If Beijing's economic sanctions continue to tighten in 2018, the military could conceivably see the Supreme Leader's aggressive foreign policy as a risk to regime survival. Third, Pyongyang could miscalculate and create a crisis from which it cannot deescalate. A provocation that disrupts international infrastructure and commerce or kills civilians from the U.S. or Japan could trigger a downward spiral. For instance, an attack against international shipping in the Yellow Sea or Sea of Japan by North Korean submarines would be an unprecedented act that the U.S. and Japan would likely retaliate against.14 We could see the U.S. following the script from Operation Praying Mantis in the Persian Gulf in 1988 - the largest surface engagement by the U.S. Navy since the Second World War. In that incident, the U.S. sunk half of Iran's navy in retaliation for the mining of the guided missile frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts. In the case of North Korea, this would primarily mean taking out its approximately 20 Romeo-class submarines and an unknown number of domestically-produced - Yugoslav-designed - newly built submarines. Such a conflict is not our baseline case, but we assign much higher probability to it than an all-out war on the Korean Peninsula. How would Pyongyang react to the sinking of its submarines? Our best case is that the regime would do nothing. The leadership in Pyongyang is massively constrained by its quantifiable military inferiority. True, North Korea has around 6 million military personnel - about 25% of the total population is under arms - but unfortunately for Pyongyang, this large army is arrayed against one of the most sophisticated defenses ever constructed by man: the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). To support its ground forces, North Korea would have at its disposal only about 20-30 Mig-29s. Countering two dozen jets would be South Korea's combined 177 F-15s and F-16s, plus American forces that would vary in size depending on how many aircraft carriers were deployed in the vicinity. Given that a single American aircraft carrier holds up to 48 fighter jets, North Koreans would quickly find themselves fighting a losing battle. Which is why they may never initiate one. If Kim Jong-un insists on retaliation, the military could remove and replace him with, for instance, his 30-year old sister, who has recently risen in party ranks, or his 36-year old brother Kim Jong-chul, who is apparently not entirely uninvolved in the regime despite living an unassuming life in Pyongyang. What would a regime change mean for the markets? It depends on whether it is successful or not. An unsuccessful coup could lead to a massive purge and likely a total break in Pyongyang's relations with the outside world, including China. This would seriously destabilize North Korea's decision-making. The global community would have to begin contemplating a total war on the Korean peninsula. Alternatively, a successful coup could lead to temporary volatility, yet long-term stability. The military regime in the North may even be open to reunification over the long term, depending on how U.S.-China relations evolve. Bottom Line: China does not want to cripple North Korea or throw a coup. But it is cooperating with sanctions and could therefore trigger one by mistake. At least two regimes have collapsed in the past when facing the pincer movement of economic sanctions and American military pressure - South Africa's apartheid regime in 1991 and Slobodan Miloševic's Yugoslavia in 1999. Kim Jong-un could face a similar fate, particularly if China applies excessive economic pressure. Black Swan 3: Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn There is no election scheduled in the U.K. for 2018, but if one were to be held the ruling Tories would be in trouble (Chart 10). In fact, the combined anti-Brexit forces are currently in a solid lead over the pro-Brexit parties, Conservatives and the U.K. Independence Party (UKIP) (Chart 11). Chart 10Labour Is In The Lead...
Labour Is In The Lead...
Labour Is In The Lead...
Chart 11...As Are Anti-Brexit Forces Writ-Large
...As Are Anti-Brexit Forces Writ-Large
...As Are Anti-Brexit Forces Writ-Large
What could trigger such an election? Ultimately, the final exit deal may prompt a new election. More immediately, the ongoing negotiations over the status of the Irish border would be a prime candidate. As our colleague Dhaval Joshi, head of BCA's European Investment Strategy noted recently, Prime Minister Theresa May's government is propped up by the Northern Irish Unionists to whom May has promised that there will be no hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. This will likely create a crisis as the EU negotiations may inadvertently threaten the Good Friday peace agreement. The Northern Ireland Unionists will not tolerate the border moving to the Irish Sea. This would effectively take Northern Ireland into the EU customs union and single market, and out of the U.K.'s domestic trading zone. It would also embolden Scotland's push for single market access. In essence, the Tory government may collapse because of differences within the U.K.'s "three kingdoms" before it even has the chance to collapse over differences with the EU.15 The market may cheer a Labour-Scottish National Party (SNP) coalition government, a potential winner of an early election, as it would mean that a new referendum on the U.K. leaving the EU could be held. The latest polls suggest that "Bremorse" (remorse for Brexit) has set in, as a clear majority in the U.K. thinks that Brexit was a bad idea (Chart 12). However, we suspect that it would take Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn several months, if not over a year, before he called such a referendum. First, Corbyn is on record supporting a soft Brexit, not a new referendum, and he has only just begun to adjust this position. Second, a soft Brexit is far more difficult to achieve than the hard Brexit of Prime Minister Theresa May since it requires the U.K. to subvert its sovereignty in significant ways (i.e., accepting EU regulation) in order to access the EU Common Market. Third, the most politically palatable way to re-do the referendum is to put a U.K.-EU deal up to the people to decide, which means that Corbyn first has to spend a long time negotiating that deal. Chart 12Bremorse Sets In
Bremorse Sets In
Bremorse Sets In
The market may be disappointed to find out that PM Corbyn is not willing or able to put the question of the U.K.'s EU exit up to a vote right away. Instead, the market would have to deal with Corbyn's economic policies, which are markedly left-wing. Corbyn harkens back to the 110 Propositions pour la France of French President François Mitterrand, if not exactly to the ghastly 1970s of the U.K.'s own history. A brief sample platter of Labour's proposals under Corbyn includes: Increasing the U.K. corporate tax rate to 26% from 20%; Increasing the minimum wage; Forcing companies not to out-source operations; Nationalizing public infrastructure companies. How should investors play a Corbyn victory? We think that the U.K. pound would likely rally on a higher probability of reversing Brexit. However, this "no Brexit" rally would quickly dissipate as PM Corbyn reiterated his promise to fulfill the democratic desire of the population to exit the EU. While Corbyn's negotiating team set to work on getting a better Brexit deal out of Brussels, the market would quickly turn its attention to the reality that Corbyn is not kidding about socialism.16 The result would be a selloff in the pound. Bottom Line: BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy has pointed out that the pound remains well below its fair value (Chart 13). However, as BCA's chief FX strategist Mathieu Savary points out, the valuation technicals may be misleading as the currency has entered a new economic, trade, and political paradigm. A Corbyn premiership is not clearly positive for Brexit, while opening up a completely different question: is the U.K. also exiting the free-market, laissez-faire paradigm that it has helped lead since May 1979? Black Swan 4: Italy Is A Black Swan Hiding In Plain Sight The spread between Italian and German 10-year government bonds has narrowed 72 basis points since April, suggesting that investors have grown comfortable with the risks associated with the Italian election due by May (Chart 14). There are three reasons why we agree with the market: Chart 13Pound Valuation Reflects Post-Brexit Paradigm
Pound Valuation Reflects Post-Brexit Paradigm
Pound Valuation Reflects Post-Brexit Paradigm
Chart 14Investors Not Worried About Italy
Investors Not Worried About Italy
Investors Not Worried About Italy
New electoral rules passed in October make it highly likely that a center-right alliance will take shape between the Forza Italia of former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and the mildly Eurosketpic Lega Nord. These two could form a government alone, or in a grand coalition with the center-left Democratic Party (PD) (Chart 15). Both Lega Nord and the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) have moved to the center on the questions of European integration and membership in the currency union; The European migration crisis is over and its supposedly constant impact on Italy is waning (Chart 16). Meanwhile, Italy's economy is on the mend, with its banking sector finally following the Spanish trajectory with a drop in non-performing loans (Chart 17). Chart 15Italy Set For A Hung Parliament
Italy Set For A Hung Parliament
Italy Set For A Hung Parliament
Chart 16Migration Crisis Is Over (Yes, Even In Italy)
Migration Crisis Is Over (Yes, Even In Italy)
Migration Crisis Is Over (Yes, Even In Italy)
Chart 17Italian Recovery Is Just Starting
Italian Recovery Is Just Starting
Italian Recovery Is Just Starting
That said, we continue to warn clients that the underlying support for the common currency is lagging in Italy. The support level is just above 55%, despite a strong rally in the rest of the Euro Area (Chart 18). Similarly, over 40% of Italians appear confident in the country's future outside of the EU (Chart 19). Chart 18Italians Stand Out For Distrust Of Euro
Italians Stand Out For Distrust Of Euro
Italians Stand Out For Distrust Of Euro
Chart 19Italians Not Enthusiastic About EU
Italians Not Enthusiastic About EU
Italians Not Enthusiastic About EU
Our baseline case is that Italian elections will produce a weak and ineffective government, though crucially not a Euroskeptic one. How could we be wrong? Easy: one of the three reasons why we agree with the market could shift. For example, M5S could alter its pledge to remain in the Euro Area and surprisingly win on a Euroskeptic platform. Why would the party do something like that? Because it makes sense! Polls are already showing that M5S's recent moderation on the euro is not paying political dividends, with its support sharply sliding since the summer. With power quickly slipping out of reach for the party, why wouldn't they put a down-payment on the next election by trusting the underlying trend in opinion polling and investing in a Euroskeptic platform that might pay political dividends in the future? If we think that this strategy makes sense based on the data, then the M5S leadership might as well. Chart 20Can MIB Keep Outperforming?
Can MIB Keep Outperforming?
Can MIB Keep Outperforming?
Another scenario is a major terror attack perpetrated by recent migrants from North Africa. Italy has been spared from radical Islamic terror. As such, the country may not be as desensitized to it as other European nations. A strong showing by Lega Nord and the far-right Fratelli d'Italia could force Forza Italia to move to the right as well. On our travels, we have noticed that few investors want to talk about Italy. There is wide acknowledgement of the structural trends pointing to a rise of Euroskepticism in the country, but also an appearance of consensus that this is a problem for a later date. We agree with this consensus, but our conviction is low. Bottom Line: Italian election risk is completely unappreciated by the markets. The country's equity market is one of the best performing this year (Chart 20), while government bonds are pricing in no political risk as the election approaches. We believe that shorting both would present a good hedging opportunity. Black Swan 5: Bloodbath In Latin America Our last black swan risk is not really a black swan to us but a forecast we believe will happen. As we outlined last month, we fear that Chinese policy-induced credit contraction will be negative for emerging markets, as BCA's Emerging Markets Strategy data asserts (Chart 21). BCA's Foreign Exchange Strategy has pointed out in its latest missive that its "Carry Canary Indicator" - performance of EM/JPY crosses - is signaling that a sharp deceleration in global growth is coming in Q1 2018 (Chart 22).17 Latin America (especially Chile, Peru, and Brazil) is the region most exposed to the combination of a slowing China and a China-induced drop in commodity prices. Chart 21When China Sneezes, EM Gets The Flu
When China Sneezes, EM Gets The Flu
When China Sneezes, EM Gets The Flu
Chart 22Ominous Signal From EM/JPY
Ominous Signal From EM/JPY
Ominous Signal From EM/JPY
From a political perspective, this is most negative for Brazil and Mexico. Both countries hold elections in 2018, with the Mexican election further complicated by the ongoing NAFTA renegotiations. We believe that the future of NAFTA hangs in the balance, with a high probability that the Trump administration will decide to abrogate the deal.18 Currently, anti-market political forces are in the lead in both countries. In Brazil, no pro-market candidate is leading in the polls (Chart 23). In fact, anti-market options have a 48% lead on the centrists. Granted, there are ten months until the election, but we are skeptical that the Brazilian population will change its mind and support reformers. If the "median voter" in Brazil supported reforms, the current Temer administration would have passed them already. In Mexico, anti-establishment candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador (also known as AMLO) is leading in the polls (Chart 24), as is his new party Morena (Chart 25). If Morena wins the most seats in the Mexican Congress, it will be more difficult for the opposition parties to combine to counter it.19 Chart 23There Is No Pro-Market Option In Brazil
There Is No Pro-Market Option In Brazil
There Is No Pro-Market Option In Brazil
Chart 24AMLO Is In The Lead ...
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
Chart 25...As Is Morena
Five Black Swans In 2018
Five Black Swans In 2018
In 2017, we argued that politics were not a tailwind for EM asset performance. Instead, investors chased yield in the favorable economic context of Chinese economic stimulus, low developed market yields, and a weak U.S. dollar. In reality, politics was just as dire in much of EM as it was in prior years of asset underperformance, but the surge of global liquidity in 2018 masked the problems. We do not think the EM rally is sustainable in 2018. As the global economic and market context shifts, investors will start paying attention. Suddenly, political problems will enter into focus. Here we argue that Brazil and Mexico are likely to be the main targets of portfolio outflows, but a strong case could be made for South Africa and Turkey as well.20 Bottom Line: Political risk in Latin America will return. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "U.S. Election: Outcomes & Investment Implications," dated November 9, 2016, and "Constraints & Preferences Of The Trump Presidency," dated November 30, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Reconciliation And The Markets - Warning: This Report May Put You To Sleep," dated May 31, 2017, "How Long Can The 'Trump Put' Last?" dated June 14, 2017, and "Is King Dollar Back?" dated October 4, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Geopolitics - From Overstated To Understated Risks," dated November 22, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 President Clinton launched the largest NATO military operation against Yugoslavia amidst impeachment proceedings against him while President George H. W. Bush ordered U.S. troops to Somalia a month after losing the 1992 election. Ironically, President George H. W. Bush intervened in Somalia in order to lock in the supposedly isolationist Bill Clinton, who had defeated him three weeks earlier, into an internationalist foreign policy. President George W. Bush ordered the "surge" of troops into Iraq in 2007 after losing both houses of Congress in 2006; President Obama arranged the Iranian nuclear deal after losing the Senate (and hence Congress) to the Republicans in 2014. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Break Glass In Case Of Impeachment," dated May 17, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 6 Particularly vulnerable, in our view, will be Cory Gardner (R, Colorado), Joni Ernst (R, Iowa), Susan Collins (R, Maine), and Thom Tillis (R, North Carolina). 7 U.S. Treasury Under Secretary for International Affairs David Malpass recently claimed that high-level talks had "stalled" and re-emphasized the U.S.'s structural complaints: "We are concerned that China's economic liberalization seems to have slowed or reversed, with the role of the state increasing ... State-owned enterprises have not faced hard budget constraints and China's industrial policy has become more and more problematic for foreign firms. Huge export credits are flowing in non-economic ways that distort markets." The growing presence of Communist Party cells within corporations is another important structural concern that puts the administration at loggerheads with China's leaders. Please see Andrew Mayeda and Saleha Mohsin, "US Rebukes China For Backing Off Market Embrace," Bloomberg, November 30, 2017, available at www.bloomberg.com. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Buy In May And Enjoy Your Day!" dated April 26, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Can Pyongyang Derail The Bull Market?" dated August 16, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 10 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy, "A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II," dated December 1, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 11 Please see "North Korea: From Overstated To Understated" in BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Strategic Outlook 2016: Multipolarity & Markets," dated December 9, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. A notable coup attempt occurred in 1995-96 in North Hamgyong; something like a coup attempt may have occurred in 2013; and defectors from North Korea have reported various stories of plots and conspiracies against the regime. 12 After all, Peter predicted that Donald Trump would be a serious candidate for the U.S. presidency back in September 2015! 13 Still worried, that is, even after Kim Jong-un's supposed "consolidation of power" in 2013-14 when he executed his influential and China-aligned uncle, Jang Song Thaek, and purged the latter's faction. There were reports of rogue military operations at that time. With low troop morale reported by North Korean defectors, the possibility of insubordination cannot be ruled out. 14 A North Korean submarine sank the South Korean corvette Cheonan in 2010, and North Korean artillery shelled two islands killing South Korean civilians later that year, but these attacks were still within the norm of North Korean provocations. The two countries are still technically at war and have contested maritime as well as land borders. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 16 To help investors get ready for a Corbyn premiership, we thought his appearance on President Nicolás Maduro's weekly radio show would be a good place to start: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eL8_wtS-0I 17 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy, "Canaries In The Coal Mine Alert: EM/JPY Carry Trades," dated December 1, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Global Investment Strategy, "NAFTA - Populism Vs. Pluto-Populism," dated November 10, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 19 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Emerging Markets Strategy "Update On Emerging Markets: Malaysia, Mexico, And The United States Of America," dated August 9, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "South Africa: Crisis Of Expectations," dated June 28, 2017, and "Turkey: Military Adventurism And Capital Controls," dated December 7, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Geopolitical Calendar
Dear Client, This is the second of a two-part Special Report imagining a hypothetical timeline of key economic and financial events spanning the next five years. Last week's report covered the period from the present to the brewing crisis in October 2019. This week's report examines the subsequent three years. Broadly speaking, the events described in these two reports correspond with our view that the global economy will continue to expand into the second half of 2019, before succumbing to a recession and a decade of stagflation in the 2020s. This warrants an overweight position in risk assets for the next 6-to-12 months, but a much more cautious stance thereafter. Charts 1-4 provide a visual representation of how we see the main asset classes evolving over the coming years. In addition to this report, we are publishing our monthly Tactical Asset Allocation table and supporting indicators today. These can be accessed directly from our website. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist III. The Reckoning Continued from last week... October 25, 2019: All hell breaks loose. North Korea's state broadcaster announces that Kim Jong-un has been "incapacitated". It later turns out that the tubby tyrant was killed by a group of military officers. Having not slept for days, Kim had become increasingly erratic and paranoid. Convinced that he was surrounded by spies and that Trump had deployed a secret weapon to read his mind, he ordered the execution of many people in his inner circle. Fearing for their lives, his henchmen decided to strike first. October 31, 2019: North Korea's new military rulers signal a desire for closer relations with China and a less belligerent posture towards the South. Over the coming decades, historians will debate whether Trump's tactics were a reckless gambit that luckily paid off, or the work of a master strategist playing 3D chess while everyone else was playing backgammon. Trump himself wastes no time in taking credit for ousting the Kim dynasty. November 4, 2019: The relief investors feel from the ebbing of tensions in the Korean Peninsula does not last long. The turmoil in emerging markets intensifies. A series of high-profile defaults rock the Chinese corporate debt market. Copper and iron ore prices nosedive. Brent swoons to $39/bbl. November 5, 2019: The head of Brazil's central bank resigns after the government pressures it to increase its holdings of government bonds in an effort to ward off an imminent default. The Brazilian real falls to nearly 6 against the dollar. Other EM currencies plunge. The Turkish lira is particularly badly hurt. December 6, 2019: The pain on Wall Street finally spreads to Main Street. U.S. payrolls rise by only 19,000 in November. Subsequent revisions ultimately show a drop of 45,000 for that month. The NBER will eventually go on to declare November as the start of the recession. December 11, 2019: Having raised rates just three months earlier, the FOMC cuts rates by 25 basis points and signals that it is willing to keep easing if economic conditions deteriorate further. December 16, 2019: Markets initially cheer the prospect of lower rates, but the euphoria is quickly forgotten. Credit spreads soar as investors price in an increasingly bleak economic outlook. Commercial real estate prices fall. Banks further tighten lending standards. IV. A Global Recession December 19, 2019: The recession spreads around the world. The ECB ditches plans to raise rates. The U.K., Sweden, Norway, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand all cut rates. In the emerging world, Korea, Taiwan, and Poland reduce interest rates, but a number of other countries - most notably, Turkey, South Africa, and Malaysia raise rates in a desperate bid to prop up their currencies so as to keep the local-currency value of their foreign-currency obligations from spiraling out of control. December 31, 2019: The S&P 500 closes at 2194, down 21% for the year. Most other bourses fare even worse. The U.S. dollar, which peaked against the euro at $1.02 just six weeks earlier, finishes at $1.07. The 10-year Treasury yield closes at 2.37%, down 68 basis points on the year. The 10-year German bund yield falls back to 0.5%. January 11, 2020: In a surprise twist, WikiLeaks reveals that the CIA has found no credible evidence that Russia had any material influence over the 2016 elections, but that Putin has been trying to cultivate the impression that it did. The document disparagingly notes that "Putin has relished the U.S. media's characterization of him as a master political manipulator with global reach, when in fact he is just the ruler of an impoverished, demographically depleted, militarily overextended country." The Mueller probe fizzles out. January 27, 2020: Voting in the Democratic primaries begins. Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, and Sherrod Brown lead a crowded field of hopefuls. Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden choose not to run. Brown enjoys the biggest lead against Trump in head-to-head polls, but his support among primary voters is weighed down by his status as a cisgendered white male. January 28, 2020: On the other side of the Atlantic, the U.K. holds another referendum - this one to ratify the separation agreement reached with the EU. The terms of the agreement are widely regarded as being highly unfavorable to the U.K. Prime Minister Corbyn, having formed a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats and the SNP following elections in late 2018, makes it clear that a rejection of the deal is tantamount to a vote to stay in the EU. With the British economy in the doldrums, 53% of voters reject the deal. The U.K. remains in the EU. EUR/GBP falls to 0.84. January 29, 2020: The Fed cuts rates by another 25 basis points. Hiking rates once per quarter was good enough when unemployment was falling. However, now that the economy is on the rocks, the Fed reverts to a more aggressive loosening cycle, cutting rates once per meeting. Even so, a growing chorus of voices both inside and outside the Fed argue that it is not doing enough. February 17, 2020: Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren pull out ahead in the Democratic primaries. Similar to the Clinton/Sanders duel in 2016, Warren polls best among younger, whiter voters, while Harris leads among minorities and establishment Democrats. March 10, 2020: Donald Trump, seeing his poll numbers tank after the post-Korea bump, unilaterally raises trade barriers across a wide variety of industries. Foreign producers retaliate, leading to a contraction in global trade. April 26, 2020: Warren's relentless characterization of Harris as a shill for moneyed interests pays off. The Massachusetts senator secures the Democratic nomination. Hollywood celebrities line up to support Warren. Taylor Swift's silence on the matter is deafening, leading to a further increase in her album sales. June 5, 2020: The U.S. unemployment rate surges to 5.1%. Corporate America sees a wave of business closings, with the retail sector being particularly badly hit. July 21, 2020: The bellwether German IFO index falls to a multi-year low. Germany's manufacturing sector feels the pinch from the collapse in demand for capital equipment, especially from emerging markets. Merkel's popularity plummets after it is revealed that she tried to suppress data that more than half of asylum seekers classified as children were actually adults. Support for the Alternative for Deutschland Party, which by this time has greatly moderated its anti-EU rhetoric, rises sharply. August 17, 2020: The trade-weighted yen continues to strengthen, pushing Japan deeper into recession. In response, the Japanese government announces a major new stimulus package. In the clearest attempt yet to link fiscal with monetary policy, the authorities pledge to start issuing consumption vouchers to households, the value of which will be incrementally increased until long-term inflation expectations rise to the Bank of Japan's 2% target. The policy proves to be a smashing success. September 9, 2020: The U.S. presidential campaign ends up being even more divisive than the one in 2016. Unlike four years earlier, equities rally at any glimmer of hope that Trump will win. However, with unemployment rising, such moments prove few and far between. September 22, 2020: Senator Warren states on the campaign trail that she will not renominate Jay Powell in 2022 for a second term as Fed chair if she is elected president. Lael Brainard's name is floated as a likely replacement. V. The Return Of Stagflation October 13, 2020: Green shoots appear in the U.S. economy, marking the end of the recession. The unemployment rate rises for another two months, peaking at 6.8% in December. Other economies also begin to turn the corner. November 3, 2020: The tentative improvement in U.S. economic data happens too late to bail out Trump. Elizabeth Warren wins the presidential election. Warren loses Ohio but picks up Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. An influx of Democratic voters from Puerto Rico puts her over the top in Florida. The Democrats take back control of the Senate. November 4, 2020: The S&P 500 barely moves the day after the election, having already priced in the outcome months earlier. Still, at 2085, the index is 26% below its February 2019 peak. December 2, 2020: President-elect Warren pledges to introduce a major spending package after she is inaugurated. She brushes off concerns from some economists that fiscal stimulus is coming too late, noting that the unemployment rate is more than three points higher than it was one year earlier. Stocks rally on the news. January 27, 2021: The FOMC votes to keep rates on hold at 1%. Lael Brainard dissents, arguing that further monetary stimulus is necessary. March 19, 2021: The Chinese government shifts more bad loans from commercial banks into specially-designed state-owned asset management companies. The banks generally receive well above-market prices for their loans. Chinese bank shares move higher. April 2, 2021: Congress proposes to significantly raise taxes on higher-income earners and corporations with more than 500 employees and use the proceeds to fund an expansion of the Affordable Care Act. It also promises to introduces a "Tobin tax" on financial transactions. The post-election stock market rally fades. June 8, 2021: In a seminal speech, Lael Brainard argues that current inflation measures fail to adequately correct for technological improvements and other methodological issues. She suggests that this leads to an overstatement of the true level of inflation. The implication, she concludes, is that an inflation target of 2.5%-to-3% would be consistent with the Fed's existing mandate. September 24, 2021: Many Trump-era deregulation measures are rolled back. Anti-trust efforts are also ramped up. Despite an improving economy, the S&P 500 sinks to 2031, marking a five-year low. November 17, 2021: A wave of panic selling grips Wall Street. The S&P 500 crashes to 1969, down 31% from its February 2019 peak. As is often the case, this marks the bottom of the equity bear market. The subsequent recovery, however, proves to be tepid and prone to numerous setbacks. January 31, 2022: Thanks to ample fiscal stimulus, inflation in Japan rebounds from its recession lows. Aggregate income growth slows as more Japanese workers exit the labor force, but spending holds up as health care expenditures continue to climb. Japan's current account moves into a structural deficit position. February 16, 2022: Lael Brainard succeeds Jay Powell as Fed chair. The decision by Republicans in 2013 to reduce the number of senators necessary to approve appointments to the Fed board from 60 to 51 ensures smooth sailing for Brainard during congressional hearings and the confirmation of a slew of highly dovish candidates over the subsequent two years. April 6, 2022: China belatedly introduces modest financial incentives to encourage couples to have more children. The public jokingly dubs this as the new "at least one child policy". It ends up having little effect. Future Chinese scholars will end up describing China's failure to arrest the decline in its population as its greatest geopolitical blunder. July 20, 2022: The U.S. becomes the latest country to introduce strict restrictions on the use of bitcoin. Although the U.S. government never says so, fears that bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies will eat into the $75 billion in seigniorage revenue that the Treasury earns every year underpins the decision. The price of bitcoin falls to $550, down 95% from its all-time high. September 29, 2022: Japan officially abandons its yield-curve targeting regime. The 30-year yield rises to 2.5%. Faced with onerous long-term debt-servicing costs and stagnant tax revenues, the government starts refinancing much more of its debt through short-term borrowings. The Bank of Japan obliges, keeping short-term rates near zero. The combination of negative short-term real rates and higher inflation allows Japan to reduce its debt-to-GDP ratio over time. This proves to be the modus operandi for Japan and many other fiscally-challenged governments over the coming decades. October 18, 2022: Productivity growth in most developed economies continues to disappoint. For the first time in modern history, the flow of new workers entering the labor force are no better skilled or educated than the ones leaving. With potential GDP growing at a lackluster pace, output gaps disappear, setting in motion the acceleration in inflation over the remainder of the decade. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield rises to 4%. It will be over 6% by the middle of the decade. November 22, 2022: The price of gold surpasses its previous high of $1895/oz. The 2020s turn out to be an excellent decade for bullion. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Chart 1Market Outlook: Equities
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Chart 2Market Outlook: Bonds
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Chart 3Market Outlook: Currencies
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Chart 4Market Outlook: Commodities
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Tactical Global Asset Allocation Recommendations Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Dear Client, In this report, we image a hypothetical timeline of key economic and financial events spanning the next five years. The events described in the report correspond with our view that the global economy will continue to expand into the second half of 2019, before succumbing to a recession and a decade of stagflation in the 2020s. This warrants an overweight position in risk assets for the next 6-to-12 months, but a much more cautious stance thereafter. Charts 1-4 provide a visual representation of how we see the main asset classes evolving over the coming years. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Feature I. The Blow-Off Phase December 4, 2017: U.S. stocks fall by 1.7% on reports that Mitch McConnell does not have enough votes to get the tax bill through the Senate. A sell-off in high-yield markets and a tightening of financial conditions in China aggravate the situation. December 13, 2017: The Fed hikes rates by 25 basis points, taking the Fed funds target range to 1.25%-to-1.5%. December 14, 2017: Global equities continue to weaken. The S&P 500 suffers its first 5% correction since June 2016. December 15, 2017: The correction ends on news that the Senate will consider a revised bill which trims the size of corporate tax cuts and uses the savings to finance a temporary reduction in payroll taxes. President Trump and House leaders promise to go along with the proposal. The PBoC also injects fresh liquidity into the Chinese financial system. December 29, 2017: Global equities rally into year-end. The S&P 500 hits 2571 on December 29, placing it just shy of its November high. The dollar also strengthens, with EUR/USD closing at 1.162. The 10-year Treasury yield finishes the year at 2.42%. January 10, 2018: The global cyclical bull market in stocks continues. European and Japanese indices power higher. Both the NASDAQ and the S&P 500 hit fresh record highs. EM stocks move up but lag their DM peers, weighed down by a stronger dollar. January 12, 2018: U.S. retail sales surprise on the upside. Department store stocks, having been written off for dead just a few months earlier, end up rising by an average of 40% between November 2017 and the end of January. February 14, 2018: The euro area economy continues to grow at an above-trend pace. Nevertheless, inflation stays muted due to high levels of spare capacity across most of the region and the lagged effects of a stronger euro. The 2-year OIS spread between the U.S. and the euro area widens to a multi-year high. February 26, 2018: China's construction sector cools a notch, but industrial activity remains robust, spurred on by a cheap currency, strong global growth, and rising producer prices. Chinese H-shares rise 13% year-to-date, beating out most other EM equity indices. March 14, 2018: The U.S., Canada, and Mexico reach a last-minute deal to preserve NAFTA. The Canadian dollar and Mexican peso breathe a sigh of relief. March 16, 2018: In a surprise decision, Donald Trump nominates Kevin Hassett as Fed vice-chair. Trump cites the "tremendous job" Hassett did in selling the GOP's tax cuts. A number of Fed appointments follow. Most of the picks turn out to be more hawkish than investors had expected. This gives the greenback further support. March 18, 2018: Pro-EU parties do better than anticipated in the Italian elections. Italian bond spreads compress versus the rest of Europe. March 21, 2018: The Fed raises rates again, bringing the fed funds target range up to 1.50%-to-1.75%. April 8, 2018: Bank of Japan governor Kuroda is granted another term in office. He pledges to remain single-mindedly focused on eradicating deflation. April 11, 2018: Chinese core CPI inflation reaches 2.9%. Producer price inflation stays elevated at 6%. A major market theme in 2018 turns out to be how China went from being a source of global deflationary pressures to a source of inflationary ones. April 30, 2018: U.S. core PCE inflation jumps 0.3% in March, reaching 1.7% on a year-over-year basis. Goods and service inflation both pick up, while the base effects from lower cell phone data charges in the prior year drop out of the calculations. May 17, 2018: Oil prices continue to rise on the back of ongoing discipline from OPEC and Russia, smaller-than-expected shale output growth, and production disruptions in Libya, Iraq, Nigeria, and Venezuela. June 13, 2018: Strong U.S. growth in the first half of the year, a larger-than-projected decline in the unemployment rate, and higher inflation keep the Fed in tightening mode. The FOMC hikes rates again. June 25, 2018: Global capital spending accelerates further. Global industrial stocks go on to have a banner year. June 27, 2018: Wage growth in the U.S. accelerates to a cycle high. Donald Trump takes credit, stating that "this wouldn't have happened" without him or his tax cuts. July 31, 2018: The Japanese labor market tightens further. The unemployment rate falls to 2.6%, 1.2 percentage points below 2007 levels, while the ratio of job vacancies-to-applicants moves further above its early-1990s bubble high. A number of high-profile companies announce plans to raise wages. August 2, 2018: A brief summer sell-off sees global equities dip temporarily, but strong global earnings growth keeps the cyclical bull market in stocks intact. August 28, 2018: The London housing market continues to weaken, with home prices falling by 9% from their peak. The rest of the U.K. economy remains fairly resilient, however. EUR/GBP closes at 0.87. August 31, 2018: The Greek bailout program ends and a new one begins. Greece's economy continues to recover, but Tsipras fails to obtain debt relief from creditors. September 7, 2018: The U.S. unemployment rate falls to a 49-year low of 3.7%, nearly a full percentage below the Fed's estimate of NAIRU. September 26, 2018: The Fed raises rates again. By now, the market has gone from pricing in only two hikes for 2018 at the start of the year to pricing in almost four. September 27, 2018: Profit growth in the U.S. moderates somewhat as higher wage costs take a bite out of earnings. Nevertheless, stock market sentiment remains buoyant. Retail participation, which had been dormant for years, takes off. CNBC sees a surge in viewers. Micro cap stocks go wild. October 7, 2018: The outcome of Brazil's elections shows little appetite for major structural reforms. Economic populism lives on. October 31, 2018: Realized inflation and inflation expectations continue grinding higher in Japan, triggering market speculation that the BoJ will abandon its yield-curve targeting policy. The resulting rally in the yen is short-lived, however. At its monetary policy meeting, the Bank of Japan indicates that it has no near-term plans to modify its existing strategy. November 6, 2018: The Democrats narrowly regain control of the House but fail to recapture the Senate. Investors shrug off the results, figuring correctly that a Republican Senate will keep Trump's corporate tax cuts in place and that Democrats will agree to extend the expiring payroll tax cut and other tax measures that benefit the middle class. December 7, 2018: The U.S. unemployment rate falls to 3.5%. Donald Trump tweets "You're welcome, America". December 19, 2018: The Fed raises rates for the fourth time that year - one more hike than it had signaled in its December 2017 "dot plot" - taking the fed funds target range to 2.25%-2.5%. December 31, 2018: The MSCI All-Country Index finishes up 12% for the year (in local-currency terms), led by the euro area and Japan. U.S. stocks gain 8%. EM equities manage to rise 6%. Small caps edge out large caps, value stocks beat growth stocks, and cyclical stocks outperform defensives. December 31, 2018: The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield finishes the year at 3.05%. German bund yields reach 0.82%, U.K. gilt yields rise to 1.7%, Canadian yields hit 2.3%, and Australian yields back up to 3%. Japanese 10-year yields remain broadly flat, but the 20-year yield moves up 40 basis points to nearly 1%. Credit spreads finish the year close to where they started, providing a modest carry pick-up over high-quality government bonds. December 31, 2018: The DXY index rises 4% to 98. EUR/USD closes at 1.11, USD/JPY at 123, GBP/USD at 1.31, and AUD/USD at 0.76. The Canadian dollar manages to edge up against the greenback on the year, with CAD/USD finishing at 0.81. The Chinese yuan also strengthens to 6.4 versus the dollar. December 31, 2018: Brent and WTI spot prices finish the year at $65 and $63, respectively. Copper and metal prices are broadly flat for the year, having faced the dueling forces of a stronger dollar (a negative) and above-trend global growth (a positive). Gold sinks to $1,226. II. The Clouds Darken February 22, 2019: The global economy starts to decelerate. The slowdown is led by China, where the government's crackdown on shadow banking activities begins to take a bigger toll on growth. Most measures of U.S. economic activity also soften somewhat in the first two months of the year. Investors take heart in the hope that the economy will achieve a soft landing, allowing the Fed to moderate the pace of rate hikes. February 27, 2019: In an otherwise mundane day, the S&P 500 edges up 0.3% to 2832. Little do investors know that this marks the cyclical peak in the U.S. stock market. March 13, 2019: Hopes that the Fed can take its foot off the brake are dashed when the Bureau of Labor Statistics reveals that inflation rose by more than expected in February. U.S. core CPI inflation increases to 2.9% while the core PCE deflator accelerates to 2.4%. Market chatter turns from whether the Fed can slow the pace of rate hikes to whether it needs to start hiking more rapidly than once-per-quarter. The S&P falls 2.1% on the day. March 20, 2019: The Fed lifts the funds rate target range to 2.5%-to-2.75% and signals a readiness to keep hiking rates. The 10-year Treasury yield rises to 3.3%. EUR/USD sinks to 1.08. The first quarter of 2019 marks a watershed of sorts. In 2018, the Fed raised rates because of stronger growth; in 2019, it kept raising them because of brewing inflation. As it turned out, risk assets were able to tolerate the former, but not the latter. March 29, 2019: The U.K. does not leave the EU two years after Britain invoked Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty. The EU votes to prolong negotiations given growing political support within Britain for the country to remain part of the European bloc. April 5, 2019: The S&P 500 sinks further and is now 10% below its February high, returning close to where it was at the start of 2018. The increasingly sour mood on Wall Street does not appear to be hurting Main Street very much, however. The U.S. unemployment rate edges down further to 3.4%. Euro area growth remains resilient. May 31, 2019: The Brazilian government announces that the fiscal deficit will come in larger than originally expected. USD/BRL slips to 3.45. June 4, 2019: Jens Weidmann, who had gone out of his way to soften his hawkish rhetoric over the preceding months, is chosen to succeed Mario Draghi, whose term expires in October. Nevertheless, the euro still strengthens on the news. June 6, 2019: Markets temporarily regain their composure. The S&P 500 gets back to within 4% of its all-time high. The reprieve does not last long, however. June 12, 2019: The Fed hikes rates, taking the fed funds target range to 2.75%-to-3%. The FOMC cites inflation as its primary concern. July 8, 2019: Global risk assets weaken anew as a fiscal crisis grips Brazil. Turkey, South Africa, and a number of other emerging markets show increasing signs of fragility. August 20, 2019: Korean exports, a leading indicator of the global business cycle, decelerate once again. Global PMIs sag, as do most measures of business confidence. September 25, 2019: Despite a slowing U.S. economy, the Fed hikes rates again, bringing the fed funds target range to 3%-to-3.25%. The FOMC justifies the decision based on the fact that the unemployment rate is below NAIRU, core inflation is above the Fed's 2% target, and real rates are less than 1%. To assuage markets, Jay Powell suggests that the Fed could keep rates on hold in December. This turns out to be more prescient than he realizes. It will be another three years before the Fed raises rates again. By then, Powell is no longer the Fed chair. September 30, 2019: Commodity prices tumble, further adding to the pressure facing emerging markets. The U.S. yield curve inverts for the first time during this business cycle. The dollar, which previously strengthened due to a hawkish Fed, now starts strengthening on flight-to-safety flows back into the U.S. The yen appreciates even more than the greenback. October 15, 2019: The bottom falls out of the Canadian housing market. Home sales dry up and prices begin to sink. The Canadian dollar, which peaked back in February at 83 cents, falls to 74 cents against the U.S. dollar. October 19, 2019: A failed North Korean launch lands a missile 80 kilometres from Japanese shores. Prime Minister Abe pledges swift retaliation. October 21, 2019: The negative feedback loop between a rising dollar, falling commodity prices, and EM stress intensifies. Sentiment towards emerging markets deteriorates dramatically. Rumours begin to swirl that Brazil will miss a debt payment. October 23, 2019: Trump tweets "Dopey Rocketman thinks he is so smart, but we know where all his hideouts are. Sweet dreams!" October 24, 2019: News reports are abuzz about a massive buildup of troops on the North Korean side of the border. Panic grips Seoul. Asian bourses sell-off, taking global stock markets down with them. III. The Reckoning October 25, 2019: All hell breaks loose. North Korea's state broadcaster announces that Kim Jong-un has been "incapacitated". It later turns out that the tubby tyrant was killed by a group of military officers. Having not slept for days, Kim had become increasingly erratic and paranoid. Convinced that he was surrounded by spies and that Trump had deployed a secret weapon to read his mind, he ordered the execution of many people in his inner circle. Fearing for their lives, his henchmen decided to strike first. October 31, 2019: North Korea's new military rulers signal a desire for closer relations with China and a less belligerent posture towards the South. Over the coming decades, historians will debate whether Trump's tactics were a reckless gambit that luckily paid off, or the work of a master strategist playing 3D chess while everyone else was playing backgammon. Trump himself wastes no time in taking credit for ousting the Kim dynasty. November 4, 2019: The relief investors feel from the ebbing of tensions in the Korean Peninsula does not last long. The turmoil in emerging markets intensifies. A series of high-profile defaults rock the Chinese corporate debt market. Copper and iron ore prices nosedive. Brent swoons to $39/bbl. November 5, 2019: The head of Brazil's central bank resigns after the government pressures it to increase its holdings of government bonds in an effort to ward off an imminent default. The Brazilian real falls to nearly 6 against the dollar. Other EM currencies plunge. The Turkish lira is particularly badly hurt. December 6, 2019: The pain on Wall Street finally spreads to Main Street. U.S. payrolls rise by only 19,000 in November. Subsequent revisions ultimately show a drop of 45,000 for that month. The NBER will eventually go on to declare November as the start of the recession. December 11, 2019: Having raised rates just three months earlier, the FOMC cuts rates by 25 basis points and signals that it is willing to keep easing if economic conditions deteriorate further. December 16, 2019: Markets initially cheer the prospect of lower rates, but the euphoria is quickly forgotten. Credit spreads soar as investors price in an increasingly bleak economic outlook. Commercial real estate prices fall. Banks further tighten lending standards. IV. A Global Recession December 19, 2019: The recession spreads around the world. The ECB ditches plans to raise rates. The U.K., Sweden, Norway, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand all cut rates. In the emerging world, Korea, Taiwan, and Poland reduce interest rates, but a number of other countries - most notably, Turkey, South Africa, and Malaysia raise rates in a desperate bid to prop up their currencies so as to keep the local-currency value of their foreign-currency obligations from spiraling out of control. December 31, 2019: The S&P 500 closes at 2194, down 21% for the year. Most other bourses fare even worse. The U.S. dollar, which peaked against the euro at $1.02 just six weeks earlier, finishes at $1.07. The 10-year Treasury yield closes at 2.37%, down 68 basis points on the year. The 10-year German bund yield falls back to 0.5%. January 11, 2020: In a surprise twist, WikiLeaks reveals that the CIA has found no credible evidence that Russia had any material influence over the 2016 elections, but that Putin has been trying to cultivate the impression that it did. The document disparagingly notes that "Putin has relished the U.S. media's characterization of him as a master political manipulator with global reach, when in fact he is just the ruler of an impoverished, demographically depleted, militarily overextended country." The Mueller probe fizzles out. January 27, 2020: Voting in the Democratic primaries begins. Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, and Sherrod Brown lead a crowded field of hopefuls. Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden choose not to run. Brown enjoys the biggest lead against Trump in head-to-head polls, but his support among primary voters is weighed down by his status as a cisgendered white male. January 28, 2020: On the other side of the Atlantic, the U.K. holds another referendum - this one to ratify the separation agreement reached with the EU. The terms of the agreement are widely regarded as being highly unfavorable to the U.K. Prime Minister Corbyn, having formed a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats and the SNP following elections in late 2018, makes it clear that a rejection of the deal is tantamount to a vote to stay in the EU. With the British economy in the doldrums, 53% of voters reject the deal. The U.K. remains in the EU. EUR/GBP falls to 0.84. January 29, 2020: The Fed cuts rates by another 25 basis points. Hiking rates once per quarter was good enough when unemployment was falling. However, now that the economy is on the rocks, the Fed reverts to a more aggressive loosening cycle, cutting rates once per meeting. Even so, a growing chorus of voices both inside and outside the Fed argue that it is not doing enough. February 17, 2020: Kamala Harris and Elizabeth Warren pull out ahead in the Democratic primaries. Similar to the Clinton/Sanders duel in 2016, Warren polls best among younger, whiter voters, while Harris leads among minorities and establishment Democrats. March 10, 2020: Donald Trump, seeing his poll numbers tank after the post-Korea bump, unilaterally raises trade barriers across a wide variety of industries. Foreign producers retaliate, leading to a contraction in global trade. April 26, 2020: Warren's relentless characterization of Harris as a shill for moneyed interests pays off. The Massachusetts senator secures the Democratic nomination. Hollywood celebrities line up to support Warren. Taylor Swift's silence on the matter is deafening, leading to a further increase in her album sales. June 5, 2020: The U.S. unemployment rate surges to 5.1%. Corporate America sees a wave of business closings, with the retail sector being particularly badly hit. July 21, 2020: The bellwether German IFO index falls to a multi-year low. Germany's manufacturing sector feels the pinch from the collapse in demand for capital equipment, especially from emerging markets. Merkel's popularity plummets after it is revealed that she tried to suppress data that more than half of asylum seekers classified as children were actually adults. Support for the Alternative for Deutschland Party, which by this time has greatly moderated its anti-EU rhetoric, rises sharply. August 17, 2020: The trade-weighted yen continues to strengthen, pushing Japan deeper into recession. In response, the Japanese government announces a major new stimulus package. In the clearest attempt yet to link fiscal with monetary policy, the authorities pledge to start issuing consumption vouchers to households, the value of which will be incrementally increased until long-term inflation expectations rise to the Bank of Japan's 2% target. The policy proves to be a smashing success. September 9, 2020: The U.S. presidential campaign ends up being even more divisive than the one in 2016. Unlike four years earlier, equities rally at any glimmer of hope that Trump will win. However, with unemployment rising, such moments prove few and far between. September 22, 2020: Senator Warren states on the campaign trail that she will not renominate Jay Powell in 2022 for a second term as Fed chair if she is elected president. Lael Brainard's name is floated as a likely replacement. V. The Return Of Stagflation October 13, 2020: Green shoots appear in the U.S. economy, marking the end of the recession. The unemployment rate rises for another two months, peaking at 6.8% in December. Other economies also begin to turn the corner. November 3, 2020: The tentative improvement in U.S. economic data happens too late to bail out Trump. Elizabeth Warren wins the presidential election. Warren loses Ohio but picks up Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. An influx of Democratic voters from Puerto Rico puts her over the top in Florida. The Democrats take back control of the Senate. November 4, 2020: The S&P 500 barely moves the day after the election, having already priced in the outcome months earlier. Still, at 2085, the index is 26% below its February 2019 peak. December 2, 2020: President-elect Warren pledges to introduce a major spending package after she is inaugurated. She brushes off concerns from some economists that fiscal stimulus is coming too late, noting that the unemployment rate is more than three points higher than it was one year earlier. Stocks rally on the news. January 27, 2021: The FOMC votes to keep rates on hold at 1%. Lael Brainard dissents, arguing that further monetary stimulus is necessary. March 19, 2021: The Chinese government shifts more bad loans from commercial banks into specially-designed state-owned asset management companies. The banks generally receive well above-market prices for their loans. Chinese bank shares move higher. April 2, 2021: Congress proposes to significantly raise taxes on higher-income earners and corporations with more than 500 employees and use the proceeds to fund an expansion of the Affordable Care Act. It also promises to introduces a "Tobin tax" on financial transactions. The post-election stock market rally fades. June 8, 2021: In a seminal speech, Lael Brainard argues that current inflation measures fail to adequately correct for technological improvements and other methodological issues. She suggests that this leads to an overstatement of the true level of inflation. The implication, she concludes, is that an inflation target of 2.5%-to-3% would be consistent with the Fed's existing mandate. September 24, 2021: Many Trump-era deregulation measures are rolled back. Anti-trust efforts are also ramped up. Despite an improving economy, the S&P 500 sinks to 2031, marking a five-year low. November 17, 2021: A wave of panic selling grips Wall Street. The S&P 500 crashes to 1969, down 31% from its February 2019 peak. As is often the case, this marks the bottom of the equity bear market. The subsequent recovery, however, proves to be tepid and prone to numerous setbacks. January 31, 2022: Thanks to ample fiscal stimulus, inflation in Japan rebounds from its recession lows. Aggregate income growth slows as more Japanese workers exit the labor force, but spending holds up as health care expenditures continue to climb. Japan's current account moves into a structural deficit position. February 16, 2022: Lael Brainard succeeds Jay Powell as Fed chair. The decision by Republicans in 2013 to reduce the number of senators necessary to approve appointments to the Fed board from 60 to 51 ensures smooth sailing for Brainard during congressional hearings and the confirmation of a slew of highly dovish candidates over the subsequent two years. April 6, 2022: China belatedly introduces modest financial incentives to encourage couples to have more children. The public jokingly dubs this as the new "at least one child policy". It ends up having little effect. Future Chinese scholars will end up describing China's failure to arrest the decline in its population as its greatest geopolitical blunder. July 20, 2022: The U.S. becomes the latest country to introduce strict restrictions on the use of bitcoin. Although the U.S. government never says so, fears that bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies will eat into the $75 billion in seigniorage revenue that the Treasury earns every year underpins the decision. The price of bitcoin falls to $550, down 95% from its all-time high. September 29, 2022: Japan officially abandons its yield-curve targeting regime. The 30-year yield rises to 2.5%. Faced with onerous long-term debt-servicing costs and stagnant tax revenues, the government starts refinancing much more of its debt through short-term borrowings. The Bank of Japan obliges, keeping short-term rates near zero. The combination of negative short-term real rates and higher inflation allows Japan to reduce its debt-to-GDP ratio over time. This proves to be the modus operandi for Japan and many other fiscally-challenged governments over the coming decades. October 18, 2022: Productivity growth in most developed economies continues to disappoint. For the first time in modern history, the flow of new workers entering the labor force are no better skilled or educated than the ones leaving. With potential GDP growing at a lackluster pace, output gaps disappear, setting in motion the acceleration in inflation over the remainder of the decade. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield rises to 4%. It will be over 6% by the middle of the decade. November 22, 2022: The price of gold surpasses its previous high of $1895/oz. The 2020s turn out to be an excellent decade for bullion. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Chart 1Market Outlook: Equities
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Chart 2Market Outlook: Bonds
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Chart 3Market Outlook: Currencies
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Chart 4Market Outlook: Commodities
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
A Timeline For The Next Five Years: Part II
Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Idea 1: Long Eurodollar, short Euribor - December 2022 interest rate futures contracts. Alternatively just go outright long the Eurodollar contract. Idea 2: Long EUR/USD Idea 3: Underweight Basic Materials equities versus market. Alternative expressions are to go short the LMEX index, or underweight Norway (OMX) versus Ireland (ISE). Idea 4: Long Norwegian 10-year bonds, short German 10-year bunds. Idea 5: Long U.K. 10-year gilts, short Irish 10-year bonds. Feature Question 1: Where Is The Worrying Imbalance? Last week, in the Quantum Theory Of Finance,1 we pointed out that when bond yields reach ultra-low levels, the payoff profile from bonds becomes highly asymmetric. When yields approach a lower bound, they cannot fall much further but they can rise a lot. Meaning that bond prices have very limited potential for gains, but have great potential for sudden and deep losses. Chart of the WeekThe Norway Versus Euro Area Bond Yield Spread Is Too Wide
The Norway Versus Euro Area Bond Yield Spread Is Too Wide
The Norway Versus Euro Area Bond Yield Spread Is Too Wide
The unattractive asymmetric payoff profile - known as negative skew - applies to both nominal and real returns. This is because negative skew is concerned about deep nominal losses over a relatively short period. In which case, a deep nominal loss will be a deep real loss too.2 As equity returns always possess negative skew we can say that at ultra-low bond yields, bond risk becomes equity-like. Given this risk equalization, equities no longer justify a risk premium over bonds. And the lower prospective return required from equities means that today's equity valuations and prices become a lot richer. But the new delicate balance of valuations is conditional on bond yields remaining ultra-low. This is because the unattractive negative skew on a 10-year bond's returns disappears when its yield moves up into the 'high 2s' (Chart I-2). At this point, risk is no longer equalized and the equity risk premium must fully re-emerge - requiring today's equity market valuation and price to drop, perhaps substantially. However, the ensuing fight to havens would then once again pull bond yields back down from the 'high 2s'. It follows that the rise in expected interest rates is self-limiting. Any policy interest rate expectation already in the 'high 2s' - such as the Eurodollar December 2022 contract - cannot sustainably rise much further, whereas those that are still some way below - such as the Euribor December 2022 contract - can (Chart I-3). Which leads to our first investment idea. Chart I-2Bonds Become Much More ##br##Risky At Ultra-Low Yields
Five Pressing Questions (And Investment Ideas)
Five Pressing Questions (And Investment Ideas)
Chart I-3The Euro Area/U.S. Interest Rate Expectation ##br##Spread Is Too Wide
The Euro Area/U.S. Interest Rate Expectation Spread Is Too Wide
The Euro Area/U.S. Interest Rate Expectation Spread Is Too Wide
Investment idea 1: Long Eurodollar, short Euribor - December 2022 interest rate futures contracts. Alternatively just go outright long the Eurodollar contract. Question 2: Which Is The Safest Currency To Hold? Chart I-4Euro/Dollar Just Tracks ##br##The Bond Yield Spread
Euro/Dollar Just Tracks The Bond Yield Spread
Euro/Dollar Just Tracks The Bond Yield Spread
To reiterate, at ultra-low bond yields, bond returns offer a highly unattractive payoff profile. Put simply, you can quickly lose a lot more money - in both nominal and real terms - than you can make! Now observe that the payoff profile for a foreign exchange rate just tracks the bond yield spread (Chart I-4). This means that when a central bank has already taken bond yields close to their lower bound, its currency possesses a highly attractive payoff profile called positive skew. In essence, as the ECB is at the realistic limit of ultra-loose policy, the direction of policy rate expectations cannot go significantly lower. Conversely, policy rate expectations for the Federal Reserve (for 2022) are not far from our upper bound of the 'high 2s'. So these expectations cannot go significantly higher without threatening a risk-asset selloff. On this basis, EUR/USD has more scope to gap up than to gap down. Investment idea 2: Long EUR/USD But be aware that investment ideas 1 and 2 are highly correlated with each other! Question 3: Where Are We In The Global Growth Mini-Cycle? Global growth experiences remarkably consistent - and therefore predictable - 'mini-cycles', with half-cycle lengths averaging 8 months. As the current mini-upswing started in May we can infer that it is likely to end in early 2018. So one surprise in 2018 could be that global growth slows in the first half rather than in the second half - contrary to what the consensus is expecting. That said, half-cycle lengths do have some degree of variation: the current upswing might be a few months longer or shorter than the average. So how can we avoid positioning too early or too late for the next turn? The answer is to focus on investments that have already fully priced the current upswing, so that timing becomes less of an issue. On this basis, we propose that the rally in industrial metals and Basic Materials equities is already extended. Our technical indicator which captures herding and groupthink correctly identified the trough at the end of 2015, the mini-peak at the end of 2016, and is now signalling that the latest rally is likely to fade (Chart I-5 and Chart I-6). Chart I-5Metals Have Fully Priced ##br##The Mini-Upswing...
Metals Have Fully Priced The Mini-Upswing...
Metals Have Fully Priced The Mini-Upswing...
Chart I-6...And The Metal Rally Is Reaching##br## Its Technical Limit
...And The Metal Rally Is Reaching Its Technical Limit
...And The Metal Rally Is Reaching Its Technical Limit
Investment idea 3: Underweight Basic Materials equities versus market. Alternative expressions are to go short the LMEX index, or underweight Norway (OMX) versus Ireland (ISE). Question 4: Will Inflation Lift Off? The ECB's continued indulgence with ultra-loose monetary policy would make you think that the euro area is on the edge of a deflationary abyss. In fact, inflation has been running comfortably within a 0-2% band for almost two years. Will inflation edge closer to the ECB's 2% point target? Given our view on the growth mini-cycle, not immediately. In the first half of 2018, inflation may even edge lower within the 0-2% band, but this global dynamic will affect inflation in all jurisdictions, not just in the euro area. There is nothing wrong with inflation running comfortably within a 0-2% band. Now that we know that nominal interest rates can go slightly negative, a 0-2% inflation band even permits negative real interest rates. The big mistake is to aim for an arbitrary point target, like 2%. This is because inflation is a non-linear phenomenon, and a defining characteristic of a non-linear phenomenon is that it cannot hit an arbitrary point target.3 It is our high conviction expectation that the major central banks will eventually change their point targets for inflation into target bands such as 0-2% or 1-3%. But afraid to lose credibility, they will not change tack abruptly. In the meantime, we notice that the Norges Bank is undershooting its 2.5% inflation target by considerably more than the ECB is undershooting its 2% target (Chart I-7). Yet the yield spread between Norwegian and euro area bonds has not caught up with this reality (Chart of the Week). Chart I-7The Norges Bank Is Undershooting Its Inflation Target By More Than The ECB
The Norges Bank Is Undershooting Its Inflation Target By More Than The ECB
The Norges Bank Is Undershooting Its Inflation Target By More Than The ECB
Investment idea 4: Long Norwegian 10-year bonds, short German 10-year bunds. Question 5: Will Political Risk Re-emerge? Political events have had a hand in three of the sharpest recent moves in financial markets. The vote for Brexit catalysed a 15% decline in the pound; the vote for Trump triggered an 80 bps spike in the 10-year T-bond yield, and the vote for Macron unleashed a 10% rally in the euro. Political change disrupts markets if it dislocates the long-term expectations embedded in economic agents and financial prices. The vote for Brexit changed expectations about the U.K.'s long-term trading relationships; the election of Trump changed expectations about fiscal stimulus, the tax structure, and protectionism (perhaps unrealistically); and the election of Macron exorcised the potential chaos of a Le Pen presidency. Chart I-8The U.K. Versus Ireland Bond ##br##Yield Spread Is Too Wide
The U.K. Versus Ireland Bond Yield Spread Is Too Wide
The U.K. Versus Ireland Bond Yield Spread Is Too Wide
In contrast, the recent (disputed) vote for independence in Catalonia, and the breakdown of coalition discussions in Germany barely moved the markets - because neither event changed expectations of long-term economic outcomes. As investors, this is the test we should apply to all political events. In 2018, the evolution of Brexit has the potential to move markets. This is because hard Brexiters and the EU27 are on a collision course. Specifically, the issue of the Irish border is insoluble. It is Brexit's Gordian knot. Theresa May has promised the hard Brexiters that the U.K. will leave the EU customs union and single market. She has also promised the Northern Ireland Unionists - who are propping up May's minority government - that there will be no hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland or the rest of the U.K. But these promises are irreconcilable. The Republic of Ireland will veto a border that threatens the Good Friday peace agreement; the Northern Ireland Unionists will not tolerate the border moving to the Irish Sea, which would effectively take Northern Ireland into the EU customs union and single market; and the EU27 will block a Hong Kong type 'free port' status for Northern Ireland - as this would remove the integrity of harmonized standards across the EU. Eventually, the impenetrable Irish border problem is likely to be the roadblock to a hard Brexit. But first there needs to be a collision. And the collision could move markets. With the yield spread between U.K. 10-year gilts and Irish 10-year bonds near a 2-year wide (Chart I-8), this leads us to our fifth investment idea. Investment idea 5: Long U.K. 10-year gilts, short Irish 10-year bonds. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report 'The Quantum Theory Of Finance' November 23 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 2 For example if the nominal return over 3 months was a very painful -10%, and inflation was running at -10% per annum, the real return over 3 months would be a still very painful -7.5%. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report 'Three Mantras For Investors' August 17 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model* Ahead of the OPEC meeting on November 30, the WTI crude oil price is vulnerable to any disappointment - because its rally is technically very extended. This week's trade recommendation is to expect a retracement of 7.5% with a symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Chart I-9
Short WTI Oil
Short WTI Oil
The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions.Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights The centrist consensus is breaking down across the developed world; In its place is rising political plurality, with non-centrist and anti-establishment parties gathering support; This trend is not to be feared by the markets; Political systems that encourage political plurality - such as those of continental Europe - are more stable in the long run than those promoting political duopoly; Establishment parties in Europe can neuter single-issue parties by selectively adopting their agenda; Emergence of a third party in the U.S. would be positive for both the markets and the economy in the long run. Feature Chart 1European Border Enforcement Is Effective
European Border Enforcement Is Effective
European Border Enforcement Is Effective
Germany's Social Democratic Party (SPD) signaled on November 23 a willingness to entertain another Grand Coalition with its rival the Christian Democratic Union (CDU). If coalition talks reproduce the centrist coalition that has ruled Germany since 2013, the risk of a new election will be averted. While European markets breathe a sigh of relief, there is much to be concerned about. First, the left-leaning, liberal Socialists will likely force Chancellor Angela Merkel to accept that family reunification for asylum claimants will remain an eligible migration route into the country. This means that the 1.3 million asylum seekers that have entered Germany since 2015 will be able to apply for family members to join them, swelling the numbers of migrants from Africa and the Middle East. This could raise tensions inside Germany and increase support for anti-establishment parties. This risk is overstated, as asylum seekers to Germany have collapsed since the EU stepped up enforcement of its borders after the 2015 crisis (Chart 1). Nonetheless, the perception that Merkel is soft on migrants will hound her for the remainder of what we believe will be her last term in power. Second, the SPD performed terribly in the September election, garnering only 20.5% of the popular vote, its worst performance since March 1933 (Chart 2).1 If the German Socialists enter another Grand Coalition, it will leave the anti-establishment, anti-immigrant, and anti-EU Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) in the ceremonial role of the leader of the opposition.2 Chart 2The Center-Left Has Collapsed In Germany
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
This brings up the larger concern for investors: collapse of the centrist monopoly on political power in the West writ large. Germany is hardly the only country that is facing centrifugal forces that are eroding the hold on power by the center-left and center-right establishment parties. Across a number of critical economies, the center-left and center-right political behemoths are giving way to new entrants into the political system. This political plurality means that post-World War Two era centrist duopolies are breaking down as new parties, many of them anti-establishment and populist, enter the scene. Should investors fear this development? The consensus says yes. We disagree. Even in the United States, we doubt that a "third party" would be a negative development. Introducing The Political Concentration Index Chart 3 shows the developed economy measure of our BCA Political Concentration Index (PCI), which we constructed using the Herfindahl-Hirschman index normally used to measure the level of monopoly in a particular industry.3 Our modified index measures political - rather than economic - monopoly. We replace "firms" with "parties" and "industry" with "political system" (i.e., country). A country with a single ruling party would register a 1 on the index, while a country with 10, equal-sized parties in its parliament would register a 0.1. Chart 3Political Plurality Is On The Rise In The Developed World
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
As Chart 3 illustrates, the developed economy concentration of political power has declined considerably. Power is concentrated in the hands of more and more political parties. Chart 4 shows the PCI of ten major western economies, illustrating that the culprits for the overall collapse of political monopoly are Australia, Canada, Germany, Spain, Sweden, and the Netherlands. Our indicator would illustrate an even greater decline of political concentration if we excluded the U.S. and the U.K. Somewhat surprisingly, Italy is actually holding up well, with current levels of political concentration in line with the post-World War Two era and higher than the free-wheeling 1990s. Chart 4Political Concentration Is On The Decline Across The Developed World
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
France also surprisingly illustrates rising political concentration, at least relative to the 1980-1990s. However, this result also reveals the weakness of our index. Our measure is ignorant of the rise and fall of major parties. As such, it has failed to take into account the massive political earthquake that has occurred in France, where President Emmanuel Macron's La République En Marche! (REM) has completely replaced the Socialist Party as the main center-left French party. This shift is not picked up by the index as the degree of concentration of political power in the French National Assembly remains unaltered. Overall, the data confirm the suspicions of many of our clients that the political consensus is breaking down across the western world. There are likely three culprits: The economic dimension is eroding in relevance: The post-World War Two organization of western political parties across the left-right economic spectrum echoed the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century cleavages between the conservative bourgeoisie and revolutionary proletariat. The Industrial Revolution created immense wealth across Europe and North America, but also immense inequalities. As the urban proletariat grew in size, it demanded political and economic rights. For example, the German SPD remained committed to a radical proletariat revolution almost right up until the First World War. While the question of economic redistribution remains relevant today, the left-right economic axis is not as cogent in a world where living standards have risen massively since the turn of the last century. Culture wars: With the vast majority of western voters no longer responding to basic, Malthusian needs, identity issues are rising in prominence and drawing votes away from the centrist parties arrayed along the left-right economic spectrum. Several single-issue parties have found a permanent foothold in the political system, from the German Greens (since 1980) to the U.K. Independence Party (since 1993). A number of young and old parties have found particular success focusing on immigration, most prominently the Dutch Party for Freedom (founded in 2006), the Swedish Democrats (founded in 1988), the AfD (founded in 2013), and the New Zealand First party (founded in 1993). Generational cleavages: Voters born after the Cold War are particularly drawn to new and anti-establishment parties. Spain's Podemos and Italy's Five Star Movement (M5S) have had particular success appealing to young voters. Similarly, parties with a strong anti-immigration and anti-globalization focus have found success recruiting older voters. There is no single unifying theory that explains the erosion of the left-right economic spectrum as the defining political cleavage in the West. For example, France's Front National - anti-establishment, Euroskeptic, and anti-immigration - is particularly successful in recruiting young French voters, whereas its populist peers generally have not. Each country has its own set of idiosyncratic variables that explain how the political system is evolving. These range from endogenous factors (political system, demographics, ethnic makeup) to exogenous factors (economic crisis, membership in the EU, geopolitical risk, etc.). Even in the case of the U.S. - which shows no decline in political concentration (Chart 4), as Republicans and Democrats so far maintain a grip on their duopoly - numerous cleavages are evolving. Primary elections, particularly in the Republican Party, are pitting anti-establishment candidates - often ideologically aligned with the small government "Tea Party" - against establishment centrists. While these anti-establishment policymakers are officially aligned with the GOP, they often operate as an independent bloc in the House of Representatives. Bottom Line: For a number of reasons, different in each political system, the left-right economic spectrum is no longer driving voter preferences. Hence it should no longer serve as a starting point of analysis. Politicians who realize this - such as President Donald Trump or President Emmanuel Macron, both of whom challenged left-right orthodoxies on economic policy - are rewarded with surprising upsets. Our Political Concentration Index suggests that a trend is underway. Should investors fear the trend? The short answer is no. Political Plurality Is Stabilizing Political plurality should not be feared. True, in the short term, political plurality will produce political volatility. Aside from the ongoing German coalition talks, investors may remember the recent Spanish and Greek elections. Both countries had to hold two elections before producing a relatively stable political equilibrium due to the breakdown in what were traditionally two-party systems.4 Our PCI obviously suggests that similar outcomes are likely and to be expected. Germany could still become a case in point and Italy looms ominously in Q1 2018. However, there are three reasons why risks of more political plurality are overstated. The first is obvious. Chart 5 is the same as our Chart 3, but we have grafted onto it average GDP growth and unemployment rates. There is no clear difference in economic performance between periods of rising and falling political concentration. Chart 5The Economy Does Not Drive Political Concentration
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
The second is also obvious from Chart 5. There appears to be a pattern in the rise and fall of political concentration. In other words, investors should not necessarily extrapolate today's low concentration into the future. We suspect that the reason for the natural oscillation in our index is also the third reason that more political plurality is not a risk to the markets and the economy. A field of multiple parties allows establishment, centrist politicians to steal certain popular aspects of the electoral platform of the anti-establishment parties. Over time - what appears to be a roughly 7-year interval, or two electoral cycles on our chart - the establishment simply swallows the most competitive portions of the anti-establishment platform, repackages it in a way that is palatable for the median voter, and rebrands it as an establishment policy. The recent Austrian election is a perfect case study. Austria held a general election this year in October and the anti-establishment Freedom Party (FPÖ) came in third with 26% of the vote, a 5.5% increase from its 2013 outcome. It was not, however, the best performance for the FPÖ, as it had several strong performances in the late 1990s (Chart 6). Furthermore, investors often make the mistake of only comparing the performance of a party to the last election. In case of Austria, that means that analysts are ignoring four years' worth of polling data. In the particular case of the FPÖ, that means ignoring that the party's 26% performance was an absolute crushing collapse. As Chart 7 shows, the FPÖ went from leading in the polls for much of 2016, at one point reaching 35% support, to coming in third. Why? Chart 6Austrian Populists Have Been Here Before
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Chart 7The Establishment Stole FPO's Thunder
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
As we illustrate in Chart 7, the Austrian establishment was not stupid. The center-right People’s Party (ÖVP) appointed 31-year-old Sebastian Kurz as its leader in May 2017. Kurz promptly shifted the ÖVP towards the FPÖ’s policy on immigration while retaining centrist views on literally everything else. From that point until the election, the centrist ÖVP crushed the FPÖ in the polls (the ultimate vote swing was nearly 15%). What the Austrian example shows is that a plural political system allows establishment, centrist parties to co-opt portions of the anti-establishment agenda without bringing them on board. In the long term, single-issue parties that focus on anti-globalization, immigration, the environment, or low-income families could see their support erode as the establishment parties adopt portions of their electoral manifesto, without setting-off major political earthquakes. Our forecast is that anti-immigration, populist parties in Europe have likely seen their peak in 2017. Other center-right parties will observe Kurz's success.5 There is simply no reason for them to stand in favor of open borders for asylum seekers in Europe going forward, particularly since newly arrived immigrants cannot vote. As such, it is far more likely that Kurz becomes a model for conservatives rather than, say, Angela Merkel. We concede that Merkel may be the last conservative holdover on immigration. She appears to be stuck defending her decision made in 2015 and is unable to pivot away from that episode. Our strong conviction view is that her successor as head of the CDU will have no such qualms and that the next conservative Chancellor of Germany will close all non-European immigration avenues to the country. Bottom Line: BCA's Political Concentration Index illustrates that political pluralism abates every seven years, or two electoral cycles. This is because single-issue and anti-establishment parties introduce new ideas and policies into the political marketplace, allowing the establishment players to co-opt some of those ideas and win elections without causing a dramatic - and market shattering - break with the past. Beware Of Political Duopolies Is there nothing that investors should fear in our data? No, they should fear persistent political monopolies and duopolies. Take the U.S. and the U.K. It is interesting that the two countries that have experienced the most populist political outcomes in the past two years - Brexit, Trump - are also consistently rated as having the highest political concentration (see Chart 4 on page 4). Why? We suspect that it is because the establishment parties in both political systems try to be catch-all, "big tent" conglomerates that capture a wide array of ideological views on several issues.6 By trying to capture diverse positions, including some fringe ones, they are in danger of becoming entrapped by them. One of the reasons for the "big tent" nature of Anglo-Saxon parties is the "first-past-the-post" electoral system of individual electoral districts. Unlike proportional representation systems favored on the European continent, first-past-the-post electoral systems radically reduce the incentives for small parties to launch independent campaigns.7 For example, UKIP captured 12.7% of the vote in the 2015 election, but it was awarded only one seat in the House of Commons. Such a record of failure is difficult to maintain for any political entity over a long period of time. Eventually, small parties are swallowed whole by their big tent counterparts. The problem with swallowing the whole party, instead of merely biting off an anti-establishment issue here and there, is that the big tent parties often swallow more than they can chew. In the case of the U.K.'s Conservative Party (which has almost wholly swallowed the anti-establishment UKIP), it has been forced to push forward with Brexit, which is dragging on the economy and making it difficult to govern. In the case of the Republican Party in the U.S., the Republicans absorbed the anti-establishment Tea Party, but the two wings of the party are at risk of descending into open warfare. The particular danger for U.S. parties is that their primary elections are normally poorly attended, particularly in midterm election years that lack the star-power of presidential candidates. This means that a candidate representing the far-left or far-right fringe can often win a candidacy with merely 4%-7% of the electorate in each district (the average turnout for primary elections in a midterm year).8 They then can easily proceed to be elected to the House of Representatives due to the fact that so few American electoral districts are truly competitive (Chart 8). As these anti-establishment voices gather force in Congress - 41 members of the GOP belong to the Tea Party-aligned Freedom Caucus for example - they can heighten already considerable polarization by preventing compromise (Chart 9). Chart 8No Competitive Districts Left In The U.S.
No Competitive Districts Left In The U.S.
No Competitive Districts Left In The U.S.
Chart 9Polarization In The U.S. Is Historically High
Polarization In The U.S. Is Historically High
Polarization In The U.S. Is Historically High
A heightened state of political polarization, which persists throughout the term in office, is far more market-relevant than heightened volatility around an election produced by more political plurality. For the most part, Europe's political systems have weathered a severe double-dip recession (triple-dip in Italy's case!), a massive loss of political confidence in European institutions, and a Biblical migration crisis with relatively few early elections (Table 1). In this turbulent period, many European governments have pushed through draconian austerity measures, far-reaching economic structural reforms, and agreed to fund or receive costly bailout programs. When anti-establishment parties came to power - as they legitimately did in Greece - they quickly migrated to the middle in order to govern, needing the votes of other parties. Table 1Europe: Less Volatile Relative To Context
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Empirically speaking, there is no evidence that low political concentration is therefore inferior to the perceived stability of high political concentration exhibited in the U.S. and the U.K. The American and British economies both have seen generally better economic performances since 2008, yet they are struggling with dramatic bouts of populism in 2016.9 In the U.K.'s case, Brexit will reduce potential GDP. In the U.S.'s case, Trump's tax cuts will be inflationary, could hasten the next recession, and will likely exacerbate income inequality. We do not have a view on whether a third party will emerge in the U.S. Political polarization is a powerful trend at present, and since by definition it promotes the existence of two opposing ideological camps, it reinforces the two-party system. Republicans want to maintain control of the conservative base and hence cannot afford to let the Tea Party split off, while Democrats want to control the liberal base and cannot afford to let the progressive wing split off. If either party fractures, the other benefits. Nevertheless, there is nothing unique about the U.S. electoral system that would prevent a breakdown of the American political duopoly: other first-past-the-post systems exhibit political plurality, most notably in Canada. If a third party does emerge, we would wager that it would increase, not decrease, political stability; and reduce, not increase, political polarization. For example, if Tea Party policymakers were to run as independent candidates, it would free up both Tea Partiers and centrist Republicans to pursue their preferred policies in Congress. Centrist Republicans could vote with the Tea Party on matters of common concern and vote with the Democrats on issues where the Tea Party is deemed to be on the fringe. The basic ability to pass a budget would not be hindered by the Tea Party's single-mindedness on government spending, yet voters demanding tighter budgets would not be denied representation. Alternatively, if a new single-issue party emerged, say one favoring tighter immigration policy, Republicans would be free to co-opt aspects of its view on immigration and neutralize the threat of losing votes. They would not be forced to absorb the entire party and pursue hardline policies that would cause gridlock with Democrats. Bottom Line: Empirical evidence since the 2008 Great Financial Crisis does not support the conventional wisdom that low political concentration (i.e., political plurality) is less favorable for investors than high political concentration. Both the U.S. and the U.K., which score the highest on our PCI, have produced highly volatile political outcomes. Investment Implications Investors should not worry about the emergence of new parties in Europe. Particularly harmless are single-issue parties, specifically those focusing on tighter immigration controls. Conservative parties across Europe have already adopted more stringent immigration policies while still sounding sane, a potent electoral mix relative to some of the populist anti-immigrant parties currently vying for the votes of concerned citizens on the continent. Meanwhile, we do not fear the emergence of a third, or fourth, party in the U.S. In fact, such a development could play a role in reducing historically high political polarization in the country. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri, Research Analyst jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com 1 Yes. That 1933 election. 2 There is no official "leader of the opposition" in Germany and as such the AfD leadership is merely ceremonial. The left-wing Die Linke was in the same position from 2013-2017 with little effect. In fact, Die Linke saw only an incremental increase in its support (0.6%) between the two elections. 3 Regular readers of Geopolitical Strategy will know that we are big fans of the Herfindahl-Hirschman index. We have applied it before to measure geopolitical hegemony. Originally, the index was designed to assist in competition law and antitrust cases as it is an indicator of the amount of competition between firms in a particular sector. The formula for the index is shown below, where si is the market share of firm i in the market, and the N is the number of firms;
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
Should Investors Fear Political Plurality?
4 Spain held an election in December 2015 and another in June 2016. The latter produced a minority government led by the center-right People's Party that is essentially supported by the Spanish Socialists Workers' Party (PSOE). Greece similarly held two elections, one in January 2015 and another in September of that year. 5 The German, establishment, Free Democratic Party (FDP) did so in the most recent election, copying ÖVP's focus on tight immigration policy. It has seen its support rise to 10.7%, a substantive increase from 2013. 6 We admit that the case for the U.K. as a political duopoly is harder to make given that there are third (and fourth) parties; although both the Labour Party and the Conservative Party have cleavages on the economy, globalization, and European integration that few European peers have. This is largely due to both parties' attempt to capture a diverse coalition of views. 7 First-past-the-post refers to an electoral system where the country is divided into electoral districts. In each electoral district, the party that wins the most votes generally sends its candidate to the legislature. While there are some variations on this model, and some mixed systems, this electoral system tends to favor political duopolies. In political science, this tendency has often been referred to as Duverger's law (named after the French sociologist Maurice Duverger who first observed this phenomenon). 8 Please see Elaine C. Kamarck, "Increasing Turnout In Congressional Primaries," Center for Effective Public Management at Brookings, dated July 2014, available at brookings.edu. 9 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "The End Of The Anglo-Saxon Economy?" dated April 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com.