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Special Report Dear Client, This Special Report is the full transcript and slides of a presentation I recently gave at the London School of Economics symposium: 'Will I Work For AI, Or Will AI Work For Me?' The presentation pulls together several years of research analyzing the impact of current technological advances on work, the economy and society. I hope you find the presentation insightful and provocative, especially the narrative surrounding Slide 12. Dhaval Joshi Slide 2 Feature Good afternoon Thank you very much for the invitation to speak here at the London School of Economics. The specific question you asked me was: will we be able to work in the future? (Slide 1). To which my answer is yes, an emphatic yes. I'm very optimistic that we will be able to work in the future. And one reason I'm saying this is, imagine that we had this symposium 100 years ago. I suspect we might have had exactly the same fears that we have right now (Slide 2). Slide 1 Slide 2 Specifically, at the start of the 20th century, about 35% of all jobs were on farms and another 6% were domestic servants. At the time, you could probably also have said, "Well, these jobs aren't going to exist." More or less half of the jobs that existed at that time were going to disappear - and disappear they did. So we'd have thought there would be mass unemployment. Of course, there wasn't mass unemployment, because just as jobs were destroyed, we had an equivalent job creation (Slide 3). For example, at the start of the 20th century, less than 5% of people worked in professional and technical jobs. But by the end of the century, these jobs employed a quarter of the workforce. I guess what I'm saying is that we're very conscious of job destruction because we can see existing jobs being destroyed. But we're not very conscious of job creation, because in real time, it's difficult to visualize or imagine where these new jobs will be. In essence, what we saw in the 20th century was one major segment of employment basically collapsed from very significant to insignificant. While another segment surged from insignificant to very significant (Slide 4). Slide 3 Slide 4 As you all know, there is an economic thesis that underlies this. It's called Say's Law, derived by French economist Jean-Baptiste Say in 1803. In simple terms, it says that new supply creates new demand. Think about it like this: why would you replace a human with a machine? You would only do that if it increases your productivity, right? Otherwise, it does not make sense to replace a human with any sort of machine, including AI. But because you have increased productivity, you then have extra income to spend on new goods and services. Now if those goods and services are being supplied by a machine, then you can redeploy humans to satiate new desires, desires that do not even exist at the time. In economic terms, the producer of X - as long as his products are demanded - is able to buy Y (Slide 5). The question is, what is Y? Y is the new product or service. Let me give you some examples (Slide 6). In the 19th century, we had the advent of railways. And then someone thought. "Hang on a minute. We have this way of moving things around much faster, and we've got all these people who live hundreds of miles from the coast who might want to eat fresh fish." So this was the birth of the frozen food industry. But you could not have the frozen food industry without railways. What I'm saying is that entrepreneurs will seize the new technology to satiate a desire. Or even create a new desire because maybe the people in the middle of the country never thought they could eat fresh sea fish. Until someone came along and said, "you can eat fresh fish now." Slide 5 Slide 6 Another example is, as technology improved the health and longevity of your teeth someone thought. "Well, hang on a minute. Maybe there's a desire to make teeth look beautiful." And we created this whole new industry called the dental cosmetics industry. We know this because prior to the 1960s, there was no job called dental technician or dental hygienist. A third example is, let's say that we have more advanced healthcare and pharmaceuticals, so humans are living longer and healthier lives. Well, then you can sort of ask. "Hang on a minute. Don't you want your dog to live the same long and healthy life that you're living?" And this is behind the explosion of the pet care industry that we're seeing at the moment. So while one segment of the economy will employ less, a new segment will come along to replace it. In the 20th century we saw farm work disappearing but professional work rising. Today, we are seeing manufacturing and driving jobs disappearing but healthcare work rising (Slide 7). Which does raise a pretty obvious question (Slide 8). Is there anything really different this time around? Slide 7 Slide 8 Well, the answer is yes, there is a subtle but crucial difference this time around. To see the difference, we have to look more closely at where jobs are being destroyed, and where they are being created. As you can see, the mega-sectors losing a lot of jobs are manufacturing, the auto industry, and finance (Slide 9). While on the other side of the ledger, we have job creation in health, social work and education. But now, let's look in a little more detail. Where, specifically, are the jobs being created? For this we have to look at the United States data which is much more granular than in Europe. Here are the top five subsectors of job creation this decade (Slide 10). At the top of the list is food services and drinking places, which is just a euphemistic way of describing bartenders, waitresses, and pizza delivery boys. We also have a lot of new administrative jobs and care workers. What is the common link in this job creation? Answer: these are predominantly low-income jobs. Slide 9 Slide 10 So it is true that we have an enormous amount of job creation in the last decade or so, and the policymakers keep boasting about it, they say, "Well look, the unemployment rate in the U.S. is at a record low, the unemployment rate in the UK is at a record low, the unemployment rate in Germany is at a record low. We're creating loads and loads of jobs." The trouble is that these are predominantly low-income jobs. Meanwhile the job destruction is in middle-income jobs in manufacturing and finance. This means what we're seeing in the labour market is called a 'negative composition effect' - a hollowing out of middle incomes. So while we're getting loads and loads of job creation, it is not translating into wage inflation at an aggregate level. I think one of the reasons is a concept called Moravec's paradox. Professor Hans Moravec is an expert in robotics and Artificial Intelligence, and he noticed this paradox (Slide 11). He said, "Look. For AI, the things that we think are difficult are actually easy." By easy, he means they're doable. Let me give you some specific examples. Say someone could speak five languages fluently and translate between them at ease. We would think that person is a genius, a real rare specimen, and the economy would value this person extremely highly, probably pay that person hundreds of thousands of pounds at a minimum. But actually, AI can translate across five languages quite easily, and even something like Google Translate, which we all use, does a reasonably good first stab at translating from one language to another. Slide 11 Or consider something like insurance underwriting. Pricing an insurance premium from lots of data on a risk. AI can do that extremely well, much better than a human can. Or medical diagnosis. Figuring out what's wrong with a patient from very detailed medical data. Again, AI beats humans hands down on that. What I'm saying is, these skills that we thought were difficult transpired not to be that difficult for AI, because they just amount to narrow-frame pattern recognition and repetition of algorithms. Whereas, the second part of Moravec's paradox is that AI finds the easy things very hard. Things that we think are really innate, we don't even give them a second thought like walking up some stairs, cleaning a table, moving objects around, and cleaning around them. Actually, AI finds these things incredibly difficult, almost impossible. We have a false sense of what is difficult and what is easy. The main reason is that the things that we find innate took millions and millions of years of human brain evolution for us to find them innate. And as AI is in essence trying to replicate the human brain, only now are we recognizing that things that we find innate are actually incredibly complex. If it took millions and millions of years to evolve the sensorimotor skills that allow us to walk up some stairs, recognize subtle emotional signals, and respond appropriately, then obviously AI is going to find it very, very difficult to replicate those innate human skills. Conversely, the brain's ability to do calculus, construct a grammatical structure for a language, or play chess only evolved relatively recently. So AI can do them very easily. Which brings me to quite a profound thought. If there's one thing that I want you to remember from this presentation it is this (Slide 12). Might we have completely misvalued the human brain? Might we have grossly overvalued things that are actually quite easy? And might we have undervalued things which are actually very, very difficult? And what AI is now doing is correcting this huge error. In which case, the next decade could be extremely disruptive as AI corrects this economic misvaluation of our skills. Slide 12 This might also explain the mystery as to why there is no wage inflation when the Phillips curve says there should be. The Phillips curve makes a simple relationship between the unemployment rate and wage pressures. And the folks at the Federal Reserve and Bank of England, they're sort of getting really perplexed. They're saying, "Look, unemployment is so low. Where is this wage inflation? It's going to kick in any time now." In fact, there's a bit of a paradox going on. For the people who are continuously employed in the same job, there has been pretty good wage inflation - at sort of three, four percent (Slide 13). But when you take the negative composition effect into account, then suddenly there's this big gap because what's happening is that the well-paid jobs are disappearing to be replaced by lower-paid jobs. So even if you give the bartender making thirty thousand a big pay rise to thirty-five thousand. Even if you hire two of them, but you're losing a finance job paying over a hundred thousand, then at the aggregate level, you won't see much wage inflation. And this problem, I think, continues for the next few years, minimum. It means that you will not get the wage pressures that a lot of economists think you're going to get from the low unemployment rate. Because you have to look at the quality of the jobs as well as the quantity. I think there is another disturbing impact from a societal perspective. Look again at where the jobs are being lost and where they're being created, and look at the percentage of male employees (Slide 14). Job destruction is occurring in sectors that are male-dominated, whereas job creation is occurring in sectors that are female-dominated. Slide 13 Slide 14 AI is good at narrow-frame pattern recognition and repetition of algorithms and functions - jobs like driving, which are typically male-dominated. Whereas jobs that require emotional input, emotional understanding, and empathy in the 'caring sectors' are typically female-dominated. So if you're a male, you're in trouble. You're in a lot of trouble. Obviously, there'll be re-training, so all the guys who were driving trucks will have to retrain as nurses, or as essential carers. But if you're a female, things are looking okay. You can see that in the data (Slide 15). Female labour force participation is in a very clear uptrend. Male participation is flat to down. This varies by country by country, and in the U.S., it's catastrophic for males, especially young males. Young male participation in the U.S. is really falling off a cliff at the moment. I think the other thing to say from a societal perspective is that the so-called 'Superstar Economy' is booming - both superstar individuals and superstar firms. One way of seeing this is in this index called 'the cost of living extremely well' calculated every year by Forbes (Slide 16). Whereas the ordinary CPI includes the cost of bread and milk, the CPI index for the extremely rich includes the cost of Petrossian caviar and Dom Perignon champagne. And a Learjet 70, a Sikorsky S-76D helicopter. I think there's a pedigree racehorse in there too. Anyway, we're seeing the CPI for the extremely rich rising at a dramatically faster pace than the CPI for society as a whole. So it would seem that superstar individuals and superstar firms are really thriving. Slide 15 Slide 16 Let's explain this dynamic in terms of a superstar we all recognise - Roger Federer. Roger Federer was unknown initially, but as he went up the tennis rankings and became a superstar, his income grew exponentially. The other aspect is, how long can he stay a superstar? Because all superstars are eventually displaced by a new superstar. So there's two aspects to the dynamics of superstar incomes (Slide 17). First, how exponential is your income growth? And second, how long do you stay a superstar? What I'm saying is that the rise of AI, by hollowing out the middle jobs, actually allows a few superstars to have this exponential rise in their income. Let's think about it in terms of the legal profession. The top lawyer will be in huge demand. Technology really boosts him. Not just AI, but things like the internet, the fact that social media will reinforce his position, whereby everyone will know who he is. Even if he can't service you directly, he will have a team with his brand on it. And he can stay there for longer before he is displaced. So this is the mechanism by which technology can increase income inequality by hollowing out the middle. In the legal profession, the assistant lawyer who just checks a document for simple legal principle, well the machine can do that. But the guy who knows all the oddities, who knows all the loopholes that can win you the case, the machine won't be able to do that. Essentially what I'm saying is that the technological revolution - it's not just AI, it's technology in aggregate, including the internet and social media, and so on - it increases the rate of income growth for a few superstar individuals and firms. And it increases their longevity (Slide 18). And these are the two drivers for the Pareto distribution of incomes. You can actually go through the mathematics of this to show that it does increase the polarization of incomes. Slide 17 Slide 18 Let's sum up (Slide 19). First of all, yes, we will be able to work in the future. I don't think there's any doubt about that because there will be new jobs created, the nature of which we can only guess because we're going to get new industries to satiate our new desires. However, in the coming years, middle-income work will suffer high disruption because of Moravec's Paradox. Some things that we thought were difficult are actually quite easy for AI. But things like gardening, plumbing, nursing, and childcare are very difficult for machines to replicate. Which means that low-income work will suffer much less disruption and, of course, low-income work will get paid better over time - though the gap is so large at the moment that it's preventing overall wage inflation from kicking in. And that, I think, will persist for the next few years at a minimum. Slide 19 Men are going to suffer much more disruption than women because of the nature of the job destruction versus the job creation. And the final point is that superstars will thrive. All of this has a lot of implications for how we respond as a society, and maybe we will need some support mechanisms in this period of disruption. I think the most intense disruption will be in the next decade. After that we will reach a new equilibrium once we have actually corrected this misvaluation of the brain, this misvaluation of what it is that makes us truly human. Thank you very much. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com
Highlights As the Fed proceeds with its policy tightening this year, higher real rates and a stronger USD will weigh on silver and platinum prices, and, to a lesser extent, palladium prices. Offsetting these downward pressures, silver, and to a lesser extent platinum, could take their lead from the gold market, and outperform on the back of increased equity volatility and understated geopolitical risks this year.1 Palladium, as always, will march to its own drummer, as this market's defining feature remains chronic physical deficits and depleted inventories, which will prevent prices from reacting too severely to tighter Fed policy this year. Energy: Overweight. Supply-demand fundamentals still are supportive of crude oil prices overall, and continued backwardation in forward curves. Our long Jul/18 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI calendar spread, which gains as backwardation becomes more pronounced, is up 47.4% since inception on November 2, 2017. Base Metals: Neutral. Base metals remain well supported by still-strong global growth, estimates of which were revised higher by the IMF in its most recent World Economic Outlook. Precious Metals: Neutral. Fed tightening this year will weigh on silver and platinum, less so palladium (see below). Our long gold portfolio hedge is up 7.9%. Ags/Softs: Underweight. The USDA revised down its forecast of U.S. corn ending stocks in the latest WASDE on the back of an upwards revision to U.S. corn exports. Feature The term "precious metals" is something of a misnomer: Gold, silver, and platinum-group metals (PGMs) - chiefly platinum and palladium - do not constitute a single asset class, and should not be treated as such (Chart of the Week). Nevertheless, as with most commodity markets we cover, the evolution of these markets is highly sensitive to U.S. financial variables, particularly as regards monetary policy. Palladium is something of an outlier: It behaves more like an industrial metal, while silver, and to a lesser extent platinum, are more sensitive to the fundamental drivers of gold prices - i.e., the evolution of the USD's broad trade-weighted index (USD TWIB), and real U.S. interest rates. Palladium's demand is dominated by its use in catalytic converters in gasoline-powered cars, whereas industrial applications form a more limited source of demand for platinum and silver (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekA Schism In Precious Metals Chart 2Industrial Uses Dominate Palladium Gold, silver, and, to a more limited extent platinum are cointegrated in the long run, meaning their prices follow their own random walks, even though they share a long-term trend. Palladium, on the other hand, is more responsive to the physical realities of the automobile market - chiefly, demand for gasoline-powered cars. In our econometric analysis of the behavior of PGMs and silver, we use the CRB Metals Index as a proxy for industrial activity. We find that while all three are sensitive to changes in the CRB Metals Index, palladium prices are significantly more responsive (i.e., elastic) to industrial activity than platinum and silver (Table 1). Table 1Palladium Behaves Like An Industrial Metal Furthermore, while gold prices impact both silver, and, to a lesser extent platinum, they are not significant when it comes to the palladium market. Bullish Fundamentals Tightened Palladium Market Palladium registered a 60% gain in 2017. Its forward curve has been backwardated since June (Chart 3). This backwardation - i.e., spot prices trade higher than deferred prices - is a symptom of a tight market. In fact, according to Thomson Reuters GFMS data, the palladium market has been in a chronic deficit since 2007, with the 2017 deficit the largest since 2000. The culprit in this case has been strong demand and stagnant supply. While supply has been growing ~ 1% year-over-year (yoy) over the past 5 years, demand growth has averaged 1.7% yoy over the same period. Palladium demand over this period has been driven by its growing use in automobile catalytic converters, most notably in China, where sales of gasoline-powered cars exceed those of diesel-powered cars, which typically use platinum in their catalytic converters (Chart 4). Chart 3Tight Fundamentals In##BR##The Palladium Market Chart 4Growing Demand For##BR##Autocatalysts Dominated In The Past... Growth in global demand for palladium-based autocatalysts averaged 4.8% yoy in the past 5 years. The use of palladium for autocatalysts now makes up more than 75% of global palladium demand, up from 56% 10 years ago. Chinese demand for palladium used in autocatalysts grew from 10% of global demand in 2007 to more than a quarter of global demand last year. Given autocatalysts' oversized contribution to demand growth, the palladium market is highly dependent on car sales. Our modelling highlights global car production as a significant explanatory variable when it comes to palladium prices. Most significant are the U.S. and Chinese markets, which are the largest markets for gasoline-powered cars. While vehicle sales in China were strong in 2016, they have slowed considerably and recorded yoy declines in the most recent November and December data (Chart 5). Slowing demand growth for cars in China likely comes on the back of the phasing out of tax cuts on small vehicles. This will limit the upside for palladium prices from China's industrial demand. Growth in car sales in the U.S. has been even more muted, contracting in 2017 for the first time since 2009. However, a more concerted adoption of gasoline-powered cars in Europe - largely in response to efforts by cities to reduce emissions of particulate matter from diesel engines, and the highly publicized emissions-testing scandals involving European carmakers - will, at least partially, mitigate the negative impact of slowing demand from the top two gasoline-powered markets. On the supply side, global mine supply has been relatively stagnant over the past 5 years, expanding an average 1.2% yoy during this period. Russia, South Africa and Canada account for almost 90% of total palladium mine supply. And while Russian and South African supplies have been relatively flat over the years, Canadian palladium has grown to account for ~11% of global supply in 2017, up from 4% in 2010. Global palladium supply has been supported by metal recovered from autocatalyst scrap, which has been averaging 4.8% yoy growth in supply over the past 5 years. In fact, the share of palladium recovered from autocatalyst scrap has almost doubled in the past 10 years, and now makes up almost 20% of total supply. Growth in this source of supply has come down significantly (Chart 6). However, we expect palladium's exorbitant price and elevated steel prices to incentivize an increase in the metal's recovery from scrap. Indeed, GFMS expects recycled palladium to pave record highs this year and to surpass 2 million ounces next year. Chart 5...But Beware Of Slowing Gasoline Car Sales Chart 6Palladium Needs Restocking Strong demand, combined with limited supply growth, has weighed on palladium inventories. Furthermore, ETF holdings of palladium have come down sharply while net speculative long positions have skyrocketed. Given that stocks are so low, we do not expect a severe fall in prices. Bottom Line: Palladium behaves like an industrial metal and is especially sensitive to changes in demand for automobiles. While the stars were aligned for palladium last year - a weak USD, low real interest rates, and bullish fundamentals - car sales in the U.S. and China have been slow recently. Even so, a physical deficit will prevent a crash in the palladium market this year. Platinum Trading At A Discount To Palladium In contrast with palladium's remarkable performance last year, platinum was up a mere 3.4% in 2017. In fact palladium, which usually trades at a discount to platinum, has been more expensive since October (Chart 7). This can be attributed to differences in fundamentals. Palladium's market conditions have been significantly tighter than platinum. Greater demand for the physical metal than supply put the market in deficit last year, which supported platinum prices. As with palladium, catalytic converters are a major demand source for platinum; however, they account for ~ 40% of platinum demand - considerably less than the roughly 80% share of palladium demand accounted for by catalytic converter demand. Europe is the largest market for diesel cars, and, while total vehicle sales in Europe have remained healthy, diesel-powered cars have been losing market share since the Volkswagen emissions-rigging scandal came to light in 2015 (Chart 8). This hit platinum use in autocatalysts particularly hard. In addition, weaker demand from its second use - jewelry - is keeping a lid on platinum prices (Chart 9). In fact, Chinese demand for the white metal, which accounts for more than 50% of global platinum jewelry demand, has been falling. Despite weakening demand, global balances remained in deficit on the back of muted supply. Chart 7Platinum Now Cheaper Than Palladium Chart 8EU Diesel Car Market Losing Momentum Chart 9Platinum Jewelry Losing Its Appeal Platinum's market balance could be at risk if carmakers start using more of it in catalytic converters, now that it trades at a discount to palladium. Platinum is a superior material for autocatalysts, but palladium has been traditionally favored on a cost basis. Platinum's lower price incentivizes carmakers to switch to this metal. According to Johnson Matthey, it will be two years before the impact of such substitution begins to affect the palladium market. Bottom Line: Subdued demand for platinum jewelry combined with the loss of market share for diesel-powered cars in Europe will keep a lid on the platinum market this year. However, platinum follows gold, and this could support prices if equity investors hedge market volatility and future corrections by purchasing the metal. Silver Follows Gold Silver, and, to a lesser extent, platinum are not as exposed to the industrial business cycle as palladium. These metals' prices instead move in line with gold (Chart 10). Our modeling reveals that a 1% increase in gold prices is associated with a 0.76 pp increase in silver prices. Thus gold's spillovers to the silver market are significant. Even so, there are periods when this relationship disconnects. This is because, although industrial uses do not account for as large a share of silver demand as they do for palladium, such fundamentals do account for a significant source of demand. Thus, in addition to the financial factors which drive gold, silver's industrial applications give it some exposure to economic activity. In fact, a 1% increase in the CRB Metals Index is associated with a 0.17pp increase in silver prices. This explains why, in some instances, silver's cointegration with gold weakens. As a practical matter, gold is a superior hedge against equity downfalls than silver (Chart 11). While gold month-on-month (mom) returns outperform S&P 500 mom returns almost 80% of the time in periods of decreasing equity returns, the ratio for silver comes in at a lower 67%. On the other hand, gold mom returns outperform S&P 500 returns less than 30% of the time during periods when equities are increasing, while silver outperforms the stock market almost 40% of the time. Chart 10Silver And Gold##BR##Move In Tandem Chart 11Gold Outperforms Amid Equity Downfalls,##BR##Not During Rising Stocks In addition, although both gold's and silver's correlations with the S&P 500 become large and negative when the S&P 500 decreases in yoy terms, this negative correlation in the case of gold is significantly larger than for silver (Chart 12). In fact, along with silver's relatively weaker negative correlation with the S&P 500 during periods of negative equity returns, silver also exhibits a relatively stronger positive correlation with equities during periods of positive returns. While silver is an effective hedge against geopolitical and economic crises, gold's hedging ability remains superior (Chart 13). Silver and gold post similar returns during geopolitical crises; however, gold returns are significantly higher during economic crisis. Chart 12Negative Correlations More##BR##Pronounced During Equity Downfalls Chart 13Gold Is A##BR##Superior Protection This supports the finding that silver's hedging ability is hampered by its use in industrial applications, which make it more responsive to the business cycle than gold. Bottom Line: Gold and silver prices are cointegrated. However, given silver's industrial applications, it is more sensitive to business activity. This explains the periods of divergence in the two precious metals, and limits silver's ability to hedge against economic crises and falling equities. Roukaya Ibrahim, Associate Editor Commodity & Energy Strategy RoukayaI@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Analyst HugoB@bcaresearch.com 1 For a discussion of the gold market fundamentals, please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled "Gold Still Shines Despite Threat Of Higher Rates," dated February 1, 2018. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2018 Summary of Trades Closed in 2017
Highlights Persistent QE, ZIRP and NIRP have severely distorted the valuation relationship between equities and bonds on a global scale. Hence, the risk is that financial market distortions will infect the economy, not the other way round. A global mini-downturn in the first half of 2018 is now all but guaranteed. High conviction equity sector recommendation: underweight the major cyclical equity sectors: specifically, Banks, Materials and Energy; but overweight Airlines. High conviction currency recommendation: yen first; euro second; pound third; dollar fourth. Feature Stock markets ascend by walking up the stairs, but they descend by jumping out of the window. Unfortunately, investors often misinterpret the low volatility of a market ascent as a sign that equity risk has diminished. In fact, the low volatility just tells us that walking up the stairs is a slow and dull process (Chart I-2). It tells us nothing about equity risk. Chart of the WeekA Global Mini-Downturn In H1 2018 Is Now All But Guaranteed Chart I-2Stock Markets Climb Up The Stairs, And Then Jump Out Of The Window The risk of equities, as we have just seen, is that they do periodically jump out of the window. Meaning that equities have the potential to suffer much more intense short-term losses than short-term gains. This ratio of potential losses to potential gains is technically known as negative skew. For a reminder why equity returns have this unattractive asymmetry, please revisit our Special Report 'Negative Skew': A Ticking Time-Bomb.1 That said, equity returns always possess negative skew, so there is nothing new about stock markets jumping out of the window, as they have this week. Persistent QE, ZIRP And NIRP Have Created A Severe Financial Distortion The much bigger story is that persistent QE, ZIRP and NIRP2 have imparted negative skew on bond returns too. Central banks accept that there is a 'lower bound' for policy interest rates - perhaps slightly negative - below which there would be an exodus of bank deposits. The limit also marks the lower bound for bond yields. Approaching this lower bound for yields, bond prices have diminishing upside with increasing downside (Chart I-3). So at low bond yields, mathematics necessarily forces bond markets also to walk up the stairs and then jump out of the window (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5). Chart I-3Approaching The Lower Bound For Yields, Bond Prices ##br##Have Diminishing Upside With Increasing Downside Chart I-4In A Low Yield Era, Bond Markets ##br##Also Climb Up The Stairs... Chart I-5... And Then Jump Out ##br##Of The Window As the risk of owning 10-year bonds has increased to become 'equity-like', it has removed the requirement for an excess return, a risk premium, on equities. In other words, persistently ultra-accommodative monetary policy has diminished the prospective 10-year annual return on global equities to become 'bond-like', collapsing from 9% in 2012 to 1.5% today - exactly the same rate of return that is now offered by the global 10-year bond (Chart I-6). In effect, persistent QE, ZIRP and NIRP have severely distorted the valuation relationship between equities and bonds. Chart I-6Equities' Prospective Returns##br## Have Become 'Bond-Like' However, as we explained last week in Beware The Great Moderation 2.0,3 the nose-bleed valuation of the world stock market is justified only as long as bond yields stays low. Above a 2% yield, the payoffs offered by bonds gradually lose their negative skew and thereby become less risky than those offered by equities. So equities must once again compensate by offering an excess prospective return, necessitating a derating of today's elevated valuations. Specifically, we wrote that the big threat to equity valuations "comes from the global 10-year bond yield rising to 2% - broadly equivalent to the German 10-year bund yield rising to 1% or the U.S. 10-year T-bond yield rising to 3%." To which one client responded "markets do not respect round numbers... if the trigger-point is 3%, then you must act well before that." Wise words indeed. The U.S. 10-year T-bond yield got as far as 2.88% before triggering a reversal in equity valuations. Financial Distortions Threaten The Real Economy Chart I-7Financial Conditions 'Easiness' Is Just ##br##Tracking The Stock Market Many people naturally assume that the economy drives the financial markets. This may be true some of the time, or even most of the time. But in the last three downturns, the causality ran the other way round - financial market distortions dragged down the economy. The bursting of the dot com bubble triggered the downturn in 2001; the large-scale mispricing of U.S. mortgages caused the Great Recession in 2008; and the explosive widening of euro area sovereign credit spreads resulted in the euro area recession in 2011. Which begs the question: is there a financial distortion or mispricing that could once again drag down the economy? The answer is an emphatic yes. To repeat, six years of persistent QE, ZIRP and NIRP have severely distorted the valuation relationship between equities and bonds on a global scale, compressing the prospective 10-year annual return on world equities from 9% to 1.5%.4 Thereby, equity returns which would have accrued in the future have been brought forward to the here and now in the form of elevated capital values. But if higher bond yields correct the severely distorted valuation relationship between equities and bonds, the effect will be to move these returns from the present back to the future, depressing capital values today. Now note that while world GDP is worth around $80 trillion, the combination of equities and correlated risk-assets such as corporate and EM debt is worth double that, around $160 trillion, and real estate is worth $220 trillion. If returns from these richly valued asset-classes are redistributed from the present back to the future, through lower capital values today, there is a very real risk that current spending could take a hit. Supporting this broad thesis, central bank measures of 'financial conditions easiness' just track tick for tick the level of the stock market (Chart I-7). What To Do Now The upturn in bond yields which started last summer threatens to impact activity through two separate channels. As just discussed, the first is the financial market channel via a setback to global risk-asset capital values. The second is the bank credit channel. Changes in the bond yield very clearly and reliably lead changes in credit flows, the credit impulse, by 6 months. Therefore, the rise in bond yields is only now starting to pull down the credit impulse - and thereby the global activity mini-cycle, which is the all-important driver of mainstream European investments. It follows that a global mini-downturn in the first half of 2018 is now all but guaranteed (Chart of the Week). And that the higher that bond yields go from here, the more marked this mini-downturn will be. This reinforces two high conviction investment recommendations. First, it is now appropriate to underweight cyclical equity sectors: specifically, Banks, Materials and Energy. Against this, the one cyclical sector to upgrade to overweight is Airlines, given the sector's negative correlation with the oil price. Second, the payoff profile for exchange rates is just tracking expected long-term interest rate differentials (Chart I-8). This means that when the expected interest rate is close to the lower bound, the currency possesses a highly attractive payoff profile called positive skew. In essence, for any central bank already at the realistic limit of ultra-loose policy - such as the BoJ and ECB - the direction of policy rate expectations cannot go significantly lower. Conversely, tightening expectations for the Federal Reserve are approaching a magnitude that threatens either risk-asset prices and/or economic growth. So these expectations cannot go significantly higher (Chart I-9). Chart I-8Exchange Rates Are Tracking Long-Term ##br## Interest Rate Differentials Chart I-9Expected Interest Rates In The Euro Area And ##br##U.S. Will Converge One Way Or The Other On this basis, we reiterate our high conviction pecking order for currencies in 2018. Yen first; euro second; pound third; dollar fourth. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report 'Negative Skew: A Ticking Time-Bomb', July 27 2017 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Quantitative Easing, Zero Interest Rate Policy and Negative Interest Rate Policy. 3 Please see the European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, 'Beware The Great Moderation 2.0', February 1 2018 available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 4 This 1.5% forecast comes from regressing the world equity market to GDP multiple through 1998-2008 with subsequent 10-year returns, observing a very tight relationship, and then using the same relationship on current world equity market cap to GDP. Fractal Trading Model* This week's recommended trade is to go long utilities versus the market. The profit target is 3.5% outperformance with a symmetrical stop-loss. It was an excellent week for our other trades with short palladium hitting its 6% profit target, while underweight Japanese energy and long USD/ZAR are both in comfortable profit. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10 The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch##br## - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights The end of the low volatility regime could mark a leadership change in global equities away from EM to DM. The near-term risk to our negative stance on EM risk assets is a scenario where Beijing allows RMB appreciation to head off major protectionist threats from the U.S. This could delay the U.S. dollar rally and support EM risk assets. The EM and commodities equity rallies might be facing formidable technical resistances. These equity segments have to break out these technical resistances decisively to confirm the sustainability of the bull market. Feature Global stocks have corrected, and volatility measures have surged. The low volatility regime appears to have come to a decisive end. Even though in the short run volatility measures could well decline after their steep surge of the past week, the cyclical outlook points to higher volatility relative to last year. Financial markets are likely to be re-priced to adjust to the end of this low-volatility period. This entails more stress, and an additional selloff in risk assets. Periods of low volatility historically sow the seeds of their own reversal. Investors tend to embrace high-risk strategies amid low volatility, and take on more leverage. As a result, market excesses and froth arise, increasing the market's vulnerability in the event of a reversal. The latest period of low volatility lasted for more than a year, and no doubt facilitated the build-up of froth and excesses in global financial markets. Chart I-1 illustrates that the aggregate volatility measure of various financial markets was at its lows of the past 12 years before surging in recent days. Chart I-1Rising Volatility Coincides With A U.S. Dollar Rally What does rising volatility mean for emerging market (EM) relative performance vis a vis developed markets (DM)? It is primarily contingent on the U.S. dollar. If the U.S. dollar rebounds along with the rise in volatility, as it has done in the past (Chart I-1), EM equities will commence underperforming DM bourses. If the U.S. dollar fails to rebound and drifts lower, EM stocks are likely to outperform DM equities. With respect to exchange rates, we believe one of the major driving forces for currencies is the relative growth trajectory. The latter can be approximated by relative equity market performance in local currency terms. Chart I-2 shows that U.S. share prices - of both large and small caps - have been outperforming their global counterparts in local currency terms. Persisting periods of outperformance of U.S. stocks versus their global peers eventually, albeit sometimes with a considerable time lag, instigates a stronger trade-weighted U.S. dollar. U.S. large-cap share prices are making new highs versus their global peers in local currency terms. This entails that the selloff in the broad trade-weighted dollar is at a very late stage. The dollar rebound is a missing trigger for EM relative equity outperformance to reverse. A Risk To Our View: The U.S. Dollar One risk to our negative stance on EM risk assets and our recommendation of underweighting EM versus DM is the continuation of the U.S. dollar selloff. The greenback has been trading very poorly despite jitters in global equity markets. The recent surge in the RMB versus the U.S. dollar may be indicative that the Chinese authorities are tolerating RMB appreciation to defuse a threat of major protectionist measures from the U.S. (Chart I-3). If the RMB continues to appreciate versus the greenback, Asian and other EM currencies will stay well supported, and EM outperformance will persist. Chart I-2U.S. Relative Equity Outperformance ##br##Warrants A Stronger Dollar Chart I-3Will Beijing Tolerate A Stronger RMB? We suspect that Chinese policymakers are reluctantly allowing the RMB to appreciate. Indeed, Chinese policymakers have been both vocal and public about their understanding of Japan's experience with deleveraging, and specifically the mistake made by Japanese policymakers of allowing the yen to appreciate in the early 1990s. As most know, deflationary forces stemming from the combined effects of deleveraging and currency appreciation set off a formidable deflationary adjustment in Japan in the 1990s. Given Japan's experience, our conjecture is that Chinese policymakers would rather opt for a stable-to-mildly weaker currency. This has been one of the cornerstones of our bullish bias on the U.S. dollar versus emerging Asian currencies. If China allows the RMB to appreciate further versus the U.S. dollar, a potential U.S. dollar rally versus EM currencies will be delayed. In turn, this will likely allow EM equity, currency and credit markets to outperform their DM peers. That said, a strong currency will add to the ongoing policy tightening in China. The cumulative impact of this policy tightening combined with currency appreciation will weigh on China's growth later this year. As such, our fundamental thesis on China-slowdown is still valid in the medium term. However, political interference in the currency markets could delay EM risk assets' response to it. Bottom Line: The near-term risk to our negative stance on EM risk assets is a scenario where Beijing allows further RMB appreciation to head off potentially major protectionist threats from the U.S. May 2006 Redux? The current riot in global stocks resembles the May 2006 correction to a certain extent. Back in the spring of 2006, then Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke had just taken the helm at the Fed. Global growth was strong, the U.S. dollar was selling off, and global share prices were surging and overbought. Chart I-4May 2006 And Now: EM Stocks, ##br##U.S. Bond Prices And U.S. Dollar In May-June 2006, markets sold off because of the then-prevailing narrative that Chairman Bernanke would be too dovish and would allow U.S. inflation to get out of hand. U.S. bond yields spiked, inflicting particular damage on EM. It seems that February 2018 may play out like May 2006. It will not be exactly the same, but there are enough similarities to draw parallels: Global growth is robust, inflationary pressures are accumulating. DM bond yields are rising and the greenback is selling off. The new Fed Chairman, Jerome Powell, just took over the reins at the Fed, and there are growing odds that U.S. inflation will soon begin to rise, justifying more Fed rate hikes. Chart I-4 illustrates the similarities between financial market dynamics in 2005-2006 and now. If we take 2006 as a guide, we can infer that the selloff is not yet over. In a matter of only five weeks EM share prices plunged by 25% in U.S. dollar terms, and the S&P 500 dropped by 7%. From a big-picture perspective, the May 2006 selloff was a sharp correction in a bull market that lasted for another year or so. Importantly, the 25% plunge in EM share prices that took place in 2006 occurred despite EM corporate profit growth expanding at a double-digit rate in 2006-'07. All that said, the 2006 selloff marked an important regime shift in the global economic landscape - the rate of U.S. growth peaked in the second quarter 2006, and began to decelerate. We believe that the current equity market riot will likely mark a bottom in U.S. inflation and the beginning of a slowdown in China. The U.S. Bond Market Selloff Is Not Over... Yet The selloff in the U.S./DM bond markets has not yet run its course: The U.S. inflation model - constructed by our colleagues in the Foreign Exchange Strategy service and based on U.S. capacity utilization and broad money supply - is pointing to higher inflation in the months ahead (Chart I-5). U.S. bond yields will likely move higher as forthcoming inflation prints validate our expectations for higher U.S. inflation. Fiscal stimulus amid robust growth and a tight labor market in the U.S. as well as record-high optimism among consumers and businesses have created fertile ground for rising inflation. The weak dollar of the past 12 months will also manifest in rising inflationary pressures. The U.S. bond term premium is still extremely low. Yet, budding uncertainty over inflation and the gradual end of QE programs in DM, will likely cause the U.S. bond term premium to rise from current depressed levels. Finally, simple DM bond markets technicals are still pointing to higher yields ahead (Chart I-6). Chart I-5U.S. Core Inflation Set To Rise Chart I-6U.S. Bond Yields: The Path ##br##Of Least Resistance Is Up Overall, the path of least resistance for DM bond yields is up. This will make EM local currency bond yields less attractive versus DM and especially versus U.S. Treasurys. Yield differentials between EM and the U.S. are already at a 10-year low (Chart I-7). Low risk premiums on EM local bonds and rising global financial market volatility suggest that flows to EM fixed income markets will slow over the course of this year. That said, near-term risks still remain due to the massive inflows that previously went into EM funds, and might not have been deployed yet. China's Tightening And Pending Slowdown It is not unusual for an equity market riot to begin with inflation and high-interest-rate fears and then culminate with a growth scare - with a rebound in between. 2018 may shape up to fit this pattern. Global equity markets seem to be immersed with inflation and policy tightening in the U.S. - and potentially in China. At some point, share prices could well stage a rebound but then relapse again as materially slower Chinese growth spills over to global trade.1 We have discussed our view on China and its spillover effect on EM in past reports, and will not reiterate our views and analysis here. We will only bring to clients' attention that manufacturing production volume in Asia has already been weakening for a couple of months (Chart I-8). Chart I-7EM Local Currency Bonds Over ##br##U.S. Treasurys: Yield Differential Chart I-8Asia's Manufacturing ##br##Production Growth Is Slowing Leadership changes in the equity markets occur amid selloffs. Hence, it is reasonable to expect a leadership shift within global equity market sectors and countries as well as currency markets. One major equity leadership shift could be that EM begins underperforming DM. A combination of rising U.S. inflation and bond yields and a slowdown in China are negative for EM financial markets, especially relative to DM ones. Reading Markets' Tea Leaves It remains to be seen how much further this selloff in global equities will last and whether this is the beginning of a major downtrend in EM risk assets. It is impossible to have perfect foresight. To help investors in their portfolio decisions, we combine our fundamental analysis with tools that assist us in forecasting business cycles as well as various chart patterns that may be indicative of the market's potential trajectory. The following charts illustrate that the EM and commodities equity rally may be facing formidable technical resistance. These equity markets have to break out decisively through these technical resistance lines to confirm the sustainability of the bull market. Global energy stocks have corrected after reaching their long-term moving average (Chart I-9, top panel). The latter served as a floor in the 2008 crash. It was a key technical level in the 2014-'15 bear market that did not hold up and was followed by a collapse in crude prices. Similarly, global steel stocks are exhibiting the same pattern (Chart I-9, bottom panel). Relative performance of emerging Asian share prices versus the global equity benchmark is also at a similar critical juncture (Chart I-10, top panel). Chart I-9Global Energy And Steel Stocks: ##br##A Technical Resistance Chart I-10Select EM Equity Markets ##br##Are Facing A Critical Test Finally, Brazilian share prices in U.S. dollar terms have also reached a crucial technical threshold (Chart I-10, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Share prices of a few equity sectors and markets that are imperative to the EM equity outlook are at important technical junctures. Failure to break above these technical resistance lines will corroborate our negative stance on EM/China growth and related financial markets. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 We elaborated the relationship between China/EM and DM growth in November 29, 2017 Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, the link is available on page 12. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Special Report Dear Client, In light of recent market turbulence, we are publishing our weekly report earlier than usual. Caroline Miller, Garry Evans, and I will also be hosting a webcast Wednesday morning at 10am EST to discuss the investment outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Monday's stock market rout was largely driven by technical factors. Strong economic growth and positive earnings surprises should keep the equity bull market intact. Nevertheless, investors need to adjust to the fact that volatility is likely to pick up, just as it did in the last few years of the 1990s bull market. The market's expectations of where the funds rate will be over the next two years have almost converged with the Fed dots. In the near term, this will limit the ability of the 10-year Treasury yield to rise much above 3%. Looking further out, inflation is likely to move above the Fed's target early next year, setting the stage for a recession starting in late 2019. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Feature VIX Kicks Last week's Global Investment Strategy report, entitled "Take Out Some Insurance," argued that equities had become dangerously overbought and were highly vulnerable to a correction.1 We noted that the VIX had likely bottomed for the cycle and that going long volatility had now become an attractive hedge against stock market declines. As many of my colleagues have noted, betting on continued low volatility had become an increasingly crowded trade in recent years. Back in January, we observed that net short volatility positions had reached record-high levels (Chart 1). We warned that "traders have been able to reap huge gains over the past few years by betting volatility will decline. The problem is that if volatility starts to rise, those same traders could start to unload their positions, leading to even higher volatility."2 Precisely such a vicious cycle erupted on Monday, causing the S&P 500 to suffer its worst daily percentage loss since August 18, 2011. The question is where do we go from here? So far, the sell-off in stocks looks largely technical in nature. Chart 2 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on Monday than one would have expected based solely on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction of other "risk gauges" such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices over the past few days is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Volatility Is Back Chart 2Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large Cyclical Outlook Still Solid It is impossible to know if today's rebound will persist or if the correction still has further to run. What we do know is that the cyclical underpinnings for the bull market remain intact. Leading economic data remain buoyant (Chart 3). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant Chart 4Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth None of our recession-timing indicators are flashing red (Chart 5). The Conference Board's LEI is rising at a healthy 5.5% y/y pace. Historically, a decisive break below zero in the year-over-year change in the LEI has been a reliable recession indicator. Likewise, while the U.S. 2/10-year Treasury curve has flattened, it has not inverted yet. Moreover, even once the yield curve inverts, the lags can be quite long before the recession begins. For example, in the last cycle, the yield curve inverted in early 2006, but the recession did not begin until December 2007. This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing from here. Monday's sell-off marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed over the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Going forward, volatility will remain elevated relative to what investors have come to expect. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still go up when volatility is trending higher (Chart 6), but this is going to make for a much more challenging investment environment. Chart 5No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle Chart 6Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise The Powell Put? How the Fed and other central banks react to this new world will be critical. It is perhaps not a complete coincidence that Monday's crash occurred on the first day that Jay Powell took over the helm of the Fed. Investors are increasingly worried that the Fed will turn from friend to foe. The faster-than-expected increase in average hourly earnings in January put those fears in stark relief. Accelerating wage growth suggests supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. This, in turn, means that the runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. As BCA editors discussed in our 2018 Outlook, "Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," central banks are in the process of winding down the extraordinary stimulus that investors have gotten used to.3 Whether this undermines the case for holding stocks and other risk assets depends on how quickly the adjustment occurs. On the plus side, we continue to think the adjustment will be fairly gradual, at least for the time being. Core CPI inflation outside of shelter is still running at 0.7% (Chart 7). This gives the Fed plenty of wiggle room. Just like Janet Yellen, Jay Powell will seek to build a consensus among his colleagues. Granted, the composition of the FOMC is likely to shift in a somewhat more hawkish direction. However, the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important, and often underappreciated, source of continuity. As in the past, the Fed will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. and most other countries remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 8). Chart 7Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year Just as importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the financial system in the same way as it did during the financial crisis. What made the mortgage crisis so toxic was that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. In the case of volatility funds, that does not appear to be the case. Investment Implications Global bond yields remain quite low by historic standards and this should continue to support stocks. Indeed, even after the recent bond sell-off, average global bond yields are still close to half of what they were in 2011 - a time when global excess capacity was much greater than it is today (Chart 9). In keeping with our structurally bearish view on bonds, which we first articulated on July 5, 2016 in a note entitled "The End of 35-Year Bond Bull Market," we expect global bond yields to grind higher.4 However, in rate-of-change terms, the swift repricing of yields over the past few months has likely run its course. Chart 10 shows that market expectations of where the funds rate will be at the end of 2018 and 2019 have almost converged with the Fed dots. This convergence helped our short December-2018 fed funds futures trade, which we closed at our stop for a gain of 70 bps last Friday. A sustained move above 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we do expect core inflation to move above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this is likely to be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of recessions (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we expect, the equity bull market could last a while longer. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Chart 9Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards Chart 10Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin Be DeFANGed?" dated January 12, 2018. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Global Bond Rout: Overheated financial markets are going through a much needed correction with higher bond yields being the immediate trigger. The cyclical rise in global bond yields is not yet complete, however. Monetary policy settings remain accommodative in almost all major economies, while global growth momentum is showing no signs of slowing. The current turbulence is an early indication of how the investment backdrop will become much more challenging later in 2018 as global inflation continues to rise. Fixed Income Strategy: Returns on global spread product are still expected to beat those on sovereign debt in the coming months, particularly after the latest market correction restored some value through spread widening. There is no sign yet that the sell-off is damaging future global growth expectations that can stall the move to less accommodative monetary policy. Maintain an overall below-benchmark duration stance, favoring corporate credit over sovereign debt - especially in the U.S. - for now. Feature Risk assets worldwide are finally correcting after the relentless run-up seen in January, with the trigger being the steady rise in global bond yields seen since the beginning of the year. The big decline in U.S. equity markets, particularly after the release of last Friday's U.S. employment data which featured the highest year-over-year growth rate in wages seen in almost a decade, suggests that investors are growing increasingly worried about accelerating inflation and a more aggressive tightening response from central banks (NOTE: markets were undergoing another bout of selling yesterday as this publication went to press, but the conclusions reached in this report are unchanged). Chart of the WeekThe Cyclical Rise In Yields##BR##Has Room To Run However, taking a step back to look at the big picture, nothing has really changed in the past few days. Global growth remains strong, which has already steadily increased pressure on policymakers to raise interest rates according to our own BCA Central Bank Monitors (Chart of the Week). In the U.S. - the epicenter of the latest bout of market angst - financial conditions remain highly accommodative and supportive for future growth, while bond volatility remains low by historical standards even after the most recent upward blip. Credit spreads and equity valuations in non-U.S. markets, from Europe to the emerging world, are also no impediment to future growth in those regions. We have been expecting global bond yields to rise in 2018 as markets adjust to both a normalization of global inflation expectations and a shift to a less aggressive pace of bond buying by the Fed, European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan (BoJ). As we described in our 2018 Outlook report published last December:1 The current low volatility regime will end when higher inflation and less accommodative central banks raise interest rate volatility and, eventually, future growth uncertainty. We see that inflection point occurring sometime next year, leading to a more challenging environment for global fixed income "carry trades" that are also focused on global growth, like developed market corporate bonds and emerging market debt. The current market sell-off is likely too soon to be the ultimate realization of that forecast. Monetary policy settings remain accommodative and inflation is still below central bank targets in almost all major economies, while global growth momentum is showing no signs of slowing. This is an early indication, however, of how the investment backdrop will become much more challenging later in 2018 as global inflation continues to rise. We continue to recommend a pro-growth fixed income investment strategy, staying below-benchmark overall duration, focusing on lower-beta government bond markets, overweighting corporate debt over sovereign debt, and prioritizing inflation protection in bond portfolios. In the coming weeks, however, we will begin to discuss strategies to play for the shift to a more hostile investment backdrop that we expect later in 2018. The U.S. Bond Vigilantes Are Back In Charge Global monetary policies that remain "too" accommodative given robust growth and some pickup in realized inflation have prompted bond markets to reprice, through both higher inflation expectations and real yields. Rising yields have triggered a spike in market volatility measures like the U.S. VIX index, although there were also several bouts of higher volatility in 2017 (Chart 2). Growth-sensitive financial assets shrugged off those higher volatility episodes, mainly because growth expectations were not impacted. We see no reason why this current bout of market turbulence should differ from last year's volatility spikes, and have any meaningful impact on forecasts for future economic growth (and, by extension, corporate profits). At least, not without a more meaningful tightening of global monetary policy, particularly in the U.S. where inflation pressures are gaining steam. The December Payrolls report released last week may finally contain that missing piece of the inflation puzzle - faster wage growth. Headline Average Hourly Earnings expanded 2.9% on a year-over-year basis, with the 3-month annualized growth rate surging to pre-crisis levels above 4% (Chart 3). Coming at a time when the U.S. labor market remains tight by any measure (top panel), a pickup in wage growth supports the other evidence indicating that U.S. inflation is on the upswing, like the modest acceleration in core PCE inflation (3rd panel) and steady climb in TIPS breakevens (bottom panel).2 Chart 2This Is A Correction,##BR##Not A Reversal, In Risk Assets Chart 3U.S. Wage Inflation##BR##Finally Appears A faster inflation backdrop is making the Fed's current monetary policy plans more credible for investors. The U.S. Overnight Index Swap (OIS) curve is now fully pricing in the Fed's three planned interest rate hikes for 2018, and has almost priced in the additional 50bps of hikes the Fed is projecting for 2019 (Chart 4). Rate expectations even further out the curve have been climbing, as well. Our measure of the market's expectation for the so-called "terminal rate" - the 5-year U.S. OIS rate, 5-years forward - is now up to 2.66%, only 9bps below the current median projection ("dot") for the terminal rate. Markets have been highly skeptical that the Fed would ever be able to raise rates as high as its projections in recent years - justifiably so, given that U.S. realized inflation has been persistently falling short of the Fed's 2% inflation target. Now, with core inflation having clearly bottomed out and shorter annualized rates of change closing in on 2%, markets are coming around to the idea that the Fed inflation forecasts will be realized. If that happens, then the Fed should be expected to follow through on its published projections, not only for 2018 but for the remainder of the current tightening cycle. On that basis, there is not a lot more room for the market's pricing of the expected path of U.S. interest rates to converge to the Fed's projections. That suggests that the shorter-end of the U.S. Treasury curve may be approaching a cyclical peak - unless the Fed were to begin revising up its "dots" in response to a faster pace of U.S. economic growth and inflation. That would require the Fed to start believing that a faster pace of rate hikes, or a higher equilibrium real interest rate, was required in the U.S. The current real interest rate remains around 0% (subtracting core PCE inflation from the fed funds rate), as the Fed's rate hikes since beginning the tightening cycle in December 2015 have matched the increase in realized inflation. Measures of the so-called "r-star" equilibrium rate, like the Williams-Laubach measure, are also indicating that the real fed funds rate should be around 0% (Chart 5). The real fed funds rate has historically been highly correlated to the employment/population ratio in the U.S., and the current level of that ratio (60%) suggests that the Fed does not have to target a real funds rate above 0%. The conclusion is that it would take a sign of even greater U.S. labor market utilization - i.e. a rising employment/population ratio - for the Fed to conclude that it must raise its interest rate projections. Chart 4Market Pricing Has Caught Up##BR##To The Fed's Forecasts Chart 5A 0% Real Fed Funds Rate##BR##Is Still Appropriate Without such a boost to the Fed's expected path of interest rates, any remaining increases in U.S. Treasury yields will have to come from higher inflation expectations. On that front, the current level of the 10-year TIPS breakeven at 2.14% remains 30-40bps below the 2.4-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target (adjusting for the typical gap between CPI and PCE inflation and allowing for a small inflation risk premium). That suggests that the 10-year nominal Treasury yield can rise to the 3.10-3.25% range to fully discount a sustainable return of inflation to the Fed's target, with the Fed delivering on its interest rate projections in response. That target range is also not far from the current fair value from our 2-factor 10-year U.S. Treasury yield model, which has risen to 3.01% (Chart 6).3 It will be critical to watch the future behavior of the parts of the U.S. economy that are most sensitive to interest rates, like consumer durables and housing, for signs that the latest rise in U.S. bond yields is having any negative effect on U.S. growth. A slowing trajectory for U.S. growth in response to higher interest rates would certainly give the Fed some second thoughts on moving ahead with its rate hike plans. On that note, the year-over-year change in the 10-year Treasury yield is now in positive territory, which has typically led to a slower contribution to U.S. real GDP growth from consumer durables (Chart 7, top panel). The rise in U.S. mortgage rates should also lead to slower growth in residential investment, although housing has already been providing very little marginal contribution to U.S. growth over the past two years (2nd panel). Chart 6Fair Value On The 10-Year##BR##UST Yield Is 3%...And Rising Chart 7Rising U.S. Capex Should Offset##BR##Slowing Interest-Sensitive Spending The potential offset to any slowdown in interest-sensitive spending, however, is capital spending by businesses, which is being boosted by easy financial conditions (bottom panel), loosening bank lending standards and a rise on the expected after-tax return on investment following the Trump corporate tax cuts. It will likely take higher interest rates, and much tighter financial conditions, before the capex cycle peaks out. Bottom Line: Overheated financial markets are going through a much needed correction, with higher bond yields, most notably in the U.S., being the immediate trigger. The cyclical rise in global bond yields is not yet complete, however, and monetary policies will need to tighten further in response to strong growth and rising inflation pressures. The cyclical interest rate tipping point for risk assets has not yet been reached, even in the U.S., but is getting incrementally closer. Don't Forget The Other Factor Driving Global Bond Yields - Reduced Central Bank Buying Amidst all the worries about higher inflation and the related impact on global bond yields, it should not be forgotten that the major developed market central banks have been cutting back on their bond purchases. Global bond yields have been correlated to the growth rate of the combined balance sheet of the "G-4" central banks (Fed, ECB, BoJ and Bank of England) since the ECB started its bond buying program in 2015 (Chart 8). The current rise in global yields has been in line with the projected slower pace of aggregate bond buying by those central banks. Based on our projection for the year-over-year growth rate of the G-4 central bank balance sheets - which incorporate the Fed letting maturing bonds run off its balance sheet and cutbacks in the pace of buying of new bonds by the ECB and BoJ - there is still more room for bond yields to rise over the course of 2018. A slower pace of central bank "liquidity" creation is something that we anticipated to weigh on risk asset returns in 2018. By driving down the yields on safe assets like government debt to highly unattractive levels, central banks induced huge inflows into global equity and credit markets, both in the developed and emerging worlds. As central banks are now buying fewer bonds, however, there is not only reduced downward pressure on government bond yields but also diminished scope for additional inflows into riskier assets. Looking at the growth rate of the G-4 central bank balance sheet versus the rolling 12-month returns on global equities and credit, the current pullback in overheated risk assets is merely bringing returns back down to levels consistent with central banks taking their foot off the monetary accelerator (Chart 9). Chart 8The Central Bank Impact On##BR##Bond Yields Is Slowly Unwinding... Chart 9...Which Impacts Risk Asset##BR##Returns, As Well For global fixed income markets, we had anticipated that 2018 would be a year of much lower expected returns on spread product like global corporate debt, although those would still beat the returns likely from government debt - at least until government bond yields reached our cyclical targets. Our view has not changed, even in light of the current pullback in risk assets and yesterday's decline in government bond yields. For now, we continue to recommend an overweight stance on global corporate debt, but favoring U.S. Investment Grade and High-Yield debt over European equivalents (and over Emerging Market hard currency debt). We will discuss our eventual recommended exit strategy in upcoming reports, but for now, our advice is to sit tight and ride out this current bout of market turbulence. Bottom Line: Returns on global spread product are still expected to beat those on sovereign debt in the coming months, particularly after the latest market correction restored some value through spread widening. There is no sign yet that the sell-off is damaging future global growth expectations that can stall the move to less accommodative monetary policy. Maintain an overall below-benchmark duration stance, favoring corporate credit over sovereign debt - especially in the U.S. - for now. Robert Robis, Senior Vice President Global Fixed Income Strategy rrobis@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "2018 Key Views: BCA's Outlook & What It Means For Global Fixed Income Markets", dated December 5th, 2017, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 It is interesting to note that it took a sharp pickup in the Average Hourly Earnings measure to get the market's attention about wage inflation. Many Fed officials and market commentators (including here at BCA!) have consistently pointed out the inherent flaws in looking at Average Hourly Earnings as an accurate measure of wage pressures in the U.S. Yet the big market response to the latest surge in Average Hourly Earnings is a sign that investors still look at that indicator as the "true" measure of wage inflation. 3 The standard deviation of the fair value estimate from that model is 17bps, which means that yields could rise as high as 3.18% before reaching an "undervalued" level for U.S. Treasuries - assuming no further increases in fair value, of course. Recommendations Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Special Report Dear Client, In light of recent market turbulence, we are publishing our weekly report earlier than usual. Caroline Miller, Garry Evans, and I will also be hosting a webcast Wednesday morning at 10am EST to discuss the investment outlook. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights Monday's stock market rout was largely driven by technical factors. Strong economic growth and positive earnings surprises should keep the equity bull market intact. Nevertheless, investors need to adjust to the fact that volatility is likely to pick up, just as it did in the last few years of the 1990s bull market. The market's expectations of where the funds rate will be over the next two years have almost converged with the Fed dots. In the near term, this will limit the ability of the 10-year Treasury yield to rise much above 3%. Looking further out, inflation is likely to move above the Fed's target early next year, setting the stage for a recession starting in late 2019. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Feature VIX Kicks Last week's Global Investment Strategy report, entitled "Take Out Some Insurance," argued that equities had become dangerously overbought and were highly vulnerable to a correction.1 We noted that the VIX had likely bottomed for the cycle and that going long volatility had now become an attractive hedge against stock market declines. As many of my colleagues have noted, betting on continued low volatility had become an increasingly crowded trade in recent years. Back in January, we observed that net short volatility positions had reached record-high levels (Chart 1). We warned that "traders have been able to reap huge gains over the past few years by betting volatility will decline. The problem is that if volatility starts to rise, those same traders could start to unload their positions, leading to even higher volatility."2 Precisely such a vicious cycle erupted on Monday, causing the S&P 500 to suffer its worst daily percentage loss since August 18, 2011. The question is where do we go from here? So far, the sell-off in stocks looks largely technical in nature. Chart 2 shows that the VIX soared by roughly four times more on Monday than one would have expected based solely on the decline in equity prices. This suggests that the spike in volatility caused the stock market plunge, rather than the other way around. The relatively muted reaction of other "risk gauges" such as junk bonds, EM stocks, and gold prices over the past few days is consistent with this thesis. Chart 1Volatility Is Back Chart 2Monday's VIX Spike Was Abnormally Large Cyclical Outlook Still Solid It is impossible to know if today's rebound will persist or if the correction still has further to run. What we do know is that the cyclical underpinnings for the bull market remain intact. Leading economic data remain buoyant (Chart 3). Corporate earnings continue to come in above expectations (Chart 4). Chart 3Global Economic Backdrop Remains Buoyant Chart 4Optimism Over 2018 Earnings Growth None of our recession-timing indicators are flashing red (Chart 5). The Conference Board's LEI is rising at a healthy 5.5% y/y pace. Historically, a decisive break below zero in the year-over-year change in the LEI has been a reliable recession indicator. Likewise, while the U.S. 2/10-year Treasury curve has flattened, it has not inverted yet. Moreover, even once the yield curve inverts, the lags can be quite long before the recession begins. For example, in the last cycle, the yield curve inverted in early 2006, but the recession did not begin until December 2007. This does not mean that everything will be smooth sailing from here. Monday's sell-off marked an inflection point in the low-volatility world that has prevailed over the past few years. The VIX Humpty-Dumpty has been irrevocably broken. Going forward, volatility will remain elevated relative to what investors have come to expect. As the experience of the 1990s shows, stocks can still go up when volatility is trending higher (Chart 6), but this is going to make for a much more challenging investment environment. Chart 5No Signs Of An Imminent End To This Business Cycle Chart 6Volatility Can Increase As Stock Prices Rise The Powell Put? How the Fed and other central banks react to this new world will be critical. It is perhaps not a complete coincidence that Monday's crash occurred on the first day that Jay Powell took over the helm of the Fed. Investors are increasingly worried that the Fed will turn from friend to foe. The faster-than-expected increase in average hourly earnings in January put those fears in stark relief. Accelerating wage growth suggests supply-side constraints are beginning to bite. This, in turn, means that the runway for low inflation and easy monetary policy may not be as long as some had hoped. As BCA editors discussed in our 2018 Outlook, "Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," central banks are in the process of winding down the extraordinary stimulus that investors have gotten used to.3 Whether this undermines the case for holding stocks and other risk assets depends on how quickly the adjustment occurs. On the plus side, we continue to think the adjustment will be fairly gradual, at least for the time being. Core CPI inflation outside of shelter is still running at 0.7% (Chart 7). This gives the Fed plenty of wiggle room. Just like Janet Yellen, Jay Powell will seek to build a consensus among his colleagues. Granted, the composition of the FOMC is likely to shift in a somewhat more hawkish direction. However, the evolution will be slow. In the meantime, the recommendations of career Fed staff will represent an important, and often underappreciated, source of continuity. As in the past, the Fed will continue to monitor incoming economic and financial data and react accordingly. The stock market rout has led to some tightening in financial conditions, but FCIs in the U.S. and most other countries remain more expansionary than they were six months ago (Chart 8). Chart 7Core Inflation Outside Housing Is Still Low Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Tightened Recently, But Are Still Easier Than They Were Last Year Just as importantly, the implosion of volatility funds is unlikely to reverberate across the financial system in the same way as it did during the financial crisis. What made the mortgage crisis so toxic was that the losses were concentrated in the books of highly leveraged financial institutions. In the case of volatility funds, that does not appear to be the case. Investment Implications Global bond yields remain quite low by historic standards and this should continue to support stocks. Indeed, even after the recent bond sell-off, average global bond yields are still close to half of what they were in 2011 - a time when global excess capacity was much greater than it is today (Chart 9). In keeping with our structurally bearish view on bonds, which we first articulated on July 5, 2016 in a note entitled "The End of 35-Year Bond Bull Market," we expect global bond yields to grind higher.4 However, in rate-of-change terms, the swift repricing of yields over the past few months has likely run its course. Chart 10 shows that market expectations of where the funds rate will be at the end of 2018 and 2019 have almost converged with the Fed dots. This convergence helped our short December-2018 fed funds futures trade, which we closed at our stop for a gain of 70 bps last Friday. A sustained move above 3% on the 10-year Treasury yield will require a more durable increase in inflation. Ultimately, we do expect core inflation to move above 2%, forcing the Fed to lift interest rates into restrictive territory. However, this is likely to be a story for 2019 rather than 2018. Stocks tend to peak about six months before the start of recessions (Table 1). If the next recession occurs in late 2019, as we expect, the equity bull market could last a while longer. A modest overweight on global risk assets is warranted for now, but investors should consider reducing risk exposure later this year. Chart 9Yields Are Still Low By Historic Standards Chart 10Market Pricing Has Almost Caught Up To The Fed's Dots Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Take Out Some Insurance," dated February 2, 2018. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin Be DeFANGed?" dated January 12, 2018. 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "2018 Outlook - Policy And The Markets: On A Collision Course," dated November 20, 2017. 4 Please see Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "End Of The 35-Year Bond Bull Market," dated July 5, 2016. Strategy & Market Trends* Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Trades Closed In 2015-2018
Highlights Global equities are technically overbought, making them highly vulnerable to a correction. The cyclical picture for stocks still looks good, thanks to strong economic growth and rising corporate profits, but the recent spike in bond yields is becoming a headwind. Valuations are highly stretched, particularly in the U.S. This points to subpar long-term returns. On balance, we recommend staying overweight global equities. However, investors should consider buying some insurance against a market selloff. The VIX has probably bottomed for this cycle and high-yield spreads are unlikely to move much lower. This makes long volatility and short credit positions attractive hedges. Going short AUD/JPY is also an appealing hedge, given the yen's defensive characteristics and the Aussie dollar's vulnerability to slower Chinese growth. We were stopped out of our long global industrials versus utilities trade for a gain of 12%. We are also raising our stop on our short fed funds futures trade to 70 bps. Feature A Cloudy Picture As a rule of thumb, technical factors drive stocks over short-term horizons of one-to-three months, business cycle developments and financial conditions drive stocks over horizons of one-to-two years, and valuations drive stocks over ultra long-term horizons of five years and beyond. Occasionally, all three sets of signals line up in the same direction. In March 2009, the combination of bombed-out sentiment, cheap valuations, green shoots in the economy, and the expansion of the Fed's QE program all aligned to mark the beginning of a powerful bull market in stocks. Unfortunately, today the calculus is not so simple. Stocks Are Technically Overbought Technically, the stock market has gotten ahead of itself. The S&P 500 Relative Strength Index hit a record high earlier this week, while our Technical Indicator reached a post-recession high (Chart 1). The S&P has now gone 310 days without a 3% drawdown and 402 days without a 5% drawdown - both records (Chart 2). Chart 1U.S. Equities Are Technically Overbought Chart 2It's Been A Long Time Since U.S. Stocks Corrected Irrational exuberance is back. Our Composite Sentiment Indicator has jumped to the highest level since right before the 1987 crash (Chart 3). Retail investors are also flooding back into the market. Discount brokers such as E*TRADE and Ameritrade have seen a flurry of activity (Chart 4).The latest monthly survey conducted by the American Association of Individual Investors showed that respondents had the largest allocation to stocks since 2000 (Chart 5). Chart 3Equity Investors Are Mega-Bullish Chart 4Retail Investors Have Piled In (Part I) Chart 5Retail Investors Have Piled In (Part II) The Economy And Earnings Still Paint A Bullish Backdrop Chart 6Economic Outlook Remains Solid In contrast to the ominous technical picture, the cyclical outlook for stocks looks reasonably solid (Chart 6). The Citigroup Economic Surprise Index for major advanced economies has risen to near record-high levels. Goldman's Global Current Activity Indicator stands close to a cycle high of 5%, up from 2.2% at the start of 2016. Our Global Leading Indicator has decelerated somewhat, but is still pointing to above-trend growth this year. Growth in the euro area remains strong. The economy grew by 2.5% in 2017, the fastest pace since 2007. U.S. growth is gathering steam. Real private final demand increased by 4.6% in Q4. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model is signaling growth of 5.4% in the first quarter, while the New York Fed Staff Nowcast is pointing to a more plausible growth rate of 3.1%. Reflecting the strong economy, corporate profits are ripping higher. 45% of S&P 500 companies have reported 2017 Q4 results. 80% have beaten consensus EPS projections, above the long-term average of 69%. 82% have beaten revenue projections, which also exceeds the long-term average of 56%. The fact that earnings and revenue have surprised so strongly to the upside is all the more impressive given the sharp increase in EPS estimates over the past few months (Chart 7). Moreover, the improvement in earnings has been broad-based across sectors (Table 1). Chart 7Analysts Scramble To Revise 2018 Earnings Estimates Higher Table 1Estimated Earnings Growth For 2018 Financial Conditions Are Supportive, But Rising Bond Yields Are A Risk Financial and monetary conditions remain accommodative, as judged by an assortment of financial conditions indices (Chart 8). The global credit impulse has surged (Chart 9). Chart 8Financial Conditions Have Eased Chart 9Global Credit Impulse Is Positive The recent rapid ascent in global bond yields complicates matters. So far, much of the increase in yields has been driven by higher inflation expectations. This has kept real yields down. Indeed, real 2-year yields have actually declined in the euro area and Japan over the last several months. In absolute terms, yields are still low by historic standards (Chart 10). As my colleague Doug Peta, who heads our Global ETF Strategy service, has documented, rising bond yields pose a bigger problem for the economy and risk assets when they move into restrictive territory (Table 2). We are not there yet (Chart 11). Stronger global growth and diminished spare capacity have pushed up the pain threshold for when rising bond yields begin to bite. In the U.S., fiscal stimulus and a cheaper dollar have also caused the neutral rate to rise. Chart 10Yields Are Still Low ##br## By Historic Standards Table 2Aggregate Real S&P 500 Returns ##br## During Rate Cycle Phases From August 1961 Chart 11Rates Not Hurting ... Yet Nevertheless, equities often struggle to digest rapid increases in bond yields. Although the late 2016 episode stands out as an exception, stocks have typically floundered following an increase in global bond yields of around 50 bps (Table 3). The yield on the JP Morgan Global Government Bond index has risen by 27 bps since last autumn. If yields continue their swift ascent, stocks could come under pressure. Table 3What Happens When Bond Yields Spike? Valuation Concerns Chart 12Demanding U.S. Valuations Point To Low Long-Term Returns Valuations are not much use for timing the stock market, but they are the most important driver of returns over the long haul. Chart 12 shows the close correlation between the Shiller P/E ratio in the U.S. and the subsequent 10-year total return for stocks. Even though realized earnings growth tends to be higher following periods when the P/E ratio is elevated, this is more than offset by a lower dividend yield and the compression of P/E multiples. Today's Shiller P/E ratio of 34 presages subpar returns over the next decade. The picture is somewhat better outside the U.S. Our composite valuation measure - which combines trailing P/E, price-to-sales, price-to-book, Tobin's Q, and market capitalization-to-GDP - suggests that most stock markets outside the U.S. will see returns in the low-to-mid single-digit range over the next ten years (Appendix 1). Nevertheless, this is still well below the historic average return for these markets. What To Do? Our cyclical overweight in global equities has worked out well, and barring evidence that the global economy is tipping into recession, we intend to maintain this recommendation. Nevertheless, the discussion above suggests that stocks are vulnerable to a near-term correction and that long-term returns are likely to be lackluster at best. As such, it is sensible to take out some insurance against a market selloff. The question, as always, is how to guard against a drop in equity prices without suffering too much of a drag if global bourses continue to grind higher. We noted three weeks ago that today's equity bull market is starting to look increasingly like the one in the late 1990s.1 Back then, rising equity prices were accompanied by both higher volatility and wider credit spreads (Chart 13). History seems to be repeating itself. The VIX bottomed on November 24 at 8.56 and ended last week at 11.08, even as the S&P 500 hit another record high. Investors should consider buying volatility futures on any major dip in the VIX. Junk bonds have also underperformed equities year-to-date, which has benefited our long S&P 500/short high-yield credit recommendation. As we go to press, the Barclays high-yield total return index is flat for the year, while the S&P 500 has gained 5.7%. Given the deterioration in our Corporate Health Monitor, and the likelihood that rising inflation will keep Treasury yields in an uptrend, investors should consider hedging equity risk by shorting junk bonds. Chart 13Volatility Can Increase And Spreads Can Widen As Stock Prices Rise Chart 14Chinese Growth Is Decelerating Moderately Go Short AUD/JPY Chart 15Iron Ore Stockpiles Are Hitting New Highs In China Going short the Australian dollar versus the Japanese yen is also an appealing hedge against a broad-based retreat from risk assets. The yen is a highly defensive currency. Japan has a healthy current account surplus of 4% of GDP. Its accumulated foreign assets outstrip foreign liabilities by a whopping 65% of GDP. When Japanese investors get nervous about the world and start repatriating funds back home, the yen invariably strengthens. The Aussie dollar is highly levered to the Chinese economy. While we do not expect a steep deceleration in Chinese growth this year, we do think that growth will fall from last year's heady pace. This can already be seen in the deterioration in the Li Keqiang index (Chart 14). The growth rate of railway freight, one of the index's components, has fallen from above 20% in early 2017 to -1%. Crucially for Australia, iron ore stockpiles in Chinese ports are hitting record highs (Chart 15). Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of Australia's commodity index has rolled over. The year-over-year change in the index has dropped from a high of 47% six months ago to -1%. Domestically, the output gap stands at 2% of GDP. Both core CPI inflation and wage growth remain subdued (Chart 16). The household saving rate has dropped to 3%, while debt levels have reached nosebleed levels (Chart 17). This will limit consumer spending. Business confidence has dipped recently, as has the PMI new orders index (Chart 18). Mining capex has been trending lower, falling from over 6% of GDP in 2012 to 2.1% of GDP in 2017. The Australian government expects mining capex to sink further to 1.3% of GDP in 2018 (Chart 19). All this will limit the RBA's ability to hike rates. Chart 16Australian Core CPI Inflation And Wage Growth Remain Subdued Chart 17Australian Household Debt At Unsustainable Levels Chart 18Australia: Business Confidence And Orders Have Dipped Chart 19Mining Capex To Fall Further From a valuation perspective, AUD/JPY currently trades at a 27% premium to its Purchasing Power Parity exchange rate, having traded at a discount of as much as 50% back in 2000 (Chart 20). Speculators are heavily short the yen right now. As my colleague Mathieu Savary has noted, this could supercharge any short covering rally.2 Higher asset market volatility should also weaken the Aussie dollar. Chart 21 shows that AUD/JPY tends to be inversely correlated with the CVIX, an index of currency volatility. Chart 20AUD/JPY Trading At A Premium Chart 21Higher Vol Will Weaken AUD With this in mind, we are opening a new tactical trade recommendation to go short AUD/JPY. As a housekeeping matter, we are closing our long AUD/NZD trade for a loss of 1.8%. We were also stopped out of our long global industrial stocks versus utilities trade for a gain of 12%. Lastly, we are raising our stop on our short fed funds futures trade to 70 bps. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Will Bitcoin be Defanged," dated January 12, 2018, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Yen: QQE Is Dead! Long Live YCC!," dated January 12, 2018, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Appendix 1 Chart A1Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S.Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S.Long-Term Return Prospects Are Slightly Better Outside The U.S. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Watch Inflation Expectations How much longer can this go on? Global equities were up 6% in January alone (the 15th consecutive month of positive returns), and investors are increasingly asking how much further this bull market has to run. There are no signs we can see that suggest it will end imminently. Our watch-list of key recession indicators (decline in global PMIs, inverted yield curve, rise in credit spreads - Chart 1) is sending no warning signals. U.S. GDP growth was a little weaker than expected in Q4, at 2.6% QoQ annualized, but this was mainly due to inventories and strong imports: final private demand, a better guide to future growth, was strong at 4.3%. Fed NowCasts for Q1 growth point to 3.1-4.2%. The euro zone grew even faster than the U.S. last year, and even Japan probably saw 1.8% GDP growth. Corporate earnings expectations have accelerated sharply over just the past few weeks - particularly in the U.S. as a result of the tax cuts (Chart 2) - with analysts now expecting 16% EPS growth for the S&P 500 this year. BCA U.S. Equity Strategy service's earnings models suggest that this forecast may still be too cautious (Chart 3). Recommended Allocation Chart 1No Recession Signals Flashing Chart 2A Dramatic Rise In Earnings Forecasts... Chart 3...But Forecasts May Still Be Too Cautious While it is true that equity valuations are stretched, particularly in the U.S. (with BCA's Composite Valuation Index having just tipped into the "Extremely Overvalued" zone - Chart 4), valuations are not usually a good timing tool. Investor euphoria seems not yet to have reached the extremes that usually characterize a bull-market peak. The message we hear consistently from wealth managers is that their clients who missed last year's rally are now looking to get into risk assets. The American Association of Individual Investors' latest weekly survey shows 45% bulls to 24% bears - not especially optimistic by past standards (Chart 5). Flows into equity funds have started to accelerate, but have been weaker than bond flows over the past year (Chart 6). Chart 4U.S. Equities Now 'Extremely Overvalued' Chart 5Investors Are Not Particularly Bullish Chart 6Flows Into Equities Starting To Accelerate Chart 7Key: Inflation Expectations Getting to 2.5% We think the key to timing the top lies in inflation expectations. With the U.S. economy at full capacity and unemployment at 4.1%, well below the NAIRU of 4.6%, the Fed believes that a pick-up in inflation is just a matter of time - an analysis we agree with. The market has started to come round to this view too, with implied inflation rising by about 40 BPs over the past two months (Chart 7). The market has now priced in a 65% probability of the Fed's projected three rate hikes this year, and even a 27% probability of four. Inflation expectations hitting 2.5% (which would be compatible with the Fed's 2% PCE inflation target - CPI inflation is typically 50 BPs higher) could be the tipping-point. This is because it would remove the Fed put - with inflation expectations elevated, the Fed would no longer be able to back off from tightening in the event of a global risk-off event such as a stock-market correction or a slowdown in China. Such a rise in inflation expectations would also push the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield above 3%, which would increase the attraction of fixed income, and represent a threat to highly indebted borrowers, especially in emerging markets. This is how bull markets typically end: with the Fed having to raise rates to choke off inflation, and either making a policy mistake or tightening monetary policy enough to slow growth. But all this is probably quite a few months away. We expect to turn more defensive perhaps late this year, ahead of a recession that we have for some time now penciled in for the second half of 2019. Given how advanced the cycle is, conservative investors primarily concerned with capital preservation might look to dial down risk or hedge exposure now. But investors focused on quarterly performance should ride the bull market until some of the warning signals mentioned above begin to flash. For now, therefore, we continue to recommend an overweight in equities relative to bonds on the 12-month investment horizon, and mostly pro-risk and pro-cyclical tilts. Equities: We continue to prefer developed over emerging equities. EM will be hurt by the slowdown likely in China (where money supply and credit growth have fallen in response to the authorities' tighter policies - Chart 8), rising U.S. interest rates, sluggish productivity growth, and valuations that are no longer particularly cheap (Chart 9). Within DM, we are overweight euro zone and Japanese equities, which should benefit from their higher beta, more cyclical earnings, still accommodative monetary policy, and cheaper valuations than the U.S. Our sector bets are tilted to late-cycle value sectors such as financials, industrials and energy. Chart 8Tighter Monetary Conditions in China Chart 9EM No Longer Cheap Fixed Income: Rising inflation expectations should push the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield up to 3% this year, with German Bunds rising by a similar amount. We recommend an underweight on duration, and a preference for inflation-linked over nominal bonds, in these markets. In the U.K. and Australia, however, central banks are unlikely to tighten as quickly as futures markets have priced in and so we prefer their government bonds. While the expansion continues, spread product should continue to outperform in the fixed-income bucket. The default-adjusted spread on U.S. high-yield bonds remains over 200 BP and, though we see little further spread contraction, carry alone makes this attractive. Currencies: BCA was correct last year to predict a widening of interest-rate differentials between the U.S. and the euro zone, but wrong to conclude that this would lead to a stronger dollar (Chart 10). The drivers of currencies can undergo regime shifts, and it seems now that valuation (both the euro and yen are cheap compared to their purchasing power parity, 1.32 and 99 to the U.S. dollar respectively), current account surpluses (3.3% for the euro zone and 3.7% for Japan), and other factors have become more important. Tactically, the euro, in particular, looks very overbought. Speculative investors are very long euros, the ECB is likely to remain dovish relative to the Fed, and the strong euro could put some downward pressure on growth in the short-term. However, if the dollar were to rebound by 5% or so we would be likely to end our dollar bull call. Chart 10Rate Differentials No Longer Moving Currencies Chart 11Oil Supply To Increase In 2019 Commodities: Oil prices have risen on the back of strong global demand, OPEC discipline, and a lag in the response of U.S. shale oil producers. We forecast an average of $67 a barrel for Brent crude this year, with spikes to as high as $80 in the event of disruptions in producer countries such as Venezuela. However, with one-year forward crude prices around $62, shale producers (whose marginal costs average about $52 a barrel) are likely to pick up production soon. OPEC, too, should be happy with crude around $50-60. Our energy team forecasts a pick-up in supply next year (Chart 11), which should bring the crude price down to an average of $55 in 2019. Industrial commodities are a product of Chinese demand, global growth, and the U.S. dollar. These drivers look likely to be mixed over the coming months and so we remain neutral. Gold has risen, in the face of rising interest rates, because of the weak dollar - it remains an excellent hedge against inflation, recession, and geopolitical risks and so should be a modest part of any balanced portfolio. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation