Gold
Highlights Washington must establish a "credible threat" if it is to convince Pyongyang that negotiations offer the superior outcome; The process of establishing such a credible threat is volatile; U.S. Treasurys, along with Swiss and Japanese government bonds have been consistent safe haven assets; The risk of a U.S. attack against North Korea is a red herring, while the crisis itself is not; We suggest that investors hedge the risk with an equally-weighted basket of Swiss bonds and gold. Feature Brinkmanship between Pyongyang and Washington, D.C. has roiled markets over the past week. The uptick in rhetoric has not come as a surprise. Since last year, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy has stressed that souring Sino-American relations were the premier geopolitical risk to investors and that China's periphery, especially the Korean peninsula, would be the "decisive" factor for markets.1 North Korea's nuclear ambitions - which could be snuffed out immediately by a concerted and coordinated effort by China and the U.S. - are a derivative of the broader U.S.-China dynamic. The U.S. is unlikely to use military force to resolve its standoff with North Korea. There are long-standing constraints to war, ones that all of the interested parties know only too well from their experience in the Korean War of 1950-53. The first of these is that war is likely to bring a high death toll: Pyongyang can inflict massive civilian casualties in Seoul with a conventional artillery barrage; U.S. troops and Japanese troops and civilians would also likely suffer. Second, China is unlikely to remain neutral, given its behavior in the 1950s, its persistent strategic interest in the peninsula, and its huge increase in military strength relative to both the past and to the United States. However, the process by which the U.S. establishes a "credible threat" of military action is volatile.2 Such a credible threat is necessary if Washington is to convince Pyongyang that negotiations offer a superior outcome to the belligerent status quo. Viewed from this perspective - which is informed by game theory -President Donald Trump has not committed any grave mistakes so far, but has rather shrewdly manipulated the world's perception that he is mentally unhinged in order to enhance his negotiating leverage. It is unclear how long it will take Trump to convince North Korea that the threat of a U.S. preemptive strike is "credible." As such, it is unclear how long the current standoff will persist. From an investor perspective, it will be difficult to gauge whether the brinkmanship and military posturing are part of this "territorial threat display" or evidence of real preparations for an actual attack. As such, further volatility is likely. The ongoing crisis in North Korea is neither the first nor the last geopolitical crisis the world will face in today's era of paradigm shifts.3 We have long identified East Asia as the cauldron of investment-relevant geopolitical risks.4 This is a dynamic produced by the multipolar global context and the geopolitical disequilibrium in the Sino-American relationship. For now, investors have been able to ignore the rising global tensions (Chart 1) due to the ample liquidity emanating from central banks, but the day of reckoning is nigh (Chart 2). Chart 1Multipolarity Increases Conflict Frequency Chart 2Day Of Reckoning? Q&A On North Korea Back on April 19, we wrote a Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," which argued that North Korea had at last become a market-relevant geopolitical risk after decades of limited impact (Chart 3).5 Chart 3North Korean Provocations Rarely Affect Markets For Long Looking to the next steps, we introduced the "arc of diplomacy," a framework comparable to the U.S.-Iran nuclear negotiations from 2010-15 (Chart 4). We predicted that the U.S. would ultimately ramp up threats for the purpose of achieving a diplomatic solution. The U.S. was constrained and would only go to war if an act of war were committed, or appeared imminent.6 Chart 4Arc Of Diplomacy: Tensions Ramp Up As Nuclear Negotiations Begin This assessment is now playing out. But not all clients are convinced of our logic, as we have found in our travels throughout Asia Pacific and elsewhere this month. Below we offer a short Q&A based on questions we have received from clients: Q: Diplomacy has already been tried, so why won't the U.S. attack? A: The U.S. public has less appetite for war, especially a preemptive strike, in the wake of the Iraq War, and has not suffered a 9/11 or Pearl Harbor-type catalyst. The U.S. will exhaust diplomatic options before joining a catastrophic second Korean War. And the diplomatic options are far from exhausted. The latest round of sanctions are tighter and more serious than past ones, but still leave categories untouched (like fuel supplies to the North) and are still very hard to enforce (like cutting illegal North Korean labor remittances). Enforcement is always difficult, and the U.S. is currently attempting to ensure that its allies enforce the sanctions strictly, not to mention its rivals (i.e. Russia and China). While we do not think China will ever impose crippling sanctions, we do think it can tighten them up considerably, which could be enough to change the North's behavior. Q: Why doesn't China just take North Korea out? A: China is a formal political, military, and ideological ally of North Korea, and has a strategic interest in maintaining a buffer space on the Korean peninsula - which it defended at enormous human cost in the Korean War. This interest remains in place. China is far more likely to aid and abet a nuclear-armed ally in North Korea than it is to endorse (much less participate in) regime change. The fallout from a new war, such as North Korean refugees flooding into China, is extremely undesirable for China, though it could handle the problem ruthlessly. China would also prefer not to have to occupy a collapsing North, which would be an extensive and dangerous entanglement. Therefore, expect China to twist Pyongyang's arm but not to break its legs. On a more topical note, China is consumed with domestic politics ahead of the nineteenth National Party Congress. It is perhaps more likely to take action after the congress in October-November. Q: Will U.S. allies cooperate with Trump? Why not bandwagon with China to gain economic benefit? A: South Korea is the best litmus test for whether Trump is causing U.S. allies to drift. The new South Korean President Moon Jae-In, who is politically left-of-center, has played his cards very carefully and started out on good footing with President Trump. A disagreement appears to be a likely consequence of Moon's agenda, which calls for extensive engagement with the North and a review of the U.S. THAAD missile defense deployment in Korea. So far, however, Moon is reaffirming the alliance, in his own way, and Trump has not (yet) expressed misgivings about him. If this changes significantly - as in, South Korea joining with China to give North Korea significant economic aid in defiance of U.S. sanctions efforts - then it would be a sign of division among the allies that would benefit North Korea and could even increase the risk of the U.S. taking unilateral action. The odds of that are still low, however. We have been short the Korean won versus the Thai baht since March 1, and the trade is up 6.03%. We also expect greater volatility and higher prices of credit default swaps to plague South Korea while the crisis continues over the coming months. We are closing our long Korean consumer stocks trade versus Taiwanese exporters for a loss of 4.24%. Q: What is Japan's role in the current crisis? What is the impact on Japan? A: Japan is one of the few countries whose relations with the U.S. have benefited under the Trump administration. The Japanese are in lock-step so far in reacting to North Korea. The government has been sounding louder alarms about North Korea for the past year, including by conducting evacuation drills in the case of attack. Japan has long been within range of North Korea's missiles, but its successes in nuclear miniaturization pose a much greater threat. Not only does North Korea pose a legitimate security risk, but Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also stands to benefit at least marginally in terms of popular support and support for his controversial constitutional revision. This will, in turn, feed into the region's insecurities. Yen strength as a result of the crisis, however, would be a headwind to Japan's economic growth. Thus Abe has a tightrope to walk. We expect him to take actions to ensure the economy continues to reflate. Q: Is Trump rational? How do we know he won't push the nuclear button? A: Ultimately this is unknowable. It also involves one's philosophical outlook. Josef Stalin and Mao Zedong both committed atrocities by the tens of millions but did not use nuclear weapons. Nikita Khrushchev practically wrote the playbook that North Korea's Kim dynasty has used in making its belligerent nuclear threats. Yet Khrushchev ultimately agreed to détente. Kim Jong Un makes Trump look calm. The combination of Kim and Trump is worrisome; but so was the combination of Eisenhower and Khrushchev, one believing nuclear weapons should be used if needed, the other threatening wildly to use them. It may be the case that the threat of an atrocity, or (in Kim's case) of total annihilation, is enough to keep decisions restrained. As we go to press, Kim has ostensibly suspended his plan to fire missiles around Guam and U.S. officials have repeatedly stated that they would not attack unless attacked. Stairway To (Safe) Haven Revisited In expectation of increased frequency of geopolitical risks, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy has produced two quantitative analyses of safe haven assets over the past two years. The first, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," unequivocally crowned gold as the ultimate safe haven (Table 1), while showing that the USD is not much of a defense against geopolitical events (Chart 5).7 Table 1Safe-Haven Demand Rises During Crises Table 1Safe-Haven Demand Rises During Crises As such, investors should fade the narrative that the failure of the USD to appreciate amidst the latest North Korean imbroglio is a sign of some structural weakness. The greenback continues to underperform due to weak inflation in the U.S., a fleeting condition that our macro-economist colleagues expect to reverse. Mathieu Savary, BCA's currency strategist, believes that more upside exists for the USD regardless of the geopolitical outcome: Chart 5Gold Loves Geopolitical Crises Chart 6DXY Is Cheap... Chart 7...But The Euro Is Not First, the dollar is currently trading at its deepest discount to the BCA Foreign Exchange Service augmented interest rate parity model since 2010 (Chart 6). The euro, which accounts for 58% of the DXY index, is its mirror image, being now overvalued by two sigma, the most since 2010 (Chart 7). Second, bullish euro bets will dissipate as Europe's economic outperformance versus the U.S. fades. Financial conditions have massively eased in the U.S., while they have tightened in Europe, resulting in the biggest upswing on euro area growth relative to the U.S. in over two years (Chart 8). Such an economic outperformance by the U.S. should lead to a strengthening greenback (Chart 9).8 Chart 8Easing Versus Tightening FCI Chart 9PMIs Point To USD Rally Our second attempt to quantify safe-haven assets, "Stairway To (Safe) Haven: Investing In Times Of Crisis," concluded that U.S. Treasurys, Swiss bonds, and Japanese bonds are the best performers in times of crisis.9 We considered 65 assets10 (Table 2) with five different methodologies and back-tested them empirically within the context of 25 financial and geopolitical events since January 1988. Some of these assets have been proven to perform as safe havens by previous academic research, some are commonly utilized in investment strategies, and others could provide alternatives (see Box 1 for further details). Table 2Scrutinizing The World For Safe Havens This report demystifies four key issues related to safe havens: Part I identifies what qualifies as a safe-haven asset. Unsurprisingly, the best performers are U.S. Treasurys along with Swiss and Japanese bonds due to their currency effects. Part II examines if safe havens change over time. We find that gold and Treasurys have changed places as safe havens, and that JGBs and Swiss bonds have a long history as portfolio protectors. Part III breaks down safe havens through an event analysis. We look at the country of origin, the nature of the crisis, and whether the risk is a "black swan" or "red herring" - two classifications of events that BCA's Geopolitical Strategy has established - all of which have an impact on their performance. But red herrings or black swans are only defined after the fact, thus requiring geopolitical analysis or market timing indicators to be able to act on them. Part IV demonstrates that timing plays a crucial part when investing in safe havens as their performance is coincident with that of equities. Box 1 Safe Havens - A Literature Review In a previous Geopolitical Strategy Special Report published in November 2015, it was established that shifts in economic and political regimes alter investors' preferences for safe-haven assets, and that Swiss bonds and U.S. 10-year Treasurys were at the top of that list.11 Also, statistical methods were used to demonstrate that gold had acted as a safe haven from the 1970s to the early 90s, but has since lost its status due in part to a new era of looming deflationary risks. Li and Lucey (2013) have identified a pattern in precious metals, through a series of quarterly rolling regressions testing the significance of the 1st, 5th and 10th percentile movements in U.S. equity movements against safe-haven assets, catching extreme negative events. For instance, the 1st percentile captures the very worst corrections that have occurred, the one that represent the bottom 1% of the equity performances. The 5th and 10th percentiles represent the 5% and 10% lowest returns for equities, respectively. The authors demonstrated that silver, platinum and palladium act as safe havens when gold does not.12 Similarly, Bauer and McDermott (2013) examined the 1st, 5th and 10th percentile movements in U.S. equity movements and proved that both gold and U.S. Treasurys can serve as safe havens, but that gold has the best record in times of extreme financial stress.13 Baele et al. (2015) concentrated on flight-to-safety episodes, which they characterized as events in which the VIX, TED spreads and a basket of CHF, JPY, and USD all increased drastically.14 They found that during flight-to-safety episodes, large cap stocks outperform small caps, precious metal and gold prices (measured in dollars) increase slightly, while bond returns exceed those of the equity market by 2.5-4 percentage points. Baur and Glover (2012) provide further evidence that gold can no longer be utilized as a safe haven due to increased speculation and hedging. Their main finding is that gold cannot be both an investment and a safe-haven asset. That is, gold can only be effective as a safe haven if the periods prior to the event had not generated significant investment demand for gold.15 Using high-frequency exchange rate data, Ranaldo and Soederlind (2010) conclude that the CHF, EUR and JPY have significant safe-haven characteristics, but not the GBP.16 The strongest safe havens are identified as the CHF and JPY, but the returns are partly reversed after a day of safe-haven protection. They also find that the nature of the crisis has a significant effect on safe-haven properties. For instance, a financial crisis and a natural disaster produced drastically different outcomes for the yen. Part I - Safety In Numbers Our first step in identifying safe-haven assets was to review each asset's performance against equities in times of crisis. As such, we conducted a series of threshold regressions to generate a list of true safe-haven assets - assets that have a statistically significant positive performance in times of turmoil. Our method is explained as follows: Step 1 - Percentile Dummies: Following methods from Li and Lucey (2013) and Bauer and McDermott (2013), we created dummy variables for the 1st, 5th and 10th percentile of the S&P 500 daily total returns since 1988. We then multiplied each of these dummies by their corresponding stock returns (see Box 1 for further detail). Step 2 - Regressions: Using the 64 potential safe-haven assets, we ran a series of regressions both in USD and the local currency, testing each asset's returns explained by the three percentile dummies.17 Step 3 - Identifying Safe Havens: We then quantified strong safe-havens as assets having significant coefficients for all three return thresholds (1st, 5th and 10th percentile of the S&P 500 daily total returns). Results - Seek Refuge In Currencies And Government Bonds: Our quantitative results are mainly consistent with what others have found in the past: the Japanese yen and most G10 government bonds are safe havens. Table 3 shows the safe-haven assets that generated negative coefficients versus equities for all three threshold percentiles. Table 3Seeking Protection Against Corrections In our threshold regressions expressed in USD terms, we found that the Japanese yen, Quality Stocks,18 and Japanese, Swiss and U.S. bonds acted as strong safe havens. Currencies play a crucial part in the performance of safe havens. In fact, in local-currency terms, a series of G10 government bonds (U.S., Canada, Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the U.K.) proved to be the most useful safe havens. In sum, true or strong safe havens are government bonds that have currencies that add to positive returns during times of crisis. Unsurprisingly, this select group of strong safe-haven assets is comprised of U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds. Quality Stocks did provide positive and statistically significant results, but the returns were very low - for this reason, we excluded them from our basket of strong safe havens. While gold, the Swiss franc, and the U.S. dollar did generate positive returns during times of crisis, they failed to generate statistically significant results at all three thresholds. Bottom Line: Based on our econometric work, most G10 government bonds can act as safe havens. But due to strong currency effects, our models favor what are already commonly known as safe havens: U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds. Simply put, the difference between this select group and other G10 bonds is that their currencies rise or are stable during turmoil, while the currencies of the other G10 bonds do not. Part II - Are Safe Havens Like Fine Wines? U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds were not always the top assets providing protection against the downside in equities, however. To determine whether safe-haven properties change, we examined the evolution of the relationship between safe havens and U.S. equity markets over time with the following model: Step 1 - Rolling Regressions: Considering the results obtained in Part I, we restricted our sample to G10 governments in USD and local-currency terms, Quality Stocks, gold, JPY, EUR, and USD for this statistical procedure. We put these remaining assets, both in USD and local-currency terms, through a series of 1-year rolling regressions.19 Step 2 - Identifying Trends: Each regression generated a coefficient that explained the relationship between equities and safe havens (B1). We created a new time series by collecting the coefficients for each data point and smoothing them using a five-year moving average, thus depicting a long-term pattern in the evolution of safe havens. Results - A Regime Shift In Gold And Treasurys: Our findings show that safe-haven assets fall in and out of favor through time (Charts 10A, B & C). Most striking are the changes in U.S. Treasurys and gold. Only after 2000 did Treasurys start providing a good hedge for equity corrections. The contrary is true for gold - it acted as one of the most secure investments during corrections until that time, but has since become correlated with S&P 500 total returns. That said, gold's coefficient has been falling closer to zero lately, illustrating that it could soon resurface as a proper safe haven, especially if deflation risks begin to dissipate. Given that this is precisely the conclusion stated by our colleague Peter Berezin - BCA's Chief Global Strategist - and our own political analysis, we suspect that gold may be resurrected as a safe haven very soon.20 Chart 10ASafe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Chart 10BSafe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Chart 10CSafe Havens Don't Necessarily Age Well Another important finding is that the currency effect plays a key role during recent risk-off periods (Charts 11A & B). The best protector currencies are the ones that are negatively correlated with equity returns. According to our results, the CHF and the JPY have generally been risk-off currencies, while the USD has only been one since 2007, switching places with the euro. This reinforces the case for U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds, which are supported by risk-off currencies. Chart 11ACurrencies Are Difference Makers Chart 11BCurrencies Are Difference Makers Bottom Line: Safe havens change over time. Gold fell out of favor due to global deflationary dynamics. With inflation on the horizon, we will keep monitoring the relationship between gold and equities for a possible return of the yellow metal as a safe haven. Since the July 4 North Korean ICBM test, for example, gold has rallied 4.8%. Part III - Red Herrings And Black Swans Since 1988, we identified 25 economic and (geo)political events that generated instant panic or acute uncertainty in the media and financial markets.21 We analyzed the short-term reactions of the safe-haven assets, both in USD and local-currency terms. This methodology allowed for the deconstruction of the impact of the events by the following factors: Country of origin of the crisis, the nature of the crisis, and whether the event was a "red herring" or a "black swan." Generally speaking, a red herring event is a crisis of some sort with little lasting financial impact. A black swan, on the other hand, is an event that has a very low probability of occurring but has a pronounced market impact if it does. Quantitatively, our definition of a black swan is an event that produces an immediate negative response in the S&P 500 below -1%, while creating a rise in either U.S., Japanese, or Swiss government bonds above 0% (Table 4). Of course, determining which event is a red herring or a black swan is only obvious post-facto and thus requires thorough geopolitical analysis. Table 4Understanding The Crises Results - Red Herrings And Black Swans Matter: Our event analysis solidifies our findings with regards to U.S., Japanese, and Swiss government bonds, but also builds a case for some European bonds as well as gold during black swan events. Our main findings can be summarized as follows. Fade The Red Herrings: Out of the sixteen geopolitical events, ten were identified as red herrings, in which safe havens underperformed the equity market. This, then, suggests that it is not always beneficial to buy safe-haven assets when tensions are rising. What is interpreted as a major geopolitical crisis - say, Ukraine in 2014 or Greece in 2015 - often ends up being a "red herring." Geopolitical Risk = Gold: Geopolitical black swan events, on the other hand, have a significant, negative impact on the market. During these events, gold emerges as the strongest hedge against a downturn in equities. U.S. Treasurys And The Swiss Franc Provide A Baseline: Under all black swan events considered - geopolitical and non-geopolitical - U.S. Treasurys and the Swiss franc had the strongest performance, generating positive returns on the day of the stock market crash in 85% of the cases. G10 Government Bonds Will Also Do: German, Dutch, Swiss and Swedish government bonds also provided protection during black swan events in local and common-currency terms, albeit to a lesser extent. U.S. And Swiss Bonds Outperform During Financial Episodes: During black swan financial crises, Swiss and U.S. government bonds stand out as the best safe havens due to their capacity to generate positive returns both in USD and local-currency terms in eight out of the nine examined crashes. Other findings that are interesting, yet less robust due to a limited sample size, include: When the crisis originated on U.S. soil, U.S. Treasurys and the dollar performed relatively poorly compared to other safe-haven assets. This is a somewhat surprising finding, as most investors believe that U.S. assets rally even at a time of U.S.-based crises, such as the 2011 budget crisis. We show that they may perform well, but in USD, non-U.S. based assets do better. When the crisis originated in Europe, European bonds performed very well both in USD and local-currency terms. When the crisis originated in Europe, Swiss and U.K. government bonds performed poorly in USD terms, but offered strong protection in local-currency terms. When the crisis originated in Russia, precious metals acted as a poor hedge. Bottom Line: It is crucial to gain an understanding of the nature of any potential crisis. Red herrings should always be faded, not hedged against, as they produce poor results in safe-haven assets. U.S. Treasurys, Swiss and Japanese government bonds have been very consistent safe-haven assets during previous periods of acute risk. Part IV: Timing Is Everything As a final step in our quantitative approach, we put our results through numerous timing exercises to test how the assets would perform in real time. Based on our Risk Asset Spectrum (Diagram 1), which summarizes our findings, one could argue that investing in times of crisis simply boils down to buying an equal-weighted basket of U.S. Treasurys, Swiss, and Japanese government bonds. Although this is technically true, such a strategy would require perfect foresight, unparalleled timing, or dumb luck - since black swan events are, by definition, very difficult to predict. Diagram 1Risk Asset Spectrum Proof Of The Ultimate Safe Haven: The first experiment we conducted was to illustrate how powerful safe havens can be when timed perfectly in a trading strategy. We started off by comparing two baskets. The first was a benchmark portfolio comprised of 60% U.S. equities and 40% U.S. bonds. The other contained the same two assets, but with 100% allocated to a basket comprised of U.S. Treasurys, Swiss, and Japanese government bonds during times of negative returns for equities. Of course, this strategy is not realistic and would be impossible to implement, since the trading rule depends on future events. But as Chart 12 shows, if one were able to predict every single period of negative returns for global equities and hold safe-haven assets instead, the trading rule would outperform almost 10-fold. Chart 12Safe Havens Work Wonders With Perfect Information... One-Month Lag Is Already Too Late: Repeating the same exercise, but with a one-month lag in the execution, produces drastically different results. More specifically, whenever the previous month's equity return is negative (t=0), the portfolio allocates 100% to a single safe-haven asset for the current month (t=1), otherwise it keeps the allocation identical to that of the benchmark. The rationale for using such a simple rule is that average investors are generally late in identifying a crisis and only react once they have validation that the market is in a correction. Chart 13 shows that being late by one month changes the performance of the safe haven basket from astronomically outperforming the benchmark to underperforming it. Chart 13... But Timing Is Everything Reaction Is Key: As a final timing exercise, we analyzed the reaction function of our assets to see how quickly they react after the correction in equities begins (Chart 14). Unsurprisingly, the top assets that we identified start appreciating as soon as the crisis hits (t=0). Gold is, on average, the quickest asset to react from investors seeking refuge. Swiss bonds come in as a close second, almost mirroring gold during the first few days of the correction. But both assets start to flatten out and even roll over after a few days. Japanese bonds react slightly later than gold and Swiss bonds, but keep increasing for a longer period of time and start plateauing around the 30th day after the crisis. U.S. Treasurys and Quality Stocks, on the other hand, remain rather flat and constant over the short term. These results attest to the importance of timing the crisis using the best safe-haven assets. Chart 14Safe Havens React Instantly Bottom Line: Timing plays a crucial part in investing in safe-haven assets, as their performance is coincident to that of equities. Investment Implications: Is Pyongyang A Red Herring Or A Black Swan? The results of our quantitative analysis are clear: hedging geopolitical risk depends on whether it is persistent or fleeting. So, is Pyongyang a red herring or a black swan? From our geopolitical analysis we make three key conclusions: The U.S. is not likely to preemptively attack North Korea; However, the U.S. has an interest in signaling that it may conduct precisely such an attack; Brinkmanship could last for a long time. Even if the risk of a U.S. attack against North Korea itself is a red herring, the crisis itself is not. In fact, between now and when a negotiated solution emerges, investors may face several new crises, which may include limited military attacks or skirmishes. While markets have faded such North Korean provocations in the past, the current context is clearly different. As such, we would suggest that investors hedge the risk with an equally-weighted basket of Swiss bonds and gold. Even though a "buy and hold" strategy with such a "Doomsday Basket" will likely underperform the market if tensions with North Korea subside, we are betting that it may take time for the U.S. and North Korea to get to the negotiating table. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com David Boucher, Associate Vice President Quantitative Strategist davidb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Global Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Geopolitics Of Trump," dated December 6, 2016, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. We upgraded North Korea to the status of a genuine market-relevant risk in "North Korea: A Red Herring No More?" in Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Partem Mirabilis," dated April 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Client Note, "Trump Re-Establishes America's 'Credible Threat'," dated April 7, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2017 available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Power And Politics In East Asia: Cold War 2.0," dated September 25, 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "North Korea: Beyond Satire," dated April 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. In particular, we argued, "the current saber-rattling is carefully orchestrated. But North Korea can no longer be consigned to the realm of satire. The very fact that the U.S. administration is adopting greater pressure tactics makes this year a heightened risk period. Investors should be especially wary of any missile tests that reveal North Korean long-range capabilities to be substantially better than is known to be the case today." Then, on May 13 and July 4, North Korea conducted its first ICBM launches; the UN Security Council agreed to a new round of even tighter economic sanctions on August 5; and the U.S. and North Korea engaged in an alarming war of words. 6 Specifically, we wrote: "Diplomacy is the only real option. And in fact it is already taking shape. The theatrics of the past few weeks mark the opening gestures. And theatrics are a crucial part of any foreign policy. The international context is looking remarkably similar to the lead-up to the new round of Iranian negotiations in 2012. The United States pounded the war drums and built up the potential for war before coordinating a large, multilateral sanctions-regime and then engaging in talks with real willingness to compromise." 7 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," dated November 11, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 8 Please see BCA Foreign Exchange Strategy Weekly Report, "Fade North Korea, And Sell The Yen," dated August 11, 2017, available at fes.bcaresearch.com. 9 Please see BCA Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Stairway To (Safe) Haven: Investing In Times Of Crisis," dated August 25, 2016, available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 10 Forty-one assets were denominated in USD only, while G10 bonds, Credit Suisse Swiss Real Estate Fund, and European 600 real estate were used both in local-currency terms and USD, for a total of 65 assets. 11 Please see Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "Geopolitics And Safe Havens," dated November 11, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 12 Sile Li and Brian M. Lucey, "What precious metals act as safe havens, and when? Some U.S. evidence," Applied Economic Letters, 2013. 13 Dirk G. Bauer and Thomas K.J. McDermott, "Financial Turmoil and Safe Haven Assets," 2013. 14 Lieven Baele, Geer Bekaert, Koen Inghelbrecht and Min Wei, "Flights to Safety," National Bank of Belgium Working Paper No. 230, 2015. 15 Dirk G. Baur and Kristoffer J. Glover, "The Destruction of Safe Haven Asset?,"2012. 16 Angelo Ranaldo and Paul Soederlind, "Safe Haven Currencies," Review of Finance, Vol. 10, pp. 385-407, 2010. 18 Quality stocks are defensive equity plays with high, steady earnings with an elevated return on investments. They are estimated by Deutsche Bank's Factor Index Equity Quality Excess Return in USD. 20 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Throwing The Baby (Globalization) Out With The Bath Water (Deflation)," dated July 13, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com, and BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Secular Bottom In Inflation," dated July 28, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 21 Since we were interested in the immediate, often unexpected, response to the event, we did not include economic recessions in our event analysis.
Highlights Strengthening income growth is apparent in DM and EM trade volumes, real wages in the U.S., and industrial commodity prices, chiefly oil and copper. This indicates inflation at the consumer level will move higher in the near future, most likely in 2H2018. We believe 10-year U.S. Treasury Inflation-Indexed securities (TIPS) trading below 0.52 do not reflect the risk of higher inflation and are, therefore, going long at tonight's close. Energy: Overweight. Crude oil prices rallied 4.6% this week, following the OPEC 2.0 meeting in St. Petersburg. Although ministers did not announce additional cuts to the 1.8mm b/d agreed at the end of last year, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said the Kingdom would reduce August exports to 6.6mm b/d, which is more than 300k b/d below May's level, the latest month for which data are available from JODI. Given strong global demand, if this export reduction persists - and if others join the Kingdom - it would speed the drawdown in global inventories. Base Metals: Neutral. Copper pushed through $2.80/lb on the COMEX, a level not seen since May 2015. Underlying strength in EM economic activity - seen most recently in global trading activity (discussed below) - and a weaker USD are supporting base metals. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold fell below $1,257/oz earlier this week, and was trading ~ $1,250/oz going to press Wednesday. We remain long gold as a portfolio hedge; the position is up 1.7% since it was initiated on May 4, 2017. Ags/Softs: Underweight. Harsh weather is impacting grains. The USDA rated 62% of the U.S. corn crop in the 18 states comprising 92% of total output good or excellent last week, down from 76% in 2016. For beans, the split was 58% last week vs. 71% last year. Feature The expansion in global trade that began toward the end of last year continues, which, based on our modeling, indicates inflation at the consumer level likely will move higher in the short run (Chart of the Week). Trade expansion, particularly in EM economies, is consistent with rising incomes, which, all else equal, will keep industrial commodities - oil and copper, in particular - well supported, given income and demand for these commodities are closely aligned.1 These fundamentals dovetail with other indications of stronger growth, particularly in DM economies, where trade volumes also are growing (Chart 2). In the U.S., for example, wage growth continues to outpace inflation, and monetary conditions remain benign (Chart 3). Our colleagues at BCA Research's Global Investment Strategy believe the Fed actually may be behind the curve in reacting to nascent inflationary pressures emerging in the U.S.2 Chart of the WeekRising EM Trade Volumes Consistent##BR##With Higher U.S. CPI Inflation Chart 2DM Trade Volumes Are Expanding##BR##At ~ 5% Pace ... Chart 3U.S. Labor Market Tightening,##BR##Financial Conditions Remain Loose Trade Growth Supports Higher Inflation U.S. CPI is highly correlated with EM trade volumes (imports and exports) as shown in the Chart of the Week. In recent research into inflation and trade, we also showed EM oil demand and world base metals demand are highly correlated with EM trade volumes.3 Chart 4EM Trade Volumes##BR##Continue To Strengthen Growth EM import growth continues to expand at a faster pace than DM growth (Chart 4). Year-on-year (yoy) EM import growth came in at 7.7%, a full 2 percentage points above DM growth. This is not to minimize DM growth - it finally broke out of its lethargy in May with a sharp advance of close to 6%, which will lift the trend rate of growth (the 12-month moving average, or 12mma) higher going forward. EM export growth in May was only slightly above DM growth for the month - 5.4% yoy vs. 5.2% yoy. These stout monthly trade performances will, in the next few months, offset the lethargic growth seen in EM and DM prior to the expansion begun at the end of 2016, as weaker monthly performance falls off the trend calculations. Over the year ended in May, within EM markets the annual trend in imports (the 12mma to May 2017) has barely grown more than 1% yoy, dragged down by a 6% contraction in the Middle East and Africa (MEA) and a 2.1% contraction in Latin American growth. The trend in EM - Asia's imports is up, rising 3.2% over the same period. For the year ended in May, imports into central and Eastern Europe were mostly flat; however, since November 2016, the trend turned sharply positive with 3.3% yoy growth. The trend in export volumes is expanding for in MEA and Latin America economies - 3.5% yoy trend growth (12mma) in MEA, and 4.4% growth in Latin America, which is slightly higher than the overall 2.2% rate of trend growth in EM exports. Still, lower oil and commodity prices, along with reduced volumes are curtailing an income recovery in these regions. Central and Eastern Europe's rate of export expansion leads EM generally at close to 4% yoy trend growth. Favor Gold And TIPS Ahead Of Higher Inflation As the labor market tightens and real-wage growth continues to outpace productivity growth, we expect U.S. inflation to pick up. Growth in trade volumes also will support growth in EM oil demand and world base metal demand, as noted above. This will feed into U.S. core PCE, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge (Chart 5). As we've highlighted in the past, there is very strong co-movement among these variables: We've found that, all else equal, a 1% increase in the non-OECD oil demand implies an increase in the core PCE of slightly less than 50bp. If the trend in overall EM trade volumes persists, the likelihood we will be increasing our estimate of non-OECD oil consumption for 2H17 and 2018 increases. U.S. CPI and EM trade volumes show similar co-movement properties, as the Chart of the Week shows. A 1% increase in EM import volumes translates into a 0.53% increase in the U.S. CPI, while a 1% increase in EM export volumes implies a 0.49% increase in the CPI. EM import volumes over the January - May 2017 interval have been growing at slightly more than 8% yoy, while exports have been growing at slightly more than 3%. Continued strength in the EM trade data implies U.S. CPI could grow well above what's currently being priced in inflation markets and by Fed policymakers. This leads us to favour gold and TIPS as inflation hedges. If we do get a larger-than-expected move in the U.S. CPI, gold should respond well. The modelling depicted in Chart 6 shows a 1% increase in the CPI translates into a 4.1% increase in gold. Chart 5Core PCE Will Pick Up##BR##As Commodity Demand Grows Chart 6Gold Will Pick Up##BR##Larger-Than-Expected CPI Moves For this reason we recommend getting long U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), which will appreciate as the U.S. CPI moves higher.4 We will be getting long as of tonight's close. We remain long low-risk calls spreads in Dec/17 WTI and Brent - long $50/bbl strikes vs. short $55/bbl strikes. We are up 39.3% and 32.9% on the Brent and WTI positions, respectively, from last week, and 47.2% and 89.2% since inception. U.S. Monetary Policy Remains A Huge Risk To EM Trade As we've noted in the past, U.S. monetary policy can have an outsized effect on EM trade volumes. In an update of an earlier model using U.S. M2 and the broad trade-weighted USD (TWIB), we find a 1% increase in the broad trade-weighted USD translates into a 1.1% drop in EM imports, while a 1% increase in U.S. M2 (broad money) implies an 85bp increase in EM imports (Chart 7).5 Chart 7EM Trade Volumes Highly Sensitive##BR##To U.S. Monetary Policy This demonstrates the feedback loop we've identified between U.S. monetary policy and EM trade. EM trade volumes affect inflation at a global level. We've found inflation in the U.S., EU and China to be co-integrated - i.e., these price gauges all follow the same long-term trend. Inflation and inflation expectations drive Fed policy, which drives the price formation of the USD - i.e., the FX rates included in the USD TWIB - and affect Fed policy on M2. These U.S. monetary variables, in turn, affect EM trade volumes. And so it goes ... Too-aggressive a tightening by the Fed as it normalizes its interest-rate policy regime could destabilize EM economies - either via too-sharp an appreciation in the USD TWIB, a larger-than-expected deceleration in M2 growth, or both - and negatively affect trade flows. At the end of the day, this would redound to the detriment of the U.S. economy, as the different feedback mechanisms kick in. This says the Fed's policy doesn't just affect the U.S. economy, or that EM economies essentially are on their own in the policy tools they deploy to adjust to Fed innovations. Like it or not, the Fed has to consider these types of feedback loops in its decision-making, since the Open Market Committee will be dealing with the fallout of its earlier policies. Bottom Line: EM trade volumes continue to grow yoy, continuing the trend that began at the end of last year. This performance, coupled with a tightening labor market in the U.S. and a still-loose financial backdrop, raises the odds inflation will exceed what's currently priced into market and Fed expectations. We are getting long U.S. 10-year TIPS at tonight's close, and remain long gold as a strategic portfolio hedge. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 The income elasticity for industrial commodities in EM economies is ~ 1.0, according to the OECD. Please see "The Price of Oil - Will It Start Rising Again?" OECD Economics Department Working Paper No. 1031, p. 6 (2013). 2 Please see BCA's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report titled "Are Central Banks Behind The Curve Or Ahead Of It?," published on July 21, 2017. It is available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Among other things, the Global Investment Strategy team notes labor-market slack is dissipating, real wages are increasing, and easier financial conditions are spurring credit growth. Our colleagues note, "The prospect of stronger growth over the next few quarters implies that the unemployment rate is likely to fall below 4% early next year, possibly breaking through the 2000 low of 3.8%." BCA's Global Investment Strategy believes U.S. inflation could move higher by 2H18. 3 Please see BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Reports titled "EM Trade Volumes Continue Trending Higher, Supporting Metals" and "Strong EM Trade Volumes Will Support Oil," published June 29, and June 8, 2017. Both are available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 4 U.S. TIPS increase in value as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rises, and fall in value as the index declines. Please see "TIPS: Rates & Terms" on the UST's TreasuryDirect web page (https://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/research/indepth/tips/res_tips_rates.htm). 5 This model covers 2000 to the present, using monthly data. The R2 for the cointegrating regression is 0.96. These variables do not explain EM exports, which are not cointegrated with U.S. monetary variables. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed in 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in 2016
Highlights Business capital spending is still trending up, adding another layer of support for the U.S. economy in the next 6-12 months. Profit growth has accelerated at a faster pace than our top-down model had projected and we expect growth to accelerate further into year end. We estimate that the delayed pass-through of previous dollar strength will remain a slight drag on U.S. EPS growth over rest of 2017. Our tactical view on gold remains bearish, but the BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy service sees strategic value in gold as a hedge. Feature The S&P 500 is attempting to break through the 2400 barrier as we go to press. This is impressive given that the flagging relative performance of infrastructure stocks and highly-taxed companies suggests that investors have given up hope of ever seeing significant tax cuts, infrastructure spending and incentives for capital spending. As we discuss below, disappointment on the policy front has thankfully been offset by solid corporate earnings figures. We believe that investors have gone too far in pricing out tax reform. True, the growing number of White House scandals will serve to delay the GOP's market-friendly policy agenda. Nonetheless, the President desperately needs a win ahead of mid-term elections, and tax reform and deregulation are two key areas where the President and congressional Republicans are on the same page. Capital spending is the part of the economy that could benefit the most from tax reform. Surprising Support From Capex Business capital spending is still trending up, adding another layer of support for the U.S. economy in the next 6-12 months. The post-election rollover in C&I loan growth worried investors that rising rates and election-related uncertainty had cut the flow of credit to the business sector, thus putting capex at risk (Chart 1, top panel). That concern was overdone, as we pointed out in a recent report.1 Business expenditures on plant, equipment and software were a surprising source of strength in first-quarter GDP, and bank lending has stabilized in the past six weeks. The FOMC minutes of the May 2-3 meeting noted that "financing conditions for large nonfinancial firms stayed accommodative." The minutes also stated that, while there was weaker demand for C&I loans in April, the weakness "pertained to customers' reduced needs for financing." The reduced need likely reflected a preference to issue corporate bonds. Chart 1Outlook For Capex Looks Solid Our BCA Capex indicator for business investment points to solid business spending in the next few quarters. (Chart 1, bottom panel) Our past research shows that sustainable capital spending cycles only get underway when businesses see evidence that consumer final demand is on the upswing. While consumer expenditures were quite soft (+0.3% annualized gain) in Q1, our view is that the weakness was transitory.2 This view was confirmed by the FOMC minutes. A rebound in consumer spending in the second quarter will boost CEO confidence that increased capital spending will be justified in terms of future sales. Our base case is that at least some tax cuts will be enacted by year end, but the risk is that political turmoil further delays a fiscal package or even totally derails the GOP legislative agenda. This scenario would be negative for stocks temporarily, but could end up being positive over the medium term by extending the expansion in the economy and corporate profits. U.S. Profits, Beats And Misses Profit growth has accelerated at a faster pace than our top-down model had projected earlier this year (Chart 2). On a 4-quarter moving total basis, S&P 500 earnings-per-share were up by more than 13% in the first quarter (84% reporting). We expect growth to accelerate further into year end, peaking at just under 20%, before moderating in 2018. The favorable profit picture reflects two key factors. First, profits are rebounding from a poor showing in 2016, when EPS was dragged down by the collapse in oil prices and a global manufacturing recession. Oil prices have since rebounded and global industrial production is recovering as expected (Chart 3). Earnings are of course leveraged to corporate sales, helping to explain why profits are highly correlated with industrial production in the major countries. BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy service estimates that operating leverage for the S&P 500 is 1.4x.3 Chart 2Impact Of Stronger Dollar Is Fading Chart 3IP On The Rebound Globally Second, the corporate sectors in the major economies are still in a sweet spot in which the top line is growing but there is no major wage cost pressure evident yet. This is the case even in the U.S., where labor market slack has largely been absorbed. Indeed, margins rose in Q1 2017 for the third quarter in a row. Our indicators suggest that the corporate sector has gained some pricing power at a time when wage gains are taking a breather.4 The hiatus of wage pressure may not last long, but for now our short-term EPS growth model remains upbeat for the next 3-6 months (not shown). What About The Dollar? We estimate that the delayed pass-through of previous dollar strength will remain a slight drag on U.S. EPS growth of about one percentage point for the remainder of this year, assuming no change in the dollar from today's level (Chart 2, second and third panels). However, our base case remains that the dollar will appreciate by another 10% in trade-weighted terms. A 10% appreciation would trim EPS growth by roughly 2½ percentage points, although most of this would occur in 2018 due to lagged effects. The key point is that another upleg in the dollar, on its own, should not provide a major headwind for the stock market. Indeed, the dollar would only be rising in the context of robust U.S. economic growth and an expanding corporate top line. Even though the message from our EPS model is upbeat, it still falls short of bottom-up estimates for 2017. Is this a risk for the equity market, especially since valuations are stretched? Investors are well aware that bottom-up estimates are perennially optimistic. Table 1 compares the beginning-of-year EPS growth estimate with the actual end-of-year outcome for 2007-2016. Not surprisingly, bottom-up analysts massively missed the mark in 2008, which was a recession year. But even outside of the recession, analysts significantly over-estimated earnings in seven out of nine years. Despite this, the S&P 500 rose sharply in most cases. One exception was 2015, when the S&P 500 fell by 0.7%. Plunging oil and material prices contributed to an EPS growth "miss" of seven percentage points. Chart 4 highlights that the level of the 12-month forward EPS estimate fell that year, unlike in the other years considered. Valuations are more demanding today than in the past, but the message is that attaining bottom-up EPS year-end estimates is less important for the broad market than the direction of 12-month forward estimates (which remains up at the moment). Table 1Bottom Up Estimates Are##BR##Always Too Optimistic Chart 4Oil Related##BR##Dip In 2015 The bottom line is that the backdrop is constructive for equities even if the Republicans are unable to push through any fiscal stimulus. In fact, it may be better for the stock market in the medium term if the GOP fails to pass any meaningful legislation. The U.S. economy does not need any demand stimulus at the moment (although measures to boost the supply side of the economy would help lift profits over the long term). The current long-in-the-tooth expansion is likely to stretch further in the absence of stimulus, extending the moderate growth/low inflation/low interest rate backdrop that has been positive for risk assets in recent years. Gold Update Our tactical view on gold remains bearish, but the BCA Commodity & Energy Strategy service sees strategic value in gold as a hedge against rising inflation and inflation expectations, geopolitical risk and increased equity volatility.5 Chart 5A shows that the price of gold in real terms is still very expensive. On a nominal basis, gold is at the top end of a trading channel that it has been in since early 2012 (Chart 5B). There has been a big gap between the model value and the actual price of gold for the past three years. The real price of gold remains elevated despite the fact that inflation has been well contained.6 Chart 5AModel Suggests Gold Is Overvalued Chart 5BIn A Downward Channel Since 2012 Our 6-12 month view on gold is that it will take its cues from Fed policy and policy expectations. The Fed is not behind the curve on inflation, and inflation expectations and measured inflation remain low. Our CPI and PCE models (Chart 6) show only a modest acceleration in inflation by year end, just enough to keep the Fed on track this year as it begins to shrink its balance sheet and raise rates two more times. Thus, we do not see a great need to hold gold as a hedge against inflation over the next year. Nonetheless, for those investors concerned about a pullback that turns into a correction or a bear market, we mention that gold has a 33% weight in our Protector Portfolio.7 Chart 6Core Inflation To Stay Near##BR##Fed's Target This Year Bottom Line: Gold is expensive in real terms relative to a set of fundamentals that have explained its real price since 1970. However, the yellow metal may have value on a strategic basis or as part of a portfolio designed to protect against falling equity prices. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com Mark McClellan, Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst markm@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Earnings Rebound Will Earn Some Respect", April 10, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Growth, Inflation And The Fed", May 8, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Operating Leverage To The Rescue?," published April 17, 2017. Available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Spring Snapback?," published April 24, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Go Long Gold As A Strategic Portfolio Hedge," published May 4, 2017. Available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Gold: The Asset Allocation Dilemma," published August 1, 2011. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 7 Please see U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Still Awaiting The Next Pullback," published May 15, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights We are going long spot gold at tonight's closing price, given our view that inflation and inflation expectations will continue to move higher going into 2018. In the U.S., we expect higher fiscal spending and tax cuts hitting the economy next year to have a significant effect on an economy already at or very close to full employment, boosting real wages and inflationary pressures. As a safe-haven, gold also is well suited to hedging geopolitical risks, which also are rising. Lastly, gold exposure has the added benefit of providing a hedge to equity positions. Energy: Overweight. The ~ 10% correction in benchmark crude oil prices from 1Q17 levels likely has run its course, as representatives of key states that are party to the November 2016 production cut deal signal it will be extended at the upcoming May 25 meeting in Vienna. We remain long Dec/17 Brent $65/bbl calls vs. short the Dec/17 Brent $45/bbl puts, which is down $0.88/bbl, and will be getting long Dec/17 Brent $55/bbl calls vs. Dec/17 $60/bbl calls at tonight's close. We expect Dec/17 Brent to reach $60/bbl by year-end, with WTI trading ~ $2.00/bbl lower. Base Metals: Neutral. Indonesia's state mining company PT Aneka Tambang is expected to resume nickel exports, reversing a three-year ban on outgoing trade. We remain neutral base metals. Precious Metals: Neutral. We are recommending an allocation to gold outright as a strategic hedge against higher inflation, particularly emanating from the U.S., and geopolitical risk in Europe (see below). Underweight. Markets remain well stocked with indications stocks-to-use data will continue to weigh on prices. We remain bearish. Feature Recent indications inflation and inflation expectations are ticking higher will persist into 2018 (Chart of the Week). U.S. fiscal spending and tax cuts expected next year will lift real wages and boost spending power. The American economy already is at or very close to full employment, and U.S. rate hikes are lagging wage growth, which will, all else equal, boost inflation and inflation expectations (Chart 2). Although we expect the Fed to raise rates at least two more times this year - perhaps three - we believe the central bank will continue to keep rate hikes behind wage growth, and will not try to get out in front of inflation (Chart 3). Chart Of The WeekGlobal CPI Inflation Continues To Percolate Chart 2Rate Hikes Lagging Wage Growth Chart 3Fed Likely Won't Get Ahead Of Inflation On the political and geopolitical fronts, looming Italian elections are a risk that is all but being ignored by financial markets. Our colleague Marko Papic, head of BCA's Geopolitical Strategy service, identifies next February's Italian elections as "the highest probability risk to European integration at the moment," given its potential to "reignite Euro Area breakup risk."1 Political risks dog the DM economies: falling support for globalization, which will undermine the benefits of sourcing low-cost inputs (labor and capital) worldwide; tighter immigration policies, which go hand-in-hand with falling support for globalization; a predisposition to monetize debt via higher money supply; and higher minimum-wage demands as income inequality increases all raise inflation and inflation expectations in DM economies.2 This financial and political backdrop again points us toward gold in an attempt to identify safe-haven assets and hedges against the increasing likelihood of renewed inflation. In addition, while our House view does not include a marked equities correction in the near term, it is worthwhile pointing out that gold does hedge equities when they are selling off, and in bear markets generally. A corollary to this property is that in equity bull markets, gold tends to hold value, even if it underperforms stocks in absolute terms. These are powerful properties, which increase the stability of investors' portfolios. Before proceeding, it is useful to distinguish between the specifications mentioned above:3 A safe-haven asset refers to an asset that is negatively correlated (or uncorrelated) with other assets that lose value in times of financial stress. An important feature of a safe-haven asset is that it only exhibit low or negative correlation with financial assets (e.g., equities) in extremely negative market conditions, without specifying any particular behavior when markets are not under stress. In other words, both assets could be positively correlated in bull markets, as long as the correlation turns negative when financial-market conditions deteriorate. We make a distinction between the weak and strong form of safe-havens: The weak form represents an asset that is uncorrelated with the reference asset, while the strong form is negatively correlated.4 A hedge is an asset that is negatively correlated (or uncorrelated) with another asset, on average, over the time interval being examined in a particular analysis. As with safe-haven assets, there is a similar distinction between weak- and strong-form hedges. A diversifier refers to an asset that is positively, but imperfectly, correlated with another asset on average during the period of analysis. Gold Vs. Inflation During inflationary periods, assets that generate returns for investors that offset purchasing-power losses experienced by other assets in their portfolio - i.e., a store of value - traditionally have been preferred. Gold has been used as a store of value during inflationary episodes, and for this reason is viewed as a safe haven. Fundamentally, gold's supply is relatively inelastic, and consists of above-ground physical stocks comprising public and private holdings. The world gold council estimates physical gold stocks were ~ 4570.8t at the end of 2016, up 5.8% since 2010. Demand for gold was estimated at 4249.1t at the end of 2016, versus 3281t at the end of 2000. The inelasticity of gold supply makes it difficult to respond to changes in inflation - or to any shocks to the economy, for that matter - by increasing the supply over the short term, as it would be the case with any fiat currencies and other assets. For this reason, price allocates limited supply. During inflationary periods and during a macroeconomic shock, gold's price is bid up, which is the source of returns for holding gold.5 Gold often is seen as a currency; however, it lacks a central bank that can increase its supply via turning up the printing press. This makes the precious metal a so-called "hard currency," and endows it with the ability to maintain its purchasing power during periods of inflation. In addition, it is an asset that is accepted as collateral to support bank lending and margining by the BIS and numerous banks.6 In Table 1, we look at the correlation between year-on-year gold return and U.S. CPI inflation.7 We used a sample period from 1985 to now.8 On average, during the entire sample, we obtained a correlation of 26%. Within the sub-periods gold provides a hedge against inflation, but how much of a hedge depends on other financial factors - chiefly the broad USD TWI and real U.S. interest rates - affecting its performance (Chart 4). We examine these below. Table 1Gold Vs. U.S.##BR##And EU Inflation Chart 4Gold's Inflation-Hedging Properties##BR##Affected By Monetary Conditions The hedging relationship between gold returns and the CPI inflation rates does not consistently hold up in all bear markets - e.g., the GFC, when global assets became highly correlated and lost significant value. It is possible, though, that in times of financial stress or downturn, gold's ability to act as a hedge asset to U.S. equities might sometime dominates its ability to hedge inflation, leading to an ambiguous relationship with inflation during bear markets. We delve further into this below. Gold, Inflation And U.S. Monetary Conditions We typically model gold as a function of financial variables, which are sensitive to inflation and inflation expectations and to Fed policy shifts. Given our preference for modeling gold's price evolution as a function of U.S. financial variables - the broad trade-weighted (TWI) USD and real rates, in particular - we looked further into this (Chart 5). The impact of inflation on gold prices is stronger when the dollar experiences large negative shocks and depreciates, and weaker when the USD appreciates (i.e., a large positive shock).9 So, when the USD broad TWI is falling, gold is an effective hedge. When the greenback is appreciating, it is less effective. Next, we examined the ability of gold to hedge inflation risk when U.S. real rates are high and low. To do this, we used 10-year real rates and cut a long-term sample from 1990 to now into two different sub-periods: a high-rate period from 1990 to 2003, and a low-rate period from 2003 to now (Chart 6).10 Chart 5USD's Evolution Is Important To Gold,##BR##As Are U.S. Real Rates Chart 6U.S. 10-Year##BR##Real Rates During the high-real-rate period, the correlation between gold and inflation is close to zero (0), meaning gold did not act as a strong hedge against inflation, but still could have been acting as a weak hedge (meaning it's uncorrelated). Gold's hedging ability increased significantly in the low-real-rate period (Table 2). Again, this supports our theory that gold's hedging ability depends on U.S. monetary conditions, and that during periods of low real U.S. interest rates gold is an effective hedge against inflation. Table 2Gold Vs. CPI Inflation In High- And Low-Real Rate Environments Gold Vs. U.S. Equities Cutting right to the chase, gold can be used to hedge equities exposure in portfolios, as the correlation analysis in Table 3 demonstrates. Here, we are examining the hedging ability of gold relative to the U.S. stock market (proxied by the S&P 500 Total Return (TR) index). Table 3Gold's Hedging Properties Vs. Equities In our analysis, we find gold and U.S. equities are negatively correlated, on average, over the entire sample (correlation coefficient -0.19). We also tested for time-varying correlation by looking at the correlation separately in different bull- and bear-market sub-periods. Bull (bear) markets are defined as periods in which the U.S. stock index has a positive (negative) move of more than 15% and that lasts for at least 3 months.11 During both bear markets, gold's annualized compound returns were up when the S&P 500 returns were negative (Table 4). This strongly suggests gold is a safe-haven asset in time of extended weakness for equities, all else equal (i.e., we don't have a 100-year global meltdown that takes all correlations to 1.00). Interestingly, the relationship is unclear for bull markets which reflects the non-linearity in gold's hedging ability. We can conclude that during bull markets, gold tends to underperform equity markets; however, this does not imply that holding gold will lead to negative returns. Hence, gold offers protection against bear markets that offsets the costs in terms of returns during bull markets.12 Table 4Gold Hedges U.S. Equities The correlation between month-on-month gold and S&P 500TR returns corroborate the earlier finding. We find that gold is negatively correlated with U.S. equities during equity bear markets, and that it is ambiguous in equity bull markets. Bottom Line: We find gold is a good hedge during inflationary periods, particularly when the USD TWI is weak and real rates are low. We also show gold has excellent safe-haven and hedging properties versus equities (using the S&P 500TR index as a proxy). Based on this analysis, we are recommending a strategic allocation to gold, and will get long at tonight's close. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant Commodity & Energy Strategy hugob@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see "Political Risks Are Understated in 2018," published on April 12, 2017, by BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy. It is available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see "The End Of the Anglo-Saxon Economy?" published April 13, 2016, by BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy. It is available at gps.bcresearch.com. 3 Baur, Dirk G.; Brian M. Lucey (2010), "Is Gold a Hedge or a Safe Haven? An Analysis of Stocks, Bonds and Gold". The Financial Review 45, 217-229. 4 Baur, Dirk G.; Thomas K.J. McDermott (2010), "Is Gold a Safe Haven? International Evidence", Journal of Banking & Finance 34, 1886-1898. 5 We would note that the real price of gold increased during the Great Depression, which indicated gold's value during a period of significant deflation appears to increase, perhaps as investors fear the debasement of their currencies and the subsequent loss of purchasing power. 6 Please see Section 4 of "Basel III counterparty credit risk and exposures to central counterparties - Frequently asked questions," published by the BIS December 2012. 7 We use CPI here because it drives the payout of inflation-linked securities in the U.S. 8 We begin our analysis in 1990 for consistency throughout. We also note that several papers take note of an important structural break in U.S. inflation around 1984. Please see Batten, Jonathan A.; Cetin Ciner; Brian M. Lucey (2014), "On The Economic Determinants Of The Gold-Inflation Relation", Resources Policy 41, 101-108; and Stock, James H.; Mark W. Watson (2007), "Why Has U.S. Inflation Become Harder to Forecast?", Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 39 (supplement). For the selection of bear and bull markets, please see "Monthly Economic Report" published on April 2017, by Mackenzie investments. 9 We did this by estimating a regression to see how gold responds when the broad trade-weighted USD is trading in the 5% and 90% quantile of year-on-year U.S. dollar variation over the period 1995 to present. We did this using dummy variables to represent the impact of U.S. inflation in periods of large dollar appreciation and dollar depreciation. The model's adj-R2 is 0.45, and all coefficients are significant below 5%. 10 The mean for the high-rates period is 3.77%; for the low-rates period it is 1.07%. These rates are statistically different between these two sub-periods (using a two-tailed t-test). 11 The selection of bull and bear markets is based on Mackenzie investment analysis. Please see "Monthly Economic Report" published on April 2017, by Mackenzie investments. 12 Our results were supported by further econometric analysis of the variance properties using GARCH modeling. These results are available upon request. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary Of Trades Closed In 2016
Feature Table 1Recommended Allocation Don't Worry About The Tepid Data Risk assets are likely to continue to grind higher. Two of the catalysts we cited for this in our most recent Quarterly1 have half happened: European political risk is lifting now that Marine Le Pen looks most unlikely to win in the second round of the French presidential election (polls give her less than 40% of the vote); and the Trump administration announced its tax cut plan (which, though details are still sparse, we expect to be passed in some form this year). As a result, the MSCI All Country World Index hit a record high in late April and the S&P 500 is only 1% below its high. But both growth and inflation have surprised somewhat to the downside in the past couple of months. The Citi Economic Surprise Index for the U.S. has fallen sharply, though surprises remain fairly positive elsewhere (Chart 1).Q1 U.S. real GDP growth came in at an annualized rate of only 0.7%. This has pushed bond yields down (with the US Treasury 10-year yield falling back to 2.2%), consequently weakening the dollar. We are not unduly worried about the tepid data. It is mainly due to technical factors. Corporate loan growth in the U.S., for example (Chart 2), mostly reflects just the lagged effect of last year's slowdown on banks' willingness to lend, as well as energy companies repaying credit lines they tapped in early 2016 when short of working capital. The weakness in auto sales (Chart 3) is most likely caused by the end of the car replacement cycle which began in 2010, rather than reflecting any generalized deterioration in consumer behavior. Moreover, there seem to be problems with seasonal adjustment of data caused by the extreme swings in the economy in 2008 and 2009: Q1 has been the weakest quarter for U.S. GDP in six out of the past 10 years, and has on average been 2.3 ppts lower than Q2.2 There were no such distortions prior to 1996. Chart 1U.S. Growth Has Surprised To The Downside Chart 2Weaker Loan Growth Is Mostly Technical... Chart 3...And The Slowdown In Autos Is Just The End Of A Replacement Cycle A consequence of the wobbly data is that markets have become too complacent about the Fed raising rates, with futures markets now projecting only about 40 bps of hikes over the next 12 months (Chart 4). Our view is that wages will gradually move up this year, pushing core PCE inflation to 2% by year end, which will cause the Fed to raise rates twice before end-2017 and once early in 2018 (though the latter rise could be postponed if the Fed starts to reduce its balance-sheet and forgoes one quarter's hike to judge the impact of this on the market). By contrast, we do not see the ECB hiking before 2019 at the earliest, with ECB President Draghi reiterating that he sees core inflation staying low and remains concerned about the fragile banking systems in peripheral European markets and about Italian politics. We also believe Bank of Japan governor Kuroda when he says he has no plans to change the BoJ's 0% target for the 10-year JGB yield. All this implies that the dollar is likely to appreciate further in the next 12 months as interest rate spreads widen (Chart 5). Chart 4Fed Is Likely To Hike Faster Than This Chart 5Interest Differentials Suggest Further Dollar Strength The next catalyst for equities to rise further could be earnings. Q1 U.S. earnings are surprising significantly on the upside, with EPS growth of 11.7% year on year and 75% of companies beating analysts' estimates.3 BCA's proprietary model suggests that S&P 500 operating earnings this year could grow by over 20% (Chart 6). If anything, upside surprises to earnings have been even stronger in the euro zone and Japan. With none of the standard indicators signaling any risk of recession over the next 12 months (Chart 7), we remain overweight equities versus bonds. We continue to warn, though, that the Goldilocks scenario of healthy growth and stable inflation may not last for long. A combination of tax cuts, wage growth accelerating as labor participation hits a ceiling, and the Fed falling behind the curve (perhaps when President Trump - given that he recently confessed "I do like a low interest rate policy" - appoints a dovish replacement for Janet Yellen as Fed Chair) could cause inflation to rise unexpectedly next year, forcing the Fed to raise rates sharply, triggering a recession in 2019. Chart 6U.S. Earnings Could Grow 20% This Year Chart 7No Sign Of A Recession On The Horizon Equities: In a risk-on environment, euro zone equities should continue to outperform, due to their higher beta (averaging 1.3 against global equities over the past 20 years, compared to 0.9 for the U.S.), more cyclical earnings, and modestly cheaper valuations (forward PE is at a 18.9% discount to the U.S.). Japanese equities should also do well as interest rates rise again globally (except in Japan where the BoJ will stick to its 0% yield target on 10-year bonds), which should push down the yen and boost earnings. We remain overweight Japanese equities on a currency-hedged basis. We are underweight EM equities, which are likely to be weighed down over the next 12 months by the stronger dollar, and by a slowdown in China which should cause commodity prices to fall. Fixed Income: We expect the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield to reach 3% by year-end: a pickup in real growth, slightly higher inflation and two more Fed hikes can easily add 70 bps to the yield over the next eight months. Euro zone yields will also rise, though not by as much. This implies a negative return from G7 sovereign bonds for the first time since 1994. We continue to prefer corporate credit, with a preference for U.S. investment-grade debt over high-yield bonds (which have stretched valuations) and over European corporate debt (which will be negatively affected by the tapering of ECB purchases next year). Currencies: As described above, we do not believe that the dollar appreciation which began in 2014 is over, due to divergences in monetary policy. We would look for a further 5-10% appreciation of the dollar over the coming 12 months, though the rise is likely to be bigger against the yen and emerging market currencies than against the euro. Commodity currencies such as the Australian dollar also look vulnerable and overvalued. The British pound will be driven by the vicissitudes of the Brexit negotiations in the short-run but looks undervalued in the long run if, as we expect, the EU eventually agrees a moderately satisfactory trade deal with the U.K. Commodities: We continue to believe that the equilibrium level for oil is $55 a barrel, and that an extension of the OPEC production agreement beyond June and a drawdown in inventories in the second half will bring WTI crude back to that level - with the risk of even $60-65 temporarily if there are any unforeseen supply disruptions. We remain more cautious on industrial commodities, which will be hurt by a mild withdrawal of monetary and fiscal stimulus in China. Following its 6.9% GDP print in Q1, Chinese growth is likely to slow moderately. However, with the Party Congress coming up in the fall, growth will not be allowed to slow excessively - and, indeed, there are signs that central government spending has begun to accelerate recently (Chart 8). We remain positive on gold as a long-term hedge against the tail risk of inflation. As our recent Special Report on Safe Havens demonstrated,4 gold has historically provided good returns during recessions, particularly those associated with high inflation (Chart 9). Chart 8China Is Withdrawing Stimulus - Or Is It? Chart 9Gold Glisters When Inflation Rises Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Global Asset Allocation garry@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Quarterly Portfolio Outlook: No Reasons To Turn Cautious," dated 3 April 2017, available at gaa.research.com 2 For detailed analysis of the problems with seasonal adjustment, please see U.S. Investment Strategy, "Spring Snapback?" dated April 24, 2017, available at usis.bcaresearch.com 3 So far about half of U.S. companies have reported. 4 Please see Global Asset Allocation, "Safe Havens: Where To Hide Next Time?" dated April 21, 2017, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com. Recommended Asset Allocation
Global gold mining stocks are breaking out on the back of the bid in gold prices. The confluence of spiking geopolitical uncertainty, both in the U.S. and globally, rise in equity volatility and safe haven bid in U.S. Treasurys have raised the profile of gold-related hedges. Importantly, the top panel of the chart shows that the surge in the economic policy uncertainty index heralds additional relative gains for gold-related shares. Similarly, easing real interest rates are raising the profile of gold prices. This portfolio hedge has served our portfolio well since the broad market's peak in early-March and more gains are in store until this consolidation/correction phase fully runs its course. Bottom Line: We are reiterating our overweight stance in the global gold mining index via the GDX:US exchange traded fund.
Highlights The Fed's evident desire to lift its policy rate next week - presumably to get out ahead of inflation that has yet to show up in its preferred gauge - will weigh on gold. Oil ... not so much. This is because fundamentals once again are asserting themselves in the evolution of oil prices, something that has been evident even before markets balanced last year. Gold, meanwhile, remains exquisitely sensitive to Fed policy expectations and their effects on the USD and real rates, as with other currencies. Energy: Overweight. We are looking to re-establish our long WTI Dec/17 vs. short Dec/18 spread if it trades in contango again, i.e., if Dec/17 is less than Dec/18. We believe the combination of OPEC and non-OPEC adherence to their production Agreement will remain high, and demand likely will remain stout. Base Metals: Neutral. Spot copper is down ~ $0.10/lb on COMEX over the past week. We expect transitory supply issues in Chile and Indonesia to be resolved, and reflationary stimulus in China to wane going into the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party in the autumn, and, with it, copper demand. We remain neutral. Precious Metals: Neutral. Gold is weakening as the Fed's March meeting approaches next week, given the overwhelming expectation for a 25bp rate hike. We remain long volatility, expecting fiscal-policy uncertainty in the U.S. to be resolved over the next few months, and Fed policy drivers to become more focused. Ags/Softs: Underweight. We are not expecting significant changes in the USDA's estimates of stocks globally, and therefore remain underweight. Feature The choreographed messaging of voting and non-voting FOMC members asserting the need for a policy-rate hike over the past two weeks succeeded in pushing markets' expectations for such action to 88.6% as of Tuesday's close, up from 44.6% at the end of February. This despite the fact that the Fed's preferred inflation gauge - core PCE - has yet to show any sign of pushing up and thru the Fed's target of 2% growth yoy (Chart of the Week). Nor, for that matter, has core PCE shown any tendency to remain above 2% yoy growth over the past two decades (Chart 2). Chart of the WeekThe Fed's Preferred Inflation ##br##Gauge Still Quiescent Chart 2Core PCE Has Been ##br##Quiescent For Decades Between mid-December 2016 and the end of last month, gold prices rallied ~11.3% largely on the expectation the Fed would not raise rates until at least June, and, even then, would be constrained by uncertainty over what Congress and the Trump Administration would offer up in terms of fiscal policy later this year. Now, with the Fed succeeding in raising the market's expectation of a March rate hike, gold markets are left to re-calibrate the number of hikes to expect this year, and the likely implications for the USD and real rates. We believe the Fed will execute three rate hikes this year, but this will be highly dependent on how markets react to the now fully priced-in hike markets expect next week. Synchronized Growth, Inflation And Feedback Loops It is likely the Fed feels confident accelerating its rates normalization because, for the first time since the Global Financial crisis, we are getting a globally synchronized recovery in GDP. All else equal, this will give the U.S. central bank a bit of headroom to experiment with an earlier-than-expected rate hike. This synchronized growth also will provide a positive backdrop for commodity demand this year and next (Chart 3). The possibility of highly stimulative - or even just moderately stimulative - fiscal policy in the U.S. at a time when the economy is apparently at or close to full employment, will be positive for aggregate demand, and could be inflationary if its principal result is to lift real wages in the U.S. In addition to synchronized growth, we also are seeing evidence of synchronized inflation in the largest economies in the world (Chart 4). Chart 3Synchronized Global Growth ##br##Could Embolden The Fed Chart 4Synchronized Inflation Globally ##br##Likely Caught The Fed's Attention This synchronized growth and inflation is, we believe, important to the Fed, in that its effects constitute something of a global feedback loop. As we have noted in earlier research, the Fed is much more sensitive to how its policy actions affect other economies, given the deepening of global supply chains over the past two decades or so. Equally, policymakers are well aware the evolution of monetary policy and economic growth in other economies affects the U.S. growth and policy variables important to the Fed.1 Absent a policy shock in the U.S., Europe or China, the backdrop for EM growth should remain positive for at least 2017, even with reflationary stimulus waning in China, a left-tail risk to commodity prices that we identified in last week's publication.2 We expect the Fed's policy normalization to be tempered by continued monetary accommodation globally, which will be supportive of growth at the margin. This will keep global oil demand growth on track to average 1.50 - 1.60mm b/d this year and next, and, importantly for inflation and inflation expectations, keep EM oil demand growing. The income elasticity of per-capita oil consumption in EM economies typically is ~ 1.0, meaning a 1% increase in EM incomes is associated with a 1% increase in EM oil demand.3 EM growth accounts for close to 85% of the growth we expect in global oil demand this year. This is important, given EM oil demand, which we proxy with the U.S. EIA's non-OECD oil consumption time series, to be a common factor that explains the evolution of the CPI series shown above (Chart 5). EM oil demand is able to explain the synchronization of inflation in the three largest economies in the world is because incremental growth is occurring in the EM economies, and this is driving global growth. We continue to expect high compliance in the OPEC - non-OPEC production deal negotiated by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) and Russia at the end of last year, which will, against the backdrop of continued global growth, cause inventories to fall and for markets to backwardate. We believe last week's increase in U.S. crude oil inventories to be the last big build, and expect the decline to begin later this month. On average vessels leaving the Persian Gulf destined for the U.S. have a 45- to 50-day sailing period depending on multiple factors such route, weather and sea conditions. Therefore, the recent increase in U.S. crude oil inventories can be linked to the arrival of the final fleet of vessels in concert with the pre-OPEC agreement production surge undertaken by the GCC. Evidence of this phenomenon is apparent in the ~500k b/d increase in U.S. crude oil imports (374k b/d coming from Iraq) over the prior week. We expect OECD oil stocks to start declining this month and fall some 300mm bbl before the end of 2017. This supply-demand dynamic will continue to dominate financial-market influences on oil prices, as we argued in last week's publication (Chart 6).4 Gold, on the other hand, will continue to take its cue from Fed policy and policy expectations, particularly as regards expectations for the USD, which should strengthen at the margin, given the Fed's new-found hawkishness, and real rates, which also should strengthen (Chart 7). Chart 5EM Oil Demand Continues##br## To Drive Inflation Chart 6IF KSA And Russia Can ##br##Coordinate Production... Chart 7Gold Will Continue To Take##br## Its Cue From Fed Policy Bottom Line: Oil prices will continue to be dominated by supply-demand-inventory fundamentals, with monetary policy effects on the evolution of prices taking a secondary role. Gold prices will continue to take their cue from Fed policy and policy expectations. We look to re-establish our long Dec/17 WTI vs. short Dec/18 WTI spread if it trades thru flat (i.e., $0.00/bbl). Given our gold view, we remain long volatility via the put spreads and call spreads we recommended February 23 - i.e., long Jun/17 $1,200/oz puts vs. short $1,150/oz puts, and long $1,275/oz calls vs. short $1,325/oz calls. The position was up 15% as of Tuesday's close. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Reports "Global Inflation and Commodity Markets," dated August 11, 2016, and "Memo To The Fed: EM Oil, Metals Demand Key To U.S. Inflation," dated August 4, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Gold's Known Unknowns, And Fat Tails," dated February 23, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 3 Oil consumption frequently is employed to approximate EM income growth, given the income elasticity of demand for oil is ~ 1.0, meaning a 1% increase in income (GDP) produces an increase in demand for oil of approximately 1.0%. The OECD notes, "Non-OECD countries are found to have a higher income elasticity of oil demand than OECD countries. On average across countries, a one per cent rise in real GDP pushes up oil demand by half a per cent in OECD countries over the medium to long run, whereas the figure is closer to unity for most non-OECD countries." Please see "The Price of Oil - Will It Start Rising Again?" OECD Economics Department Working Paper No. 1031, p. 6 (2013). 4 Please see BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report "Days Of Oil Future's Past: Mean Reversion," dated March 2, 2017, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in
Highlights Gold volatility is trending lower, suggesting unresolved economic and political issues are diminishing, and investors' confidence in the global economy is improving. This is a false positive. Uncertainty is elevated. "Known unknowns" loom large: U.S. and Chinese fiscal policy, which drive USD dynamics and commodity supply and demand, are unresolved; The outcome of French and Italian elections could shock the euro zone; The reaction functions of systemically important central banks as they navigate these risks remain opaque. Given gold's exquisite sensitivity to political and policy nuances globally, our attention naturally turns to it when we look for ways to position in the face of this political and policy-related uncertainty. Our analysis suggests the low volatility in gold markets is the result of traders and investors being driven to the sidelines, where they await clarity re politics and policy. This is keeping trading volumes low: No one wants to be long or short lacking critical information necessary to take a view on the evolution of asset-price paths. Lower trading volumes, therefore, reflect a paucity of information in the price-discovery process, which, all else equal, will tend to keep commodity prices range bound until new information arrives to propel them in one direction or the other. With fewer prints going up across markets, realized and implied volatilities remain low ... for the moment. Energy: Overweight. We are taking profits basis today's close on our WTI Dec/17 vs. Dec/18 backwardation spread initiated February 9 at -$0.11/bbl. We also will be taking profits on our Dec/19 WTI vs. Brent spread, elected February 6 at +$0.07/bbl, after WTI traded premium to Brent in anticipation a U.S. border-adjusted tax would be enacted. Base Metals: Neutral. Copper remains well bid amid transitory supply outages. Workers resumed their strike at BHP's Escondida mine in Chile, while Anglo American temporarily suspended work at its El Soldado mine in a regulatory dispute, according to Metal Report. Freeport-McMoRan declared force majeure on Grasberg deliveries. Precious Metals: Neutral. We are withdrawing our gold buy-stop, and are recommending long gold options spreads to position for higher volatility (see below). Ags/Softs: Underweight. Corn and wheat came under selling pressure over the past week, but still are holding trend-line support from end-2016. We continue to monitor these markets for signs of a short-term rally. We remain strategically bearish, however. Feature While we believe the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) holds most of the time - at least in semi-strong form (i.e., all public information is fully reflected in prices) - traders and investors now find themselves in something of a quandary.1 Much of the information needed to assess future paths for asset prices and form expectations for returns has yet to be revealed. In other words, there are large parts of markets' information sets made up of "known unknowns," which, once resolved, will be of enormous consequence to the paths taken by different asset prices. This is particularly true for gold. Our analysis suggests this lack of information is keeping trading volumes in gold markets low. As a result, the price-discovery process is stymied, which, all else equal, tends to keep prices range bound until new information arrives to propel them in one direction or the other. With fewer prints going up across markets, realized and implied volatilities remain low. Investors accustomed to viewing low volatility as an indication unresolved economic and political issues are diminishing therefore have to adapt to a new reality, one in which low volatility actually is the product of heightened uncertainty (Chart of the Week). Granted, financial stress is low. This contributes to lower volatility, particularly in gold, which is highly sensitive to U.S. real rates and USD levels. However, we find low trading volumes in gold markets also are responsible for the lower-trending realized and implied volatility prevailing in in gold markets (Chart 2).2 Chart of the WeekVolatility Is Low, Despite Uncertainty Being High Chart 2Realized And Implied Gold Vols Are Trending Lower This suggests there is an opportunity to position ahead of the resolution of these "known unknowns" in the gold market, given the low volatility levels we see. This is driven largely by our view that there are numerous risks in near- and longer-term price distributions, which imply much fatter tails than markets are pricing in at the moment.3 Indeed, the CBOE Gold VIX is running at ~ 13.5% presently vs. a post-Global Financial Crisis (GFC) average of 18.8% p.a.4 First, The Fat Left Tail There are a number of risks pumping up the left tails of many commodity price distributions - e.g., how long China will continue to tighten fiscal policy (Chart 3), and the effect this will have on the prices of base metals and bulk commodities like iron ore and steel. And, of course, markets will continue to hang on every utterance of Federal Reserve officials, attempting to discount rate-hike probabilities and their implications for the USD and real rates, the critical drivers of gold prices (Chart 4). Chart 3China Fiscal Stimulus Grinds To A Halt Near term, these risks will continue to loom large, but they are dwarfed by a possible border-adjusted tax (BAT) being imposed in the U.S. In our estimation, this is the largest left-tail risk we've identified for commodity markets over the near term. It is being championed by Republican leaders in the U.S. House of Representatives - led by Speaker Paul Ryan and Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady.5 A BAT would raise the price of commodities subject to the tax in the U.S. Domestically, producers of commodities subject to the tax would benefit from this increase in prices, since it would boost their revenues and incentivize increased domestic production. This would be used to displace imports and take market share from exporters to the U.S. Once the domestic market has been saturated with the higher domestic output, U.S. producers would turn to export markets to sell their increased output. A BAT would shrink the U.S. trade deficit, which would, all else equal, raise the trade-weighted value of the USD. Our expectation is there is a 50:50 chance a BAT is enacted, but that it will exclude oil and apparel. We expect the USD would appreciate ~ 10% on the back of this scheme, on top of the 5% increase in the value of the dollar we already were expecting from the Fed's continued push to normalize monetary policy. On the back of this 15% appreciation in the USD over the next year or so, commodity prices ex U.S. would increase in local-currency terms, which would crimp demand in EM and DM economies. On the supply side, the cost of producing commodities ex U.S. would fall in local-currency terms, which would increase supply at the margin. Net, net: A BAT would cause global commodity demand to fall and supply to increase, which would, all else equal, send a deflationary impulse back to the U.S., and DM and EM economies. Fat Right Tails Permanent and transitory commodity supply losses constitute large right-tail risks for investors, in our estimation, as does stronger-than-expected demand. Chief among these are ongoing losses in copper markets in the near term, which we believe to be transitory. The massive $1 trillion+ capex cuts registered in the oil markets in the wake of the price collapse induced by OPEC's market share war leave us with low confidence our oil-price expectation of $55/bbl will prevail beyond 2018. Near term, however, the timing and type of infrastructure projects that will be funded under the Trump administration's forthcoming fiscal roadmap, and whether Congress will be supportive represent the largest right-tail risk for gold markets. Highly expansive fiscal stimulus could spur inflation in the U.S., given this stimulus will be hitting an economy that already is at or near full employment. Given the synchronized global economic recovery currently underway, we believe an inflationary impulse could percolate into near-term inflation realizations, and into inflation expectations longer term. Chart 4Markets Will Continue To Hang On Every Fed Utterance This elevated inflation risk will be bullish for gold, as we showed in recent research.6 Indeed, we noted, "All else equal, with the U.S. labor market at or close to full employment, and the Trump administration signaling its desire for stimulative fiscal policy, we would be inclined to look for inflation hedges within commodities that are highly sensitive to rising inflation." Topping that list is gold, in our estimation. Taking A View On Volatility Chart 5Gold Provides A Good Hedge For Equity Volatility Volatility is trading-market shorthand for the annualized standard deviation of expected returns for an underlying asset. It is a parameter used to price options. Options markets are unique in that they allow investors to take a view on the dispersion of the expected returns of the asset against which the option is written.7 Volatility is a calculated value, whereas the other components of an option's price - i.e., the underlying asset's price, the strike price, time to expiration, and interest rates - all are known inputs. Volatility, like the price of the underlying asset, therefore is "discovered" when a trade occurs. After an option trades and its premium becomes known, an option-pricing model - e.g., the Black-Scholes-Merton model - can be run backwards, so to speak, to see what level of volatility solves the pricing model for the value that cleared the market. This is known as the option's implied volatility, because it is the expected standard deviation of returns implied by the price at which the option clears the market. One reason investors and traders buy and sell options is to express a view on implied volatility. Option buyers who think the market is underestimating the likelihood of sharply higher or sharply lower returns can express this view by buying out-of-the-money options - calls or call spreads on the upside, puts or put spreads on the downside. This can arise for any number of reasons, but they all boil down to one essential point: Option buyers think there is a higher probability returns will be higher or lower during the life of an option than what is being priced in the options market presently.8 Option sellers, on the other hand, are expressing the opposite view. We believe the fat-tail risks we've discussed in this article are not being fully reflected in the options markets most sensitive to this information, among them the gold market. Our own assessment of these risks implies much fatter tails than we currently observe in the out-of-the-money gold options, as noted above. For this reason, we are recommending investors consider buying put spreads and call spreads against June-delivery gold. We will look to get long Jun/17 $1,200/oz puts vs. selling $1,150/oz puts, and getting long $1,275/oz calls vs. selling $1,325/oz calls, basis tonight's closing levels for the underlying contract. This is a low-risk strategic recommendation, with the put and call spreads roughly equidistant from where the Jun/17 gold contract is trading. The motivation for this recommendation is simple: We believe volatility is low, given the "known unknowns" and their associated fat tails, which are not being accounted for in options prices. This makes these options cheap. Gold Can Hedge Equity Risk As Well Our analysis reveals gold provides a good edge against rising equity volatility, as measured by the CBOE's equity volatility index (CBOE VIX).9 From 1995 to the present, gold's monthly percentage returns outperformed those of the S&P 500 61% of the time when the VIX was increasing, and 36% of the time when the VIX was decreasing (Chart 5). Over the entire sample, gold outperformed the S&P 500 in average by 2.25% in periods of increasing equity volatility as measured by the VIX. However, if we focus only on sub-sample periods where the VIX was increasing but from an already-elevated level (20% or above), gold returns outperformed S&P 500 returns by 4.57% on average. Given our assessment that current volatility is abnormally low, particularly for gold, we believe the gold options exposure recommended here will provide investors protection against increasing equity volatility, as well. Moreover, if market sentiment changes and volatility begins to increase significantly, our analysis provides evidence that gold's volatility-risk-mitigation properties increase even more when the VIX is already at a high level. Bottom Line: Markets lack sufficient information to fully price the risks in potential fat-tail events on the down- and up-side of commodity price distributions. We believe gold options - particularly put and call spreads - offer a low-risk way to position for the eventual resolution of this uncertainty. Robert P. Ryan, Senior Vice President Commodity & Energy Strategy rryan@bcaresearch.com Hugo Bélanger, Research Assistant hugob@bcaresearch.com 1 For an excellent discussion of the EMH, please see Timmermann, Allan, and Clive W.J. Granger (2004), "Efficient market hypothesis and forecasting," in the International Journal of Forecasting, Vol. 20, pp. 15 - 27. 2 When we regress CBOE gold volatility on first-nearby gold futures volume using daily data over January 2016 to February 2017 using an error-correction model, we find trading volume explains ~ one-third of the CBOE implied gold volatility's level. 3 Many of these risks are geopolitical in nature, which our colleague Marko Papic considers at length in "A Fat-Tails World," published February 22, 2016, in BCA Research's Geopolitical Strategy Weekly Report, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 4 We mark the post-GFC period as Jan/10 to present. 5 A BAT essentially would tax imports coming in to the U.S. and subsidize exports, using proceeds to reduce corporate taxes. We are not ready to pronounce the BAT dead, as some pundits already have. We think the market's 20% probability that such a tax becomes law is too low: We give it a 50:50 chance of passage, albeit in a watered down form likely calling for a 10% tax on imports, which likely will not include oil or apparel. Base metals and agricultural imports likely would be taxed under this scheme. We analyzed the commodity impacts of this proposed scheme in "Taking a BAT To Commodities," which was published in the January 26, 2017, issue of BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see issue of BCA Research's Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, "Gold Will Perform...," dated February 2, 2016, available at ces.bcaresearch.com. 7 Call options give the buyer the right to go long an underlying asset at the price at which an option contract is struck - i.e., the option's strike price. Puts give option buyers the right to go short the underlying asset at the price at which the contract is struck. While an option buyer is not required to ever exercise an option, option sellers must take the other side of the deal if the buyer chooses to exercise. Option buyers pay a premium for the put or call they purchase. 8 This probability also can be expressed in terms or price levels, which allows investors to take an explicit view on the likelihood of a particular price being realized during the life of the option being purchased. Please see Ryan, Bob and Tancred Lidderdale (2009), "Energy Price Volatility and Forecast Uncertainty," published by the U.S. Energy Information Administration, for a discussion of options markets and implied volatility. "Appendix II: Derivation of the Cumulative Normal Density for Futures Prices" beginning on p. 22 shows how to transform the returns distribution into a price distribution. It is available at https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/special/pdf/2009_sp_05.pdf. 9 Our results are similar to those reported in "Gold is still a good hedge when volatility rises," by Russ Koesterich, CFA, published by Blackrock on its Blackrock Blog September 9, 2016. Investment Views and Themes Recommendations Strategic Recommendations Tactical Trades Commodity Prices and Plays Reference Table Trades Closed In 2017 Summary of Trades Closed in
Gold mining shares look increasingly attractive, at least as a portfolio hedge. We took profits on our overweight position in the middle of last summer, just prior to the share price crunch, because tactical sentiment and positioning had gotten too stretched. Overzealousness no longer exists, and a revival in market volatility and intensification in policy uncertainty have created an attractive re-entry point in gold shares. The last playable rally began when the yield curve started to flatten, signaling doubts about the longevity of the business cycle. More recently, the yield curve stopped steepening when the Fed raised interest rates last month and may be signaling the start of another move up in gold shares. Importantly, sentiment toward the yellow metal is no longer overheated, as evidenced by both surveys and investor behavior. Flows into gold ETFs have been trending lower, reversing last summer's buying frenzy. Speculative positions have also been unwound. Against a positive structural backdrop for gold, we recommend reestablishing overweight positions in gold mining stocks as a portfolio hedge. Please see yesterday's Weekly Report for more details.