Labor Market
Highlights The macro environment remains positive for risk assets. Nonetheless, the shadow of the '87 stock market crash is a reminder that major market corrections can occur even when the earnings and economic growth backdrop is upbeat. Our base case remains that global growth will stay reasonably firm in 2018, although the composition of that growth will shift towards the U.S. thanks to the lagged effects of easier financial conditions and the likelihood of some fiscal stimulus next year. Positive U.S. economic growth surprises and the disappearing output gap will allow the Fed to raise rates more than is discounted by the markets, providing a lift to the dollar and widening U.S. yield spreads relative to its trading partners. The momentum in profit growth, however, will favor Japan relative to the U.S. and Europe. Investors should overweight Japanese equities and hedge the currency risk. There is still more upside for oil prices, but we are not playing the rally in base metals. The Chinese economy is performing well at the moment, but ample base metal supply and a rising dollar argue against a substantial price rise from current levels. Emerging market equities should underperform the developed markets due to a rising U.S. dollar and the largely sideways path for base metals. Our macro and profit views are consistent with cyclicals outperforming defensive stocks. Investors should also continue to bet on higher inflation expectations and be overweight corporate bonds (relative to governments). High-yield relative value is decent after accounting for the favorable default outlook. It is too early to fully retreat from risk assets and prepare for the next recession. Nonetheless, the market has entered a late cycle phase. Investors appear to have shed fears of secular stagnation, and have embraced a return to a lackluster-growth version of the Great Moderation. The risk of disappointment is therefore elevated. Low levels of market correlation and implied volatility can perhaps be justified, but only if there are no financial accidents on the horizon and any rise in inflation is gradual enough to keep the bond vigilantes at bay. Investors with less tolerance for risk should maintain an extra cash buffer to protect against swoons and provide dry powder to boost exposure after the correction. Feature The October anniversary of the '87 stock market crash was a reminder to investors that major market corrections can arrive out of the blue. With hindsight, there were some warning signs evident before the crash. Nonetheless, the speed and viciousness of the correction caught the vast majority of investors by surprise, in large part because the economy was performing well (outside of some yawning imbalances such as the U.S. current account deficit). Many worried that the 20% drop in the S&P 500 would trigger a recession, but the economy did not skip a beat and it was not long before the equity market recouped the losses. We view the '87 crash as a correction rather than a bear market. BCA's definition of a bear market is a combination of magnitude (at least a 15% decline) and duration (lasting at least for six months). Bear markets are usually associated with economic recessions. Corrections tend to be short-lived because they are not associated with an economic downturn. None of our forward-looking indicators suggest that a recession is in the cards in the near term for any of the major economies. Even the risk of a financial accident or economic pothole in China has diminished in our view. As discussed below, the global economy is firing on almost all cylinders. Chart I-1Valuation Today Is Very Stretched Vs. 1987
Valuation Today Is Very Stretched Vs. 1987
Valuation Today Is Very Stretched Vs. 1987
Nonetheless, there are some parallels today with the mid-1980s. A Special Report sent to all BCA clients in October provides a retrospective on the '87 crash.1 One concern is that the proliferation of financial computer algorithms and derivatives is a parallel to the popularity of portfolio insurance in the 1980s, which was blamed for turbocharging the selling pressure when the market downturn gathered pace in October. My colleague Doug Peta downplays the risks inherent in the ETF market in the Special Report, but argues that automatic selling will again reinforce the fall in prices once it starts. It is also worrying that equity valuation is much more stretched than was the case in the summer of 1987 based on the cyclically-adjusted P/E ratio (CAPE, Chart I-1). The CAPE is currently at levels only previously reached ahead of the 1929 and 2000 peaks. In contrast, the CAPE was close to its long-term average in 1987. Quantitative easing and extremely low interest rates have pulled forward much of the bond and stock markets' future returns. It has also contributed to today's extremely low readings on implied volatility. The fact that the Fed is slowly taking away the punchbowl and that the ECB is dialing back its asset purchase program only add to the risk of a sharp correction. The Good News For now though, investors are focusing on the improving global growth backdrop and the still-solid earnings picture. While the S&P 500 again made new highs in October, it was the Nikkei that stole the show among the major countries. Impressively, the surge in the Japanese stock market was not on the back of a significantly weaker yen. As we highlighted last month, risk assets are being supported by the three legged stool of robust earnings growth, low volatility and yield levels in government bonds, and the view that inflation will remain quiescent for the foreseeable future. The fact that the global growth impulse is broadly-based is icing on the cake because it reduces lingering fears of secular stagnation. Even emerging economies have joined the growth party, while a weak U.S. dollar has tempered fears of a financial accident in this space. Our forward-looking growth indicators are upbeat (Chart I-2). Our demand indicators in the major economies remain quite bullish, especially for capital spending (not shown). Animal spirits are beginning to stir. Moreover, financial conditions remain growth-friendly, especially in the U.S., and subdued inflation is allowing central banks to proceed cautiously for those that are tightening or tapering. The global PMI broke to a new high in October, and the economic surprise index for the major economies has surged in recent months. Our global LEI remains in a strong uptrend and its diffusion index shifted back into positive territory, having experiencing a worrisome dip into negative territory earlier this year. We expect the global growth upturn will persist for at least the next year. The U.S. will be the first major economy to enter the next recession, although this should not occur until 2019. It is thus too early to expect the equity market to begin to anticipate the associated downturn in profit growth. Earnings: Japan A Star Performer It is still early days in the Q3 earnings season, but the mini cyclical rebound from the 2015/16 profit recession in the major economies is still playing out. The bright spots at the global level outside of energy are industrials, materials, technology and consumer staples (Chart I-3). All four are benefitting from strengthening top line growth and rising operating margins. Chart I-2Upbeat Global Economic Indicators
Upbeat Global Economic Indicators
Upbeat Global Economic Indicators
Chart I-3Global Earnings By Sector
Global Earnings By Sector
Global Earnings By Sector
The U.S. is further advanced in the mini-cycle and EPS growth is near its peak on a 4-quarter moving total basis. The expected topping out in profit growth is more a reflection of challenging year-on-year comparisons than a deterioration in the underlying fundamentals. The hurricanes will take a bite out of third quarter earnings, but this effect will be temporary. Moreover, oil prices are turbocharging earnings in the energy patch and we expect this to continue. Our commodity strategists recently lifted their 2018 target price for both Brent and WTI to $65/bbl and $63/bbl, respectively. The global uptick in GDP growth, along with continued production discipline from OPEC 2.0 are the principal drivers of our revised outlook. We expect the fortuitous combination of fundamentals to accelerate the drawdown in oil inventories globally, which also will be supportive for prices. While U.S. financials stocks have cheered the prospects that Congress may pass a tax bill sometime in early 2018, sell-side analysts have been brutally downgrading financial sector EPS estimates. This has dealt a blow to net earnings revisions in the sector. Expected hurricane-related losses are probably the main culprit, especially in the insurance sector. Nonetheless, our equity sector strategists argue that such indiscriminate downgrades are unwarranted, and we would lean against such pessimism.2 Recent profit results corroborate our positive sector bias, although we are still early in the earnings season. European profits will suffer to some extent in the third quarter due to the lagged effects of previous euro strength. The same will be true in the fourth quarter, although we expect this headwind to diminish early in 2018. That leaves Japan as the star profit performer among the majors in the near term. The recent surge in foreign flows into the Japanese market suggests that global investors are beginning to embrace the upbeat EPS story. Abe's election win in October means that the current monetary stance will remain in place. The ruling LDP's shift away from austerity (e.g. abandoning the primary balance target) may also be lifting growth expectations. A Return To The Great Moderation? Chart I-4Market Correlation And The ERP
bca.bca_mp_2017_11_01_s1_c4
bca.bca_mp_2017_11_01_s1_c4
A lot of the good news is already discounted in equity prices. The depressed level of the VIX and the drop in risk asset correlations this year signal significant complacency. Large institutional investors are reportedly selling volatility and thus dampening vol across asset classes. But there is surely more to it. It appears that investors believe we have returned to the pre-Lehman period between 1995 and 2006 when the Great Moderation in macro volatility contributed to low correlations among stocks within the equity market (Chart I-4). The idea is that low perceived macroeconomic volatility during that period had diminished the dispersion of growth and inflation forecasts, thereby trimming the variance of interest rate projections. This allowed equity investors to focus on alpha rather than beta, given less uncertainty about the macro outlook. Of course, the Great Recession and financial market crisis brought the Great Moderation to a crashing end. Correlations rocketed up and investors demanded a higher equity risk premium to hold stocks. Today, dispersion in the outlooks for growth and interest rates have fallen back to pre-Lehman levels, helping to explain the low levels of implied volatility and correlation in the equity market (Chart I-5). Some of this can be justified by fundamentals. The onset of a broadly-based global expansion phase has likely calmed lingering fears that the global economy is constantly teetering on the edge of the abyss. Investor uncertainty regarding economic policy has moderated as well (bottom panel). Historically, implied volatility tended to fall during previous periods when global industrial production was strong and global earnings were rising across a broad swath of countries (Chart I-6). Our U.S. Equity Sector Strategy service points out that, during the later stages of the cycle, equity sector correlations tend to fall as earnings fundamentals become more important performance drivers and sector differentiation generates alpha, as the broad market enters the last stage of the bull market. Similarly, the VIX can fluctuate at low levels for an extended period when global growth is broadly based. Chart I-5A Less Uncertain Macro Outlook?
A Less Uncertain Macro Outlook?
A Less Uncertain Macro Outlook?
Chart I-6Broad-Based Growth Lower Implied Volatility
Broad-Based Growth Lower Implied Volatility
Broad-Based Growth Lower Implied Volatility
Still, current levels of equity market correlation and the VIX are unnerving given a plethora of potential geopolitical crises and the pending unwinding of the Fed's balance sheet. Moreover, any meaningful pickup in inflation would upset the 'low vol' applecart. Table I-1 shows the drop in the S&P 500 index during non-recession periods when the VIX surges by more than 10% in a 13-week period. The equity price index fell by an average of 7% during the nine episodes, with a range of -3.6 to -18.1%. Table I-1Episodes When VIX Spiked
November 2017
November 2017
The Equity Risk Premium Chart I-7Still Some Value In High-Yield
Still Some Value In High-Yield
Still Some Value In High-Yield
On a positive note, the equity risk premium (ERP) is not overly depressed. There are many ways to define the ERP, but we present it as the 12-month forward earnings yield minus the 10-year Treasury yield in Chart I-4. It has fallen from about 760 basis points in 2011 to 310 basis points today. We do not believe that the ERP can return to the extremely low levels of 1990-2000. At best, the ERP may converge with the level that prevailed during the last equity bull market, from 2003-2007 (about 200 basis points). The current forward earnings yield is 550 basis points and the 10-year Treasury yield is 2.4%. The ERP would need to fall by 110 basis points to get back to the 2% equilibrium. This convergence can occur through some combination of a lower earnings yield or higher bond yield. If the 10-year yield is assumed to peak in this cycle at about 3% (our base case), then this leaves room for the earnings yield to fall by 50 basis points. This would boost the forward earnings multiple from 18 to 20. However, a rise in the 10-year yield to 3½% would leave no room for multiple expansion. We are not betting on any further multiple expansion but the point is that stocks at least have some padding in the event that bond yields adjust higher in a gradual way. It is the same story for speculative-grade bonds, which are not as expensive as they seem on the surface. The average index OAS is currently 326 bps, only about 100 bps above its all-time low. However, junk value appears much more attractive once the low default rate is taken into account. Chart I-7 presents the ex-post default-adjusted spreads, along with our forecast based on unchanged spreads and our projection for net default losses over the next year. The spread padding offered by the high-yield sector is actually reasonably good by historical standards, assuming there is no recession over the next year. We are not banking on much spread tightening from here, which means that high-yield is largely a carry trade now. Nonetheless, given a forecast for the default and recovery rate, we expect U.S. high-yield excess returns to be in the range of 2% and 5% (annualized) over the next 6-12 months. The bottom line is that the positive growth backdrop does not rule out a correction in risk assets, especially given rich valuations. But at least the profit, default and growth figures will remain a tailwind in the near term. The main risk is a breakout in inflation, which financial markets are not priced for. Inflation And Hidden Slack The September CPI report did little to buttress the FOMC's view that this year's inflation pullback is temporary. The report disappointed expectations again with core CPI rising only 0.13% month-over-month. For context, an environment where inflation is well anchored around the Fed's target would be consistent with core CPI prints of 0.2% every month, roughly 2.4% annualized. The inflation debate continues to rage inside and outside the Fed as to whether the previous relationship between inflation and growth have permanently changed, whether low inflation simply reflects long lags, or whether it will require tighter labor markets in this business cycle to fuel wage and price pressures. We back the latter two of these three explanations but, admittedly, predicting exactly when inflation will pick up is extremely difficult and we must keep an open mind. A Special Report in the October IMF World Economic Outlook sheds some light on this vexing issue.3 Their work suggests that the deceleration in wage growth in the post-Lehman period in the OECD countries can largely be explained by traditional macro factors: weak productivity growth, lower inflation expectations and labor market slack. The disappointing productivity figures alone account for two-thirds of the drop in wage growth. However, a key point of the research is that the headline unemployment figures are not as good a measure of labor market slack as they once were. This is because declining unemployment rates partly reflect workers that have been forced into part-time jobs, referred to as involuntary part-time employment (IPT). The rise in IPT employment could be associated with automation, the growing importance of the service sector, and a diminished and more uncertain growth outlook that is keeping firms cautious. The IMF's statistical analysis suggests that the number of involuntary part-time workers as a share of total employment (IPT ratio) is an important measure of slack that adds information when explaining the decline in wage growth. Historically, each one percentage point rise in the IPT ratio trimmed wage growth by 0.3 percentage points. Chart I-8 and Chart I-9 compare the unemployment rate gap (unemployment rate less the full-employment estimate) with the deviation in the IPT ratio from its 2007 level. The fact that the IPT ratio has had an upward trend since 2000 in many countries makes it difficult to identify a level that is consistent with full employment. Nonetheless, the change in this ratio since 2007 provides a sense of how much "hidden slack" the Great Recession generated due to forced part-time employment. Chart I-8Measures Of Labor Market Slack (I)
Measures Of Labor Market Slack (I)
Measures Of Labor Market Slack (I)
Chart I-9Measures Of Labor Market Slack (II)
Measures Of Labor Market Slack (II)
Measures Of Labor Market Slack (II)
For the OECD as a whole, labor market slack has been fully absorbed based on the unemployment gap. However, the IPT ratio was still elevated at the end of 2016 (latest data available), helping to explain why wage growth has remained so depressed across most countries. The IPT ratio is still above its 2007 level in three-quarters of the OECD countries. Of course, there is dispersion across countries. Japan has no labor market slack by either measure. In the U.S., the unemployment gap has fallen into negative territory, but only about half of the post-2007 rise in the IPT ratio has been unwound. For the Eurozone, the U.K. and Canada, the unemployment gap is close to zero (or well into negative territory in the U.K.). Nonetheless, little of the under-employment problem in these economies has been absorbed based on the IPT ratio. Our discussion in last month's report highlighted the importance of the global output gap in driving inflation in individual countries. Consistent with this, the IMF finds that there have been important spillover effects related to labor market slack, especially since 2007. This means that wage growth can be held down even in countries where slack has disappeared because of the existence of a surplus of available labor in their trading partners. Phillips Curve Is Not Dead That said, we still believe that the U.S. is at a point in the cycle when inflationary pressures should begin to build, even in the face of persisting labor market slack at the global level. Chart I-10 shows the ECI and the Atlanta Fed wage tracker, which are the best measures of wages because they are less affected by composition effects. Both have moved higher along with measures of labor market tightness. Wage and consumer price inflation have ebbed this year, but when we step back and look at it over a longer timeframe, the Phillips curve still appears to be broadly operating. Moreover, inflation is a lagging indicator. Table I-2 splits the post-war U.S. business cycles into short, medium, and long buckets based on the length of the expansion phase. It presents the number of months from when full employment was reached to the turning point for consumer price inflation in each expansion. There was a wide variation in this lag in the short- and medium-length expansions, but the lags were short on average. Chart I-10Phillips Curve Still (Weakly) Operating
Phillips Curve Still (Weakly) Operating
Phillips Curve Still (Weakly) Operating
Table I-2Inflation Reacts With A Lag
November 2017
November 2017
It is a different story for long expansions, where the lag averaged more than two years. We have pointed out in the past that it takes longer for inflation pressures to reveal themselves when the economy approaches full employment gradually, in contrast to shorter expansions when momentum is so strong the demand crashes into supply constraints. The fact that U.S. unemployment rate has only been below the estimate of full employment for eight months in this expansion suggests that perhaps we and the Fed are just being too impatient in waiting for the inflection point. Turning to Europe, the IPT ratio confirms the ECB's view that there is an abundance of under-employment, despite the relatively low unemployment rate. This suggests that the Eurozone remains behind the U.S. in the economic cycle. As expected, the ECB announced a tapering in its asset purchase program to take place next year. While policymakers are backing away from QE in the face of healthy growth and a shrinking pool of bonds to purchase, they will continue to emphasize that rate hikes are a long way off in order to avoid a surge in the euro and an associated tightening in financial conditions. U.S./Eurozone bond yield spreads are still quite wide by historical standards and thus it is popular to bet on spread narrowing and a stronger euro/weaker dollar. However, some narrowing in short-term rate spreads is already discounted based on the OIS forward curve (Chart I-11). The real 5-year, 5-year forward OIS spread - the market's expectation of how much higher U.S. real 5-year rates will be in five years' time relative to the euro area - stands at about 70 basis points. This spread is not wide by historical standards, and thus has room to widen again if market expectations for the fed funds rate moves up toward the Fed's 'dot plot' over the next 6-12 months. While market pricing for the ECB policy rate path appears about right in our view, market expectations for rate hikes in the U.S. are too complacent. This implies that long-term spreads could widen in favor of the U.S. dollar over the coming months, especially if U.S. growth accelerates while euro area growth cools off a bit. The fact the U.S. economic surprise index has turned positive is early evidence that this process may have already begun. Moreover, the starting point is that the dollar has been weaker than interest rate differentials warrant, such that there is some room for the dollar to 'catch up', even if interest rate differentials do not move (Chart I-12). We see EUR/USD falling to 1.15 by the end of the year. Chart I-11Room For U.S./Eurozone Spreads To Widen...
Room For U.S./Eurozone Spreads To Widen...
Room For U.S./Eurozone Spreads To Widen...
Chart I-12...Giving The Dollar A Lift
...Giving The Dollar A Lift
...Giving The Dollar A Lift
A New Fed Chair? Our forecast for yield spreads and currencies is not overly affected by the choice of Fed Chair for next year. President Trump's meeting with academic John Taylor reportedly went well, but we think the President will prefer someone with a less hawkish bent. Keeping Chair Yellen is an option, but she has strong views on financial sector regulation that Trump does not like. The prevailing wisdom is that Jerome Powell is a moderate who is only slightly more hawkish than Yellen. But the truth is that we don't really know where he stands because he has no academic publication record and has generally steered clear of taking bold views on monetary policy. In any event, the organizational structure of the Fed makes it impossible for the chair to run roughshod over other FOMC members. This suggests that no matter who is selected, the general thrust of monetary policy will not change radically next year. As discussed above, uncertainty is elevated, but our base case sees inflation rising enough in the coming months for the Fed to maintain their 'dot plot' forecast. The market and the Fed are correct to 'look through' the near-term growth hit from the hurricanes, to the rebound that always follows the destruction. The U.S. housing sector is a little more worrying because some softness was evident even before the hurricanes hit. Since the early 1960s, a crest in housing led the broader economic downturn by an average of seven quarters. Nonetheless, we continue to expect that the housing soft patch does not represent a peak for this cycle. Residential investment should provide fuel to the economy for at least the next two years as pent up demand is worked off, related to depressed household formation since the 2008 financial crisis. Affordability will still be favorable even if mortgage rates were to rise by another 100 basis points (Chart I-13). Robust sentiment in the homebuilder sector in October confirms that the hurricane setback in housing starts is temporary. China And Base Metals Turning to China, economic momentum is on the upswing. Real-time measures of economic activity such as electricity production, excavator sales, and railway freight traffic are all growing at double-digit rates, albeit down from recent peak levels (Chart I-14). Various price indexes also reveal a fairly broadly-based inflation pickup to levels that will unnerve the authorities. Growth will likely slow in 2018 as policymakers continue to pare back stimulus. We do not foresee a substantial growth dip next year, but it could be hard on base metals prices. Chart I-13Housing Affordability Outlook Housing ##br##Affordability Under Various Rate Assumptions
Housing Affordability Outlook Housing Affordability Under Various Rate Assumptions
Housing Affordability Outlook Housing Affordability Under Various Rate Assumptions
Chart I-14China: Healthy ##br##Growth Indicators
China: Healthy Growth Indicators
China: Healthy Growth Indicators
Policy shifts discussed in Chinese President Xi's speech in October to the Party Congress are also negative for metals prices in the medium term. The speech provided a broad outline of goals to be followed by concrete policy initiatives at the National People's Congress (NPC) in March 2018. He emphasized that policy will tackle inequality, high debt levels, overcapacity and pollution. Globalization will also remain a priority of the government. The supply side reforms required to meet these goals will be positive in the long run, but negative for growth in the short run. Restructuring industry, deleveraging the financial sector and fighting smog will all have growth ramifications. The government could use fiscal stimulus to offset the short-term hit to growth. However, while overall growth may not slow much, the shift away from an investment-heavy, deeply polluting growth model, will undermine the demand for base metals. Our commodity strategists also highlight the supply backdrop for most base metals is not supportive of an extended rally in prices. The implication is that investors who are long base metals should treat it as a trade rather than a strategic position. Despite our expectation that policy will continue to tighten, we believe that investors should overweight Chinese stocks relative to other EM markets. Investment Conclusions: Our base case remains that global growth will stay reasonably firm in 2018, although the composition of that growth will shift towards the U.S. thanks to the lagged effects of the easing in U.S. financial conditions that has taken place this year and the likelihood of some fiscal stimulus next year. The U.S. Congress has drawn closer to approving a budget resolution for fiscal 2018 that would pave the way for tax legislation to reach President Donald Trump's desk by the end of the first quarter of next year. Surveys show that investors have all but given up on the prospect of tax cuts, which means that it will be a positive surprise if it finally arrives (as we expect). Positive U.S. economic growth surprises and the disappearing output gap will allow the Fed to raise rates more than is discounted by the markets, providing a lift to the dollar and widening U.S. yield spreads relative to its trading partners. The momentum in profit growth, however, will favor Japan relative to the U.S. and Europe. Investors should favor Japanese equities and hedge the currency risk. There is still more upside for oil prices, but we are not playing the rally in base metals. The Chinese economy is performing well at the moment, but ample base metal supply and a rising dollar argue against a substantial price rise from current levels. Emerging market equities should underperform the developed markets due to a rising U.S. dollar and the largely sideways path for base metals. Our macro and profit views are consistent with cyclicals outperforming defensive stocks. Investors should also continue to bet on higher inflation expectations and be overweight corporate bonds (relative to governments) in the major developed fixed-income markets. Our base-case outlook implies that it is too early to fully retreat from risk assets and prepare for the next recession. Nonetheless, the market has entered a late-cycle phase. Calm macro readings and still-easy monetary policy have generated signs of froth. Investors appear to have shed fears of secular stagnation, and have embraced a return to a lackluster-growth version of the Great Moderation. Low levels of market correlation and implied volatility can perhaps be justified, but only if there are no financial accidents on the horizon and any rise in inflation is gradual enough to keep the bond vigilantes at bay. Upside inflation surprises would destabilize the three-legged stool supporting risk assets, especially at a time when the Fed is shrinking its balance sheet. Black Monday is a reminder that major market pullbacks can occur even when the economic outlook is bright. Thus, investors with less tolerance for risk should maintain an extra cash buffer to protect against swoons, and to ensure that they have dry powder to exploit them when they materialize. Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst October 26, 2017 Next Report: November 20, 2017 1 Please see BCA Special Report, "Black Monday, Thirty Years On: Revisiting The First Modern Global Financial Crisis," October 19, 2017, available at bca.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Banks Hold The Key," October 24, 2017, available at uses.bcaresearch.com 3 Recent Wage Dynamics In Advanced Economies: Drivers And Implications. Chapter 2, IMF World Economic Outlook. October 2017. II. Three Demographic Megatrends Dear Client, This month's Special Report is written by my colleague, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist. Peter highlights three key demographic trends that will shape financial markets in the coming decades. His non-consensus conclusions include the idea that demographic trends will be negative for both bonds and equities over the long haul, in part because the trends are inflationary. Moreover, continuing social fragmentation will not be good for business. Mark McClellan Megatrend #1: Population Aging. Aging has been deflationary over the past few decades, but will become inflationary over the coming years. Megatrend #2: Global Migration. International migration has the potential to lift millions out of poverty while boosting global productivity. However, if left unmanaged, it poses serious risks to economic stability. Megatrend #3: Social Fragmentation. Rising inequality, cultural self-segregation, and political polarization are imperilling democracy and threatening free-market institutions. On balance, these trends are likely to be negative for both bonds and equities over the long haul. In today's increasingly short-term oriented world, it is easy to lose track of megatrends that are slowly shifting the ground under investors' feet. In this report, we tackle three key social/demographic trends. Chart II-1Our Aging World
Our Aging World
Our Aging World
Megatrend #1: Population Aging Fertility rates have fallen below replacement levels across much of the planet. This has resulted in aging populations and slower labor force growth (Chart II-1). In the standard neoclassical growth model, a decline in labor force growth pushes down the real neutral rate of interest, r*. This happens because slower labor force growth causes the capital stock to increase relative to the number of workers, resulting in a lower rate of return on capital.1 The problem with this model is that it treats the saving rate as fixed.2 In reality, the saving rate is likely to adjust to changes in the age composition of the workforce. Initially, as the median age of the population rises, aggregate savings will increase as more people move into their peak saving years (ages 30 to 50). This will put even further downward pressure on the neutral rate of interest. Eventually, however, savings will fall as these very same people enter retirement. This, in turn, will lead to a higher neutral rate of interest. If central banks drag their feet in raising policy rates in response to an increase in r*, monetary policy will end up being too stimulative. As economies overheat, inflation will pick up, leading to higher long-term nominal bond yields. Contrary to popular belief, spending actually increases later in life once health care costs are included in the tally (Chart II-2). And despite all the happy talk about how people will work much longer in the future, the unfortunate fact is that the percentage of American 65 year-olds who are unable to lead active lives because of health care problems has risen from 8.8% to 12.5% over the past 10 years (Chart II-3). Cognitive skills among 65 year-olds have also declined over this period. We are approaching the inflection point where demographic trends will morph from being deflationary to being inflationary. Globally, the ratio of workers-to-consumers - the so-called "support ratio" - has peaked after a forty-year ascent (Chart II-4). As the support ratio declines, global savings will fall. To say that global saving rates will decline is the same as saying that there will be more spending for every dollar of income. Since global income must sum to global GDP, this implies that global spending will rise relative to production. That is likely to be inflationary. Chart II-2Savings Over The Life Cycle
Savings Over The Life Cycle
Savings Over The Life Cycle
Chart II-3Climbing Those Stairs Is ##br##Getting More And More Difficult
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-4The Ratio Of Workers To ##br##Consumers Has Peaked
The Ratio Of Workers To Consumers Has Peaked
The Ratio Of Workers To Consumers Has Peaked
The projected evolution of support ratios varies across countries. The most dramatic change will happen in China. China's support ratio peaked a few years ago and will fall sharply during the coming decade. Nearly one billion Chinese workers entered the global labor force during the 1980s and 1990s as the country opened up to the rest of the world. According to the UN, China will lose over 400 million workers over the remainder of the century (Chart II-5). If the addition of millions of Chinese workers to the global labor force was deflationary in the past, their withdrawal will be inflationary in the future. The fabled "Chinese savings glut" will eventually dry up. Chart II-5China On Course To Lose More ##br##Than 400 Million Workers
China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers
China On Course To Lose More Than 400 Million Workers
Rising female labor force participation rates have blunted the effect of population aging in Europe and Japan. This has allowed the share of the population that is employed to increase over the past few decades. However, as female participation stabilizes and more people enter retirement, both regions will also see a rapid decline in saving rates. This could lead to a deterioration in their current account balances, with potential negative implications for the yen and the euro. Population aging is generally bad news for equities. The slower expansion in the labor force will reduce the trend GDP growth. This will curb revenue growth, and by extension, earnings growth. To make matter worse, to the extent that lower savings rates lead to higher real interest rates, population aging could reduce the price-earnings multiple at which stocks trade. This could be further exacerbated by the need for households to run down their wealth as they age, which presumably would include the sale of equities. Megatrend #2: Global Migration Economist Michael Clemens once characterized the free movement of people across national boundaries as a "trillion-dollar bill" just waiting to be picked up from the sidewalk.3 Millions of workers toil away in poor countries where corruption is rife and opportunities for gainful employment are limited. Global productivity levels would rise if they could move to rich countries where they could better utilize their talents. Academic studies suggest that less restrictive immigration policies would do much more to raise global output than freer trade policies. In fact, several studies have concluded that the removal of all barriers to labor mobility would more than double global GDP (Table II-1). The problem is that many migrants today are poorly skilled. While they can produce more in rich countries than they can back home, they still tend to be less productive than the average native-born worker. This can be especially detrimental to less-skilled workers in rich countries who have to face greater competition - and ultimately, lower wages - for their labor. Chart II-6 shows that the share of U.S. income accruing to the top one percent of households has closely tracked the foreign-born share of the population. Table II-1Economic Benefits Of Open Borders
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-6Immigration Versus Income Distribution
Immigration Versus Income Distribution
Immigration Versus Income Distribution
Low-skilled migration can also place significant strains on social safety nets. These concerns are especially pronounced in Europe. The employment rate among immigrants in a number of European countries is substantially lower than for the native-born population (Chart II-7). For example, in Sweden, the employment rate for immigrant men is about 10 percentage points lower than for native-born men. For women, the gap is 17 points. The OECD reckons that a typical 21-year old immigrant to Europe will contribute €87,000 less to public coffers in the form of lower taxes and higher welfare benefits than a non-immigrant of the same age (Chart II-8). Chart II-7Low Levels Of Immigrant Labor Participation In Parts Of Europe
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-8Immigration Is Straining Generous ##br##European Welfare States
November 2017
November 2017
All of this would matter little if the children of today's immigrants converged towards the national average in terms of income and educational attainment, as has usually occurred with past immigration waves. However, the evidence that this is happening is mixed. While there is a huge amount of variation within specific immigrant communities, on average, some groups have fared better than others. The children of Asian immigrants to the U.S. have tended to excel in school, whereas college completion rates among third-generation-and-higher, self-identified Hispanics are still only half that of native-born non-Hispanic whites (Chart II-9). Across the OECD, second generation immigrant children tend to lag behind non-immigrant students, often by substantial margins (Chart II-10). Chart II-9Hispanic Educational Attainment Lags Behind
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-10Worries About Immigrant Assimilation
November 2017
November 2017
Immigration policies that place emphasis on attracting skilled migrants would mitigate these concerns. While such policies have been adopted in a number of countries, they have often been opposed by right-leaning business groups that benefit from cheap and abundant labor and left-leaning political parties that want the votes that immigrants and their descendants provide. Humanitarian concerns also make it difficult to curtail migration, especially when it is coming from war-torn regions. Chart II-11The Projected Expansion ##br##In Sub-Saharan Population
The Projected Expansion In Sub-Saharan Population
The Projected Expansion In Sub-Saharan Population
Europe's migration crisis has ebbed in recent months but could flare up at any time. In 2004, the United Nations estimated that sub-Saharan Africa's population will increase to 2 billion by the end of the century, up from one billion at present. In its 2017 revision, the UN doubled its projection to 4 billion. Nigeria's population is expected to rise to nearly 800 million by 2100; Congo's will soar to 370 million; Ethiopia's will hit 250 million (Chart II-11). And even that may be too conservative because the UN assumes that the average number of births per woman in sub-Saharan Africa will fall from 5.1 to 2.2 over this period. For investors, the possibility that migration flows could become disorderly raises significant risks. For one, low-skill migration could also cause fiscal balances to deteriorate, leading to higher interest rates. Moreover, as we discuss in greater detail below, it could propel more populist parties into power. This is a particularly significant worry for Europe, where populist parties have often pursued business-sceptic, anti-EU agendas. Megatrend #3: Social Fragmentation In his book "Bowling Alone," Harvard sociologist Robert Putnam documented the breakdown of social capital across America, famously exemplified by the decline in bowling leagues.4 There is no single explanation for why communal ties appear to be fraying. Those on the left cite rising income and wealth inequality. Those on the right blame the welfare state and government policies that prioritize multiculturalism over assimilation. Conservative commentators also argue that today's cultural elites are no longer interested in instilling the rest of society with middle-class values. As a result, behaviours that were once only associated with the underclass have gone mainstream.5 Technological trends are exacerbating social fragmentation. Instead of bringing people together, the internet has allowed like-minded people to self-segregate into echo chambers where members of the community simply reinforce what others already believe. It is thus no surprise that political polarization has grown by leaps and bounds (Chart II-12). When people can no longer see eye to eye, established institutions lose legitimacy. Chart II-13 shows that trust in the media has collapsed, especially among right-leaning voters. Perhaps most worrying, support for democracy itself has dwindled around the world (Chart II-14). Chart II-12U.S. Political Polarization: Growing Apart
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-13The Erosion Of Trust In Media
November 2017
November 2017
It would be naïve to think that the public's rejection of the political establishment will not be mirrored in a loss of support for the business establishment. The Democrats "Better Deal" moves the party to the left on many economic issues. Nearly three-quarters of Democratic voters believe that corporations make "too much profit," up from about 60% in the 1990s (Chart II-15). Chart II-14Who Needs Democracy When You Have Tinder?
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-15People Versus Companies
November 2017
November 2017
The share of Republican voters who think corporations are undertaxed has stayed stable in the low-40s, but this may not last much longer. Wall Street, Silicon Valley, and the rest of the corporate establishment tend to lean liberal on social issues and conservative on economic ones - the exact opposite of a typical Trump voter. If Trump voters abandon corporate America, this will leave the U.S. without any major party actively pushing a pro-business agenda. That can't be good for profit margins. The fact that social fragmentation is on the rise casts doubt on much of the boilerplate, feel-good commentary written about the "sharing economy." For starters, the term is absurd. Uber drivers are not sharing their vehicles. They are using them to make money. Both passengers and drivers can see one another's ratings before they meet. This reduces the need for trust. As trust falls, crime rises. The U.S. homicide rate surged by 20% between 2014 and 2016 according to a recent FBI report.6 In Chicago, the murder rate jumped by 86%. In Baltimore, it spiked by 52%. Chart II-16 shows that violent crime in Baltimore has remained elevated ever since riots gripped the city in April 2015. The number of homicides in New York, whose residents tend to support more liberal policing standards for cities other than their own, has remained flat, but that is unlikely to stay the case if crime is rising elsewhere. The multi-century decline in European homicide rates also appears to have ended (Table II-2). Much has been written about how millennials are flocking to cities to enjoy the benefits of urban life. But this trend emerged during a period when urban crime rates were falling. If that era has ended, urban real estate prices could suffer tremendously. It is perhaps not surprising that the increase in crime rates starting in the 1960s was mirrored in rising inflation (Chart II-17). If governments cannot even maintain law and order, how can they be trusted to do what it takes to preserve the value of fiat money? The implication is that greater social instability in the future is likely to lead to lower bond prices and a higher equity risk premium. Chart II-16Do You Still Want To Move Downtown?
November 2017
November 2017
Table II-2Crime Rates Are Creeping Higher In Europe
November 2017
November 2017
Chart II-17Homicides And Inflation
Homicides And Inflation
Homicides And Inflation
Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy
November 2017
November 2017
2 Another problem with the neoclassical model is that it assumes perfectly flexible wages and prices. This ensures that the economy is always at full employment. Thus, if the saving rate rises, investment is assumed to increase to fully fill the void left by the decline in consumption. In the real world, the opposite tends to happen: When households reduce consumption, firms invest less, not more, in new capacity. One of the advantages of the traditional Keynesian framework is that it captures this reality. And interestingly, it also predicts that aging will be deflationary at first, but will eventually become inflationary. Initially, slower population growth reduces the need for firm to expand capacity, causing investment demand to fall. Aggregate savings also rises, as more people move into their peak saving years. Globally, savings must equal investment. If desired investment falls and desired savings rises, real rates will increase. At the margin, higher real rates will discourage investment and encourage saving, thus ensuring that the global savings-investment identity is satisfied. As savings ultimately begins to decline as more people retire, the equilibrium real rate of interest will rise again. 3 Michael A. Clemens, "Economics and Emigration: Trillion-Dollar Bills on the Sidewalk?" Journal of Economic Perspectives Vol. 25, no.3, pp. 83-106 (Summer 2011). 4 Robert D. Putnam, "Bowling Alone: The Collapse And Revival Of American Community," Simon and Schuster, 2001. 5 Charles Murray has been a leading proponent of this argument. Please see "Coming Apart: The State Of White America, 1960-2010," Three Rivers Press, 2013. 6 Federal Bureau of Investigation, "Crime In The United States 2016" (Accessed October 25, 2017). III. Indicators And Reference Charts Global equity markets partied in October on solid earnings and economic growth figures, and the rising chances of a tax cut in the U.S. among other bullish developments. The Nikkei has been particularly strong in local currency terms following the re-election of Abe. Our equity indicators remain upbeat on the whole, although the rally is looking stretched by some measures. The BCA monetary indicator is hovering at a benign level. Implied equity volatility is very low, investor sentiment is frothy and our Speculation Indicator is elevated. These suggest that a lot of good news is already discounted. Our valuation indicator is also closing in on the threshold of overvaluation at one standard deviation. Our technical indicator is rolling over, although it needs to fall below the zero line to send a 'sell' signal. On a constructive note, the solid rise in earnings-per-share is likely to continue in the near term, based on positive earnings surprises and the net revisions ratio. Moreover, our new Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) continued on its bullish equity signal in September for the third consecutive month. We introduced the RPI in the July report. It combines the idea of market momentum with valuation and policy measures. It provides a powerful bullish signal if positive market momentum lines up with constructive signals from the policy and valuation measures. Conversely, if constructive market momentum is not supported by valuation and policy, investors should lean against the market trend. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicators are also bullish on stocks in the U.S., Europe and Japan. These indicators track flows, and thus provide information on what investors are actually doing, as opposed to sentiment indexes that track how investors are feeling. The U.S. and European WTPs rose in October after a brief sideways move in previous months, suggesting that equity flows have turned more constructive. But the Japanese WTP is outshining the others. Given that the Japanese WTP is rising from a low level, it suggests that there is more 'dry powder' available to purchase Japanese stocks, especially relative to the U.S. market. We favor Japanese stocks relative to the other two markets in local currency terms, as highlighted in the Overview section. Oversold conditions for the U.S. dollar have now been absorbed based on our technical indicator, but there is plenty of upside for the currency before technical headwinds begin to bite. The greenback looks expensive based on PPP, but is less so on other measures. We are positive in the near term. Our composite technical indicator for U.S. Treasurys has moved above the zero line, but has not reached oversold territory. Bond valuation is close to fair value based on our long-standing valuation model. These factors suggest that yields have more upside potential before meeting resistance. Other models that specifically incorporate global economic factors suggest that the 10-year Treasury is still about 20 basis points on the expensive side. Stay below benchmark in duration. EQUITIES: Chart III-1U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
U.S. Equity Indicators
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Willingness To Pay For Risk
Chart III-3U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
U.S. Equity Sentiment Indicators
Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Revealed Preference Indicator
Chart III-5U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
U.S. Stock Market Valuation
Chart III-6U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
U.S. Earnings
Chart III-7Global Stock Market ##br##And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Chart III-8Global Stock Market ##br##And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9U.S. Treasurys And Valuations
U.S. Treasurys and Valuations
U.S. Treasurys and Valuations
Chart III-10U.S. Treasury Indicators
U.S. Treasury Indicators
U.S. Treasury Indicators
Chart III-11Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Selected U.S. Bond Yields
Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
10-Year Treasury Yield Components
Chart III-13U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
U.S. Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Global Bonds: Developed Markets
Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
CURRENCIES: Chart III-16U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
U.S. Dollar And PPP
Chart III-17U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
U.S. Dollar And Indicator
Chart III-18U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
U.S. Dollar Fundamentals
Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Japanese Yen Technicals
Chart III-20Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Euro Technicals
Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Euro/Yen Technicals
Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
Euro/Pound Technicals
COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Broad Commodity Indicators
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-25Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Commodity Prices
Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Commodity Sentiment
Chart III-27Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
Speculative Positioning
ECONOMY: Chart III-28U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
U.S. And Global Macro Backdrop
Chart III-29U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
U.S. Macro Snapshot
Chart III-30U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
U.S. Growth Outlook
Chart III-31U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
U.S. Cyclical Spending
Chart III-32U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
U.S. Labor Market
Chart III-33U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
U.S. Consumption
Chart III-34U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
U.S. Housing
Chart III-35U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
U.S. Debt And Deleveraging
Chart III-36U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
U.S. Financial Conditions
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Global Economic Snapshot: China
Mark McClellan Senior Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst
Highlights Revisiting the shadow banking system 10 years later. The September CPI data is unlikely to resolve the inflation debate at the Fed. How to invest in a late cycle environment. Wage Inflation was on the rise even before the hurricanes. Feature Chart 1September CPI And Retail Sales Keep##BR##The Fed On Track To Tighten
September CPI And Retail Sales Keep The Fed On Track To Tighten
September CPI And Retail Sales Keep The Fed On Track To Tighten
The state of the U.S. business cycle, and what could end it, were key topics of conversation at BCA's semi-annual Research Advisory Board meeting in early October. Most participants agreed with the BCA view that the economy is in the late stages of the economic cycle, and a few suggested that another bubble in the shadow banking sector may end the expansion. With those discussions in mind, we review the state of the shadow banking in the first section of this report and then examine how key aspects of the economy and U.S. asset classes behave while the U.S. economy is in the final stages of an expansion. In the final section, we take another look at wage inflation signals from the hurricane impacted September jobs report, and conclude that wage growth has accelerated even excluding the effect of the storms. The September CPI and retail sales data were also impacted by the storm, but the message is that the underlying economy is strong enough to generate some inflation (Chart 1), although the September CPI is unlikely to resolve the inflation debate at the Fed. The minutes of last month's FOMC meeting (released last week) indicate that the upcoming inflation data could be pivotal to whether the Fed delivers another rate hike in December. There are two more CPI reports ahead of the December FOMC meeting (with the second release coming on the day of the policy announcement). While the September CPI data was hard to interpret due to the storms, the next few data prints need to affirm the Fed's forecast that core inflation is indeed recovering from the "transitory weakness" seen earlier this year. BCA's U.S. bond strategists believe that inflation will be strong enough for the Fed to justify a hike in December and recommend below-benchmark duration for fixed income portfolios. Shadow Banking Update At current levels, shadow banking activity in the U.S. is not a threat to the economic expansion. The ratio of financial sector debt to non-financial sector debt is a rough proxy of how the system can leverage existing debt into new securities and boost credit creation (Chart 2). As financial innovation and deregulation boosted system liquidity, outstanding financial debt as a percentage of non-financial debt climbed from 10% in the mid-1970s to over 50% in 2008. In Q2 2017, the shadow banking proxy stands at only 33%, because the global financial crisis and subsequent reregulation of the financial sector have reigned in excesses. The last time that the ratio was this low was in the late 1990s. Bank lending standards highlight key differences between the backdrop in the mid-2000s and today (Chart 3). In the mid-2000s, even as the Fed had boosted rates by 425 basis points, lending standards were easy and loosening. In contrast, the 100 bps increase in the Fed funds rate since late 2015 was accompanied by a tightening of lending requirements. Moreover, lending criteria were already tight when the Fed began its latest rate hikes. Chart 2The Shrinking Shadow##BR##Banking Sector
The Shrinking Shadow Banking Sector
The Shrinking Shadow Banking Sector
Chart 3Bank Lending Standards Tighter##BR##Today Than In Mid '00s
Bank Lending Standards Tighter Today Than in Mid '00s
Bank Lending Standards Tighter Today Than in Mid '00s
The Fed and other regulators are more attuned to financial excesses than they were a decade ago. The central bank under Yellen has raised the profile of financial stability.1 BCA views "financial stability" as a third mandate for the central bank, along with low and stable inflation, and full employment. That said, the Fed did not assess financial stability at the September FOMC meeting and the topic was only briefly mentioned by Fed staff and FOMC participants. At the July 2017 meeting, the central bank's staff characterized the "financial vulnerabilities of the U.S. financial system" as moderate on balance. BCA expects that the Fed will return to the topic at either one or both remaining FOMC meetings in 2017. The October 2017 Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report2 provided a checklist of liquidity measures to watch as the U.S. economy enters the end of an elongated expansion. In view of these indicators, we would describe liquidity conditions in the U.S. as fairly accommodative, although not nearly as abundant as prior to the Lehman event in 2008. Monetary conditions are super easy, while balance sheet and financial market liquidity are reasonably constructive. In contrast, funding liquidity, while vastly improved since the global financial crisis, is still a long way from the pre-Lehman go-go years (as per indicators such as bank leverage). The Fed is set to begin the process of unwinding the massive amount of monetary liquidity created by its quantitative easing program. This has the potential to undermine other types of liquidity in the financial system, leading to a correction in risk assets. However, the BCA Special Report argues that the reaction of the bond market is more important for risk assets than the balance sheet adjustment itself. If inflation only edges higher and market expectations for the upward path of the Fed funds rate remain gentle, then risk assets should take the balance sheet unwind in stride. An abrupt upward shift in inflation would be an altogether different story. Bottom Line: The U.S. expansion entered a late-cycle environment near the close of 2016 as the unemployment rate dipped below NAIRU. Nonetheless, none of our recession-timing indicators warns that a downtown is imminent3 and the financial excesses in the end stage of the 2001-2007 economic expansion are not present today. If the next recession begins in the second half of 2019, then global equities will probably peak earlier that year or in late 2018. Given the starting point for valuations, U.S. equities may decline by 20% to 30% peak-to-trough. Stay overweight equities for now. The time to trim exposure could come in mid-2018. Late-Cycle Playbook Chart 4Easier Financial Conditions##BR##Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easing financial conditions will lead to faster U.S. GDP growth in the next few quarters. Financial conditions have eased sharply this year due to a strengthening stock market, narrower credit spreads and a weaker dollar. Changes in financial conditions lead growth by about 6 to 9 months, implying that U.S. growth could reach 3% early next year (Chart 4). This could drop the unemployment rate to 3.5% by end-2018, more than one point below the Fed's estimate of full employment and even lower than the 2008 low of 3.8%. Rising inflation will compel the Fed to lift rates aggressively next year to cool the economy and push the unemployment rate back above NAIRU. The U.S. has never averted a recession in the post-war era when the unemployment rate has increased by more than one-third of a percentage point. BCA's stance is that the U.S. economy enters the expansion's final stage when the unemployment rate dips below NAIRU. Chart 5 shows that the unemployment rate moved below NAIRU in November 2016. In the past 45 years, the economy has spent an average of 33 months in late-cycle mode ahead of 5 recessions. The exception was 1981-82 when the unemployment rate did not dip below NAIRU ahead of the recession; we treated the separate 1980 and 1981-82 recessions as one episode. Note that several of these late-cycle intervals overlap with recessions (vertical lines on Charts 5, 6 and 7 indicate the start of recessions). Chart 5Late Cycle Performance Of Stocks, Bonds, & Commodities
Late Cycle Performance Of Stocks, Bonds, & Commodities
Late Cycle Performance Of Stocks, Bonds, & Commodities
The late-cycle environment favors equities over Treasuries, gold and oil, but other risk assets (small caps, investment-grade and high-yield corporates) underperform (Table 1). The dollar drops by an average of 5% in late cycles and it moved lower in 4 of the 5 previous episodes. Oil is a consistent late-cycle performer, climbing in all the stages in our analysis. The average returns across all assets classes are similar, even excluding the 1973 OPEC oil embargo and the 1987 stock market crash. Nonetheless, asset class returns in the current environment have mostly run counter to history. Table 1Late Cycle Performance Of Stocks, Bonds, & Commodities
The Late-Cycle View
The Late-Cycle View
In typical late-cycle performance, U.S. stocks have outperformed Treasuries since November 2016, the dollar has weakened and oil is up, though by far less than in an average late cycle. However, both investment-grade and high-yield corporate bonds have outpaced Treasuries, and small caps have beaten large caps. Moreover, gold prices have dropped. However, the current late-cycle period has been in place for only 10 months, which is more than two years short of the 33-month average of late cycles since 1972 (Table 1). Furthermore, the level of S&P 500 earnings, both trailing and forward, also rise uniformly in late cycles. That said, earnings growth tends to peak about halfway through each cycle, but we note that we have only forward EPS data for three of the five episodes in our analysis. Profit margins take the same course as earnings and earnings growth (Chart 6). The late-cycle climb in wages and labor compensation impacts margins. Additionally, inflation tends to escalate during late cycles (Chart 7). Chart 6S&P 500 Earnings And Margins In Late Cycle
S&P 500 Earnings And Margins In Late Cycle
S&P 500 Earnings And Margins In Late Cycle
Chart 7Inflation And Interest Rates During Late Cycles
Inflation And Interest Rates During Late Cycles
Inflation And Interest Rates During Late Cycles
Bottom Line: The late-cycle environment may persist for another two years or so, favoring stocks over bonds, a weaker dollar and higher oil prices. Although we are overweight both investment-grade and high-yield corporate bonds, these two asset classes tend to underperform Treasuries as the business cycle fades. We also expect wages and inflation to continue to mount, suggesting that duration should be kept short. The late-cycle pattern is at odds with BCA's view that the dollar will appreciate modestly in the next 12 months. However, the dollar's trajectory depends both on Fed policy and the direction of rates in the economies of the major U.S. trading partners. The Bank of Canada will be lifting rates in the coming quarters, but policy rates will be flat for some time in the Eurozone and Japan, such that interest rate differentials will shift in favor of the dollar on a multi-lateral basis. Another Look At Wage Inflation In last week's report4 we indicated that the September jobs report was difficult to interpret due to the impacts of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Specifically, we stated that the unexpected 0.5% month-over-month gain in average hourly earnings should be discounted. Employment in the low-paying leisure and hospitality sector fell by 111,000 in September, helping to boost the aggregate average hourly wage. These wages will correct lower as these workers return to their jobs post-hurricane recovery. A closer look at the wage data, however, suggests that the acceleration in wage growth in September 2017 to 2.9% from 2.7% in August and a recent low of 1.9% in 2014, has been in place for some time. Admittedly, the 2.9% year-over-year reading on wage inflation, may have overstated labor costs in September. That said, at 56% in August, the percentage of U.S. states where the year-over-year percentage change in average hourly earnings is rising has been on the upswing since mid-2014. The August reading was the highest since 2012 (Chart 8). In Chart 9, we created an "equally-weighted" AHE measure to adjust for shifts in the composition of the labor market, but we found that the recent deceleration is not linked to compositional effects. Since wage growth bottomed out in late 2012, the compositional shifts slightly lowered wage inflation on average, but the growth rates today are roughly the same. Chart 10 updates research by the Kansas City Fed5 that found only a few industries (mostly in the goods-producing sector) account for most of the rise in wages, notably manufacturing, construction and wholesale trade. Financial services, retail, professional and business services, and leisure and hospitality - all service sector industries - were the laggards. The report shows that although earnings growth has fallen behind in service-oriented industries since 2015, hours worked have increased faster than in the goods-producing sector. Chart 856% Of States Have Seen##BR##Higher Wage Inflation
56% Of States Have Seen Higher Wage Inflation
56% Of States Have Seen Higher Wage Inflation
Chart 9Compositional Effects Do Not##BR##Explain Recent Wage Weakness
Compositional Effects Do Not Explain Recent Wage Weakness
Compositional Effects Do Not Explain Recent Wage Weakness
Chart 10Acceleration In Hours Worked##BR##Should Lead To Faster Wage Growth
Acceleration In Hours Worked Should Lead To Faster Wage Growth
Acceleration In Hours Worked Should Lead To Faster Wage Growth
Moreover, the August JOLTS data also provides evidence that the labor market began to tighten before the effects of Harvey and Irma. The quit rate matched a 15-year high in August, and job openings were at an all-time high. Job openings in the leisure and hospitality sector were at all-time highs in August, and the quit rate in that storm-impacted industry stood at 4.2% (Chart 11). Even excluding the leisure and hospitality industry from the average hourly earnings data, wage growth has unambiguously climbed in the past 1- and 3- months (Chart 12). Chart 11Overall Job Openings And Quit Rates##BR##Vs. Leisure And Hospitality
Overall Job Openings And Quit Rates Vs. Leisure And Hospitality
Overall Job Openings And Quit Rates Vs. Leisure And Hospitality
Chart 12Wage Acceleration Evident Even##BR##Excluding Leisure And Hospitality
Wage Acceleration Evident Even Excluding Leisure And Hospitality
Wage Acceleration Evident Even Excluding Leisure And Hospitality
Bottom Line: Wage inflation was on the upswing even before the hurricanes hit in late August and September. Persistent wage inflation will allow the Fed to raise rates again in December and three or four times next year. This supports BCA's underweight stance on duration. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Fed's Third Mandate," July 24, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "Liquidity And The Great Balance Sheet Unwind," October 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Strategy Outlook Fourth Quarter 2017: Goldilocks And The Recession Bear," October 4, 2017. Available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Small Cap Surge," October 9, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 "Wage Leaders and Laggards: Decomposing The Growth In Average Hourly Earnings," Willem Van Zandweghe, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, February 15, 2017.
Highlights It's ok to ignore the September jobs report. Is the small cap comeback sustainable? Assessing the threat to the consumer from higher rates and oil prices. The ISM is over 60, now what? Feature Risk assets outperformed again last week, as the S&P 500, the dollar, and the 10 year- Treasury yield all moved higher. Oil was an exception, as WTI dipped back below $50 per barrel, but BCA's Commodity & Energy Strategy service expects WTI to end the year over $55/bbl. Small-cap stocks outperformed as well and conditions are in place for the rise in small caps to continue. The rise in risk assets in recent weeks occurred alongside a marked improvement in the Citi Economic Surprise Index (Chart 1), which moved into positive territory last week for the first time since April, despite the impacts of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Chart 1S&P And 10 Year Treasury Yield Tracks Economic Surprise
S&P And 10 Year Treasury Yield Tracks Economic Surprise
S&P And 10 Year Treasury Yield Tracks Economic Surprise
The lack of impact from the hurricanes on the economic data is surprising. Before Hurricane Harvey made landfall, the Atlanta Fed GDP Now reading for Q3 was 3.4%, but moved as low as 2.1% in late September as the August economic data was reported. The most recent Atlanta Fed forecast pegged Q3 GDP at 2.5%. The 60+ readings on September's manufacturing ISM composite and 70+ reading on prices were notably strong, as was the 18.6 million reading on September vehicle sales, the strongest in 12 years. That said, the impact of the storms was evident in the employment data released last week (See below). U.S. Jobs Report: All Noise, No Signal U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell 33,000 in September, which was entirely due to the hurricanes. According to the BLS, 1.47 million workers could not show up for their jobs due to the weather. Because this data series is not seasonally adjusted, one cannot simply add it back to the headline payrolls number. Unfortunately, the separate household survey does not help to shed any better light on the state of the labor market. The household survey is known to be much more volatile than the establishment survey. This was quite apparent with the 906,000 surge in jobs, which followed a 74,000 decline in the previous month. The outsized and unbelievable surge in household employment was the main reason for the decline in the jobless rate to 4.2% from 4.4%. The labor force actually grew by a hefty 575,000 and the participation rate rose to 63.1%, the highest since March 2014 (Chart 2). The 0.5% m/m gain in average hourly earnings needs to be discounted as well. Employment in the low-paying leisure and hospitality sector fell by 111,000 in September, helping to boost the aggregate average hourly wage. As these workers return to their jobs, average hourly wages will correct lower. Bottom Line: Investors should ignore the September jobs report. The 3-month average of payrolls growth from June to August was 172K. This is probably the best gauge of underlying jobs growth and this pace is above the trend growth in the labor force. To the extent that the Fed believes the tightening labor market will push inflation to its 2% target, the calculus for the December FOMC should not change after today's report. Small Caps Make A Comeback Rising prospects for tax cuts have lifted the Trump trades, including small-cap equities. We first initiated an overweight to small caps on November 14, 20161 (Chart 3). Since then, small caps have underperformed large by 162 bps, but not uniformly. The trade was successful from the start through to late January, but faded by late summer along with the prospects for Trump's tax cuts. Starting in mid-August, small cap made a comeback as odds of the tax cut troughed. Chart 2The September Jobs Report Is More Noise Than Signal
The September Jobs Report Is More Noise Than Signal
The September Jobs Report Is More Noise Than Signal
Chart 3The Trump Trades Are Back On
The Trump Trades Are Back On
The Trump Trades Are Back On
Several factors support our overweight view. According to BCA's U.S. Equity Strategy service S&P 600 valuation indicator, small caps are even more undervalued today than when we last discussed them in June2 (Chart 4). Moreover, the Cyclical Capitalization Indicator (CCI) moved sharply into positive territory following the U.S. election despite a modest dip in subsequent months (Chart 5). In addition, small cap stocks have been a reliably high-beta segment of U.S. capital markets since the middle of the last economic cycle (Chart 5, panel 2). That characteristic of small caps argues for a bullish stance given our upbeat view on growth and our overweight positions in U.S. equities versus bonds. BCA's outlook for regulation, inflation, the dollar, the Fed and the consumer also favor small over large caps. Trump has already made significant progress in slowing the pace of new regulations,3 which has long been a concern for small businesses. We expect inflation to move back to 2% in the coming quarters and then begin to climb higher in 2018. Chart 6 shows that small caps often thrive when inflation accelerates. BCA's outlook is that the dollar will see modest appreciation over the next 12 months. Small-cap stocks are less sensitive to dollar movements than large caps. Gradually rising rates will not impede small caps and credit conditions remain favorable. Finally, small caps are more closely linked to the consumer than the S&P 500, and BCA's view on household spending remains upbeat. Chart 4Small Caps Are Cheap, But Not Historically Cheap
Small Caps Are Cheap, But Not Historically Cheap
Small Caps Are Cheap, But Not Historically Cheap
Chart 5Our CCI Supports Small Caps
Our CCI Supports Small Caps
Our CCI Supports Small Caps
Chart 6Accelerating Inflation Usually Supports Small Caps
Accelerating Inflation Usually Supports Small Caps
Accelerating Inflation Usually Supports Small Caps
Despite the upbeat prospects for small caps, some risks linger. Tighter credit conditions for consumers and businesses, an abrupt pullback in housing that would trigger a consumer retrenchment, persistent weakness in the dollar, and a "risk off" environment would see small caps underperform large caps. Bottom Line: It is too early to abandon our bullish bias toward small caps. Conditions remain in place for small caps to outpace large caps. Favorable valuation and encouraging prospects for Trump's pro-small business platform are key to BCA's view, as our favorable outlook for the U.S. consumer. Will Higher Rates And Oil Prices Crush The Consumer? Supports remain in place for continued strength in U.S. consumer spending despite rising interest rates and oil prices. That support was confirmed by September's reports on employment and vehicle sales, and August's personal income and spending data, all released in the past two weeks. However, investors should be aware of hurricane-related distortions in the August and September figures.4 Moreover, BCA's position is reinforced by elevated readings on consumer confidence and booming household net worth statistics, and record high FICO scores (Chart 7). The conditions that crushed the consumer ahead of the 2007-2008 recession are not in place and will not be for some time. Chart 8 shows that at 41%, household purchases of essentials as a percentage of disposable income are near an all-time low and have dropped by 1.3 percentage points since 2012. In contrast, spending on necessities rose by a record 3.5% in the five years ending in 2008, matching the bruising impact of higher rates, surging inflation and soaring oil prices seen by the end of 1980. Wrenching consumer-driven economic downturns ensued after both episodes. We see gradual increases ahead for both oil prices and interest rates, but nothing that would trigger the collapse of the consumer.5 Furthermore, BCA forecasts only a modest rise in inflation and an acceleration in wage growth; both will provide a boost to disposable income. Personal tax cuts as part of the plan Trump proposed last month would also enhance incomes. Chart 7Plenty Of Support For The Consumer
Plenty Of Support For The Consumer
Plenty Of Support For The Consumer
Chart 8Consumer In Good Shape Despite Rise In Oil, Rates
Consumer In Good Shape Despite Rise In Oil, Rates
Consumer In Good Shape Despite Rise In Oil, Rates
BCA's research shows that sustainable capital spending cycles get underway only when businesses see evidence that consumer final demand is on the upswing. The latest reading on the manufacturing ISM composite and the 60+ readings on the new orders component of ISM since February suggest that managements are starting to note the robust pace of consumer spending. Signals From Elevated ISM Readings September's numbers on the ISM manufacturing index support BCA's case for accelerating corporate profits in the coming quarters. The ISM is a good proxy for industrial production, which in turn tracks S&P 500 sales. The recent strong data on ISM suggests that IP should pick up in the next six months (Chart 9). A rollover in the 12-month change in IP would challenge our constructive stance on earnings. While a decline is possible given that the index is already lofty, the leading components of the ISM, including the new orders index and the new orders-to-inventory ratio, indicate that the ISM will remain above 50 in the months ahead (Chart 10). Chart 9Favorable Macro Backdrop For Earnings And Sales
Favorable Macro Backdrop For Earnings And Sales
Favorable Macro Backdrop For Earnings And Sales
Chart 10ISM Components Suggest IP Poised To Accelerate
ISM Components Suggest IP Poised To Accelerate
ISM Components Suggest IP Poised To Accelerate
Some investors question how long the composite and new orders indices will remain beyond 60 and what that will mean for risk assets. Additionally, the second 70+ reading on the ISM Prices index this year challenges the notion that inflation is dormant. Other investors are concerned about what will happen after these ISM components are so elevated. Others may fear that the index will soon fall below 50. We analyze the historical periods when the ISM and its sub-indexes were above the 60 threshold, and then what happens to the returns of risk assets 12 months after they fall below the 60 threshold (Chart 11A, Chart 11B and Chart 11C). Chart 11AComposite ISM And Risk Assets
Composite ISM And Risk Assets
Composite ISM And Risk Assets
Chart 11BISM New Orders And Risk Assets
ISM New Orders And Risk Assets
ISM New Orders And Risk Assets
Chart 11CISM Prices And Risk Assets
ISM Prices And Risk Assets
ISM Prices And Risk Assets
Historically, the relative performance of large cap equities to Treasuries is typically poor when the ISM Manufacturing Composite Index is over 60, but investment-grade credit outperforms and both gold and oil usually gain. The performance of these assets is similar even excluding the period around the 1973 OPEC oil embargo and the 1987 stock market crash (Chart 11A and Appendix Table 1). The ISM Manufacturing Composite Index ticked up to 60.8 in September, the first 60+ reading since 2004. The indicator also reached 60 three times in the 1970s and twice in the 1980s, and it stayed above 60 on average for 8 months. The last time it breached 60, it remained at that level for 6 months (December 2003 through June 2004). That interval, along with most of the others, was accompanied by tightening monetary policy and accelerating inflation late in the latter half of economic cycles. Gold and oil perform strongly in the 12 months after ISM Composite Index goes below 60, large-cap equities barely do better than Treasuries, while investment-grade credit underperforms. Surprisingly, high-yield bonds and small-cap stocks outperform 12 months after the ISM falls back below 60, although the sample size is limited. In 1974-1975, the economy was in recession. In all but one other instance (the mid- 1980s), the economy was in a late stage of the cycle, nearing full employment and inflation was on the rise. Risk assets also are strong performers when the New Orders component of the ISM exceeds the 60 threshold (Chart 11B and Appendix Table 2). Moreover, the episodes are more numerous (14 since 1971 versus only 6 for the composite) but, on average, they persist as long as the signal from the ISM Composite. New Orders have been above 60 since February 2017 (7 months), just shy of the 46-year average (8 months). Large cap equities and credit (both investment-grade and high-yield) have outperformed Treasuries, and gold has climbed since February. This performance matches the historical pattern when the New Orders index exceeds 60. In the past 8 months, the underperformance of small caps and the drop in oil prices in that span runs counter to history. The performance of risk assets in the year after the new orders index moves below 60 is mixed, at best. In these periods, while the S&P 500 outperforms Treasuries on average, and small caps outperform large caps, credit underperforms. The big winners when the New Orders index is falling from over 60 are gold (average 14% gain) and oil (22%). Chart 11C and Appendix Table 3 shows the performance of risk assets when the ISM Prices index is greater than 70 and then 12 months after the index crosses below 70. Gold and oil are standouts in the first case, and small cap tends to outperform large. Note that 3 of these 11 episodes coincided with recessions (early 1970s, 1980 and 2008) and 1 occurred during the 1987 stock market crash. Small-cap equities continue to outperform as the Prices index fades, and returns on gold and oil are muted. High-yield bonds underperform Treasuries when the ISM Prices index dips back below 70, and the total return on investment-grade corporate struggles, but it beats Treasuries. Moreover, 3 of these 11 occurred during recessions (early 1980s, 2001, 2008-2009). Separately, there has been a tight relationship between the 12-month change in the 10-year Treasury yield and both the overall ISM, the New Orders and Prices component of the ISM in the past 25 years (Chart 12). Nonetheless, the relationship between the ISM Prices component and the 10-year Treasury has broken down since oil prices peaked in 2014. The 12-month jump in ISM Prices surge in 2016 was met with a decline in Treasury yields. Prior to that, a rise in Prices index was almost always accompanied by a move higher in bond yields. BCA's view is that the ISM manufacturing Composite will remain elevated (although not necessarily more than 60 in the months ahead), supporting our bullish stance on corporate sales and earnings. However, if we are wrong and the ISM dips below 60 and then down to 50, would that signal a downturn and concomitant selloff in risk assets? The ISM has a mixed track record as a leading indicator of recessions (Chart 13). Since 1948, the ISM has provided 9 false signals, using 3 consecutive months below 50 as the indication of an economic decline. Furthermore, 5 of the 9 examples occurred since 1985, as the U.S. economy became less reliant on manufacturing. In the 6 instances that the ISM warned of contractions, the average lead time was 4 months. In the 4 other economic slumps, the ISM moved and stayed below 50 for 3 consecutive months only after the start of recession. The lag averaged 4 months. This was the case in the 2007-2009 episode when the ISM did not send a recession signal until May 2008, 5 months after the official start of the downturn. Chart 1210 Year Treasury Vs. ISM
10 Year Treasury Vs. ISM
10 Year Treasury Vs. ISM
Chart 13The Rocky Relationship Between ISM And Recessions
The Rocky Relationship Between ISM And Recessions
The Rocky Relationship Between ISM And Recessions
Bottom Line: Elevated readings on ISM support BCA's view that profit growth will accelerate for a few more quarters while the recent rise in the ISM Prices index confirms the move higher in Treasury yields. Stay overweight stocks versus bonds and underweight duration. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Easier Fiscal, Tighter Money?," November 14, 2016. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Waiting For The Turn," June 26, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Still Waiting for Inflation, "August 14, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Shelter From the Storm," September 5, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Monthly Report, "Global Debt Titanic Collides With Fed Iceberg?," February 2017. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. Appendix: Table 1
Small Cap Surge
Small Cap Surge
Table 2
Small Cap Surge
Small Cap Surge
Table 3
Small Cap Surge
Small Cap Surge
Dear Client, I had the pleasure of speaking at BCA's Annual New York conference on Monday, where I offered the following trade recommendations. This week's report is a summary of my remarks. Please note we will be publishing our Q4 Strategy Outlook and monthly tactical asset allocation recommendation table next Wednesday. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy Highlights Go short the December 2018 fed funds futures contract. Go long global industrial stocks versus utilities. Go short 20-year JGBs relative to their 5-year counterparts. Feature Trade #1: Go Short The December 2018 Fed Funds Futures Contract The hurricanes are likely to dent activity in the third quarter, but leading economic indicators are pointing to faster growth starting in Q4. This can be seen in a variety of measures, including the Conference Board's LEI (Chart 1). U.S. financial conditions have eased sharply this year, thanks to a decline in government bond yields, narrower credit spreads, a weaker dollar, and rising equity prices. Changes in our FCI lead growth by about 6-to-9 months. If history is any guide, U.S. growth will rise to about 3% in the first half of 2018 (Chart 2). Growth could even temporarily rise above that level if Congress enacts significant unfunded tax cuts, as we expect it will. Chart 1U.S. Leading Economic Indicator Pointing Higher
U.S. Leading Economic Indicator Pointing Higher
U.S. Leading Economic Indicator Pointing Higher
Chart 2Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Easier Financial Conditions Will Boost U.S. Growth
Contrary to popular belief, the Phillips curve is far from dead. It has just been dormant for the better part of 30 years because the unemployment rate has hovered along the flat side of the curve. The closest the economy came to overheating was in the late 1990s, but any inflationary pressures back then were choked off by turmoil in emerging markets, a surging dollar, and collapsing commodity prices.1 If U.S. growth accelerates over the next few quarters, the unemployment rate is likely to fall to 3.5% by the end of next year - well below the Fed's end-2018 projection of 4.1%, and even below the low of 3.8% reached in 2000. At that point, the U.S. economy will find itself on the steep side of the Phillips curve (Chart 3). Chart 3U.S. Economy Has Moved Into The 'Steep' Side Of The Phillips Curve
Three Tantalizing Trades
Three Tantalizing Trades
As Chart 4 illustrates, our wage survey indicator - a propriety measures that combines the results of 13 separate employer surveys - is pointing to faster wage growth. Rising wages should boost consumer spending. With the output gap all but extinguished, faster demand growth will lead to higher inflation. This is already being telegraphed by the ISM manufacturing index (Chart 5). Chart 4Survey Data Point To Higher Wage Growth Ahead
Survey Data Point To Higher Wage Growth Ahead
Survey Data Point To Higher Wage Growth Ahead
Chart 5Strong ISM Signaling A Rise In Inflation
Strong ISM Signaling A Rise In Inflation
Strong ISM Signaling A Rise In Inflation
If inflation accelerates, there is little reason why the Fed would not continue raising rates in line with the dots, which call for one more hike in December and three hikes in 2018. That's 100 basis points of hikes between now and the end of next year, considerably more than the 40 bps that the market is currently discounting. We went short the December 2018 fed funds futures contract three weeks ago. The trade has gained 20 basis points so far, but my discussion this morning suggests that it has plenty of juice left. Trade #2: Go Long Global Industrial Stocks Versus Utilities Economists are a bit like stock market analysts - they are generally too optimistic. As a result, they usually end up having to revise their growth estimates down over time. That has not been the case this year: Global growth estimates have been marching higher (Chart 6). Capital spending tends to accelerate in the mature phase of business-cycle expansions, as a growing number of firms realize that they have insufficient capacity to meet rising demand. We are starting to see that now. A variety of indicators - including capital goods orders and capex intention surveys - are pointing to further gains in business spending. This is captured in our model estimates, which project that global capex will grow at the fastest pace in six years (Chart 7). Chart 6Global Growth Estimates Accelerating Despite Stalled U.S. Growth
Global Growth Estimates Accelerating Despite Stalled U.S. Growth
Global Growth Estimates Accelerating Despite Stalled U.S. Growth
Chart 7Global Capex On The Upswing
Global Capex On The Upswing
Global Capex On The Upswing
A burst of capital spending should benefit global industrial stocks. Conversely, rising global yields will hurt rate-sensitive utilities (Chart 8). Industrials are no longer cheap, but relative to utilities, valuations do not seem especially stretched, implying further room for re-rating (Chart 9). Chart 8Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities
Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities
Higher Bond Yields Will Hurt Utilities
Chart 9Relative Valuations Are Not Stretched
Relative Valuations Are Not Stretched
Relative Valuations Are Not Stretched
Trade #3: Go Short 20-Year JGBs Relative To Their 5-Year Counterparts The deflationary mindset remains firmly entrenched in Japan. CPI swaps are pricing in inflation of only 0.5% over the next twenty years (Chart 10). Not only do investors expect the Bank of Japan to continue to miss its 2% target, they don't even think that inflation will rise from today's miserly levels. They could be in for a big surprise. Many of the structural drivers of deflation in Japan are fading. Land prices have stopped falling for the first time in 25 years, and bank balance sheets are in good shape (Chart 11). Goods prices are also rising again, thanks in part to a cheaper yen (Chart 12). Profit margins have soared, giving firms the wherewithal to pay their workers more. Chart 10Deflationary Mindset Remains Deeply Entrenched...
Deflationary Mindset Remains Deeply Entrenched...
Deflationary Mindset Remains Deeply Entrenched...
Chart 11A...But Deflationary Pressures Are Abating
...But Deflationary Pressures Are Abating
...But Deflationary Pressures Are Abating
Chart 11B
...But Deflationary Pressures Are Abating
...But Deflationary Pressures Are Abating
Chart 12ACorporate Pricing Power Has Improved
Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved
Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved
Chart 12B
Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved
Corporate Pricing Power Has Improved
Companies have been reluctant to raise wages, but that may be starting to change. Our wage trend indicator is showing signs of life (Chart 13). As in the U.S., the Phillips curve in Japan tends to become kinked at very low levels of unemployment. Japan's unemployment rate now stands at 2.8%, almost a full percentage point below 2007 levels. As the labor market heats up, companies will have to compete more intensively for a shrinking pool of available workers. This could spark a tit-for-tat cycle where wage hikes by one company lead to hikes by others. Chart 13ATentative Signs of Wage Growth
Three Tantalizing Trades
Three Tantalizing Trades
Chart 13B
Three Tantalizing Trades
Three Tantalizing Trades
Chart 14Demographic Inflection Point?
Demographic Inflection Point?
Demographic Inflection Point?
The government has been hoping for such a bidding war to break out. It will get its wish. The ratio of job openings-to-applicants has soared, and is now even higher than at the peak of the bubble in 1990 (Chart 14). Amazingly, Japan's labor market has tightened over the past few years despite tepid GDP growth and a steady influx of women into the labor force. However, now that female participation in Japan exceeds U.S. levels, this tailwind to labor supply will dissipate. Meanwhile, the retirement of aging Japanese baby boomers will accelerate. The largest number of births in Japan occurred between 1947 and 1949. These workers will reach 70 over the next two years, the age at which most Japanese retire. How should investors play this theme? Considering that inflation is still far from the Bank of Japan's 2% target, it is doubtful that the BoJ will abandon its yield curve targeting regime any time soon. But as inflation expectations begin to rise, ultra long-term yields - which are not subject to the BOJ's cap - will increase. This suggests that shorting 20-year JGBs relative to their 5-year counterparts will pay off in spades. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?" dated September 22, 2017. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights French labor reforms stack up well against German and Spanish predecessors; We remain bullish on French industrials versus German industrials; Populism is overrated in Germany - European integration may not accelerate, but it will continue; The U.K.'s position remains weak in Brexit talks ... don't expect much from sterling. Feature On recent travels across Asia Pacific, the U.K., and the U.S., Europe has rarely featured in our conversations with clients. We proclaimed European politics a "trophy red herring" in our annual Strategic Outlook.1 Following the defeat of populists in Austria, the Netherlands, Spain, and particularly France, the market now agrees with us (Chart 1). Chart 1European Political Risk Was Overstated
European Political Risk Was Overstated
European Political Risk Was Overstated
In this report, we ask whether there is anything left to say about Europe. First, we provide an update on French structural reforms, which we predicted with enthusiasm in February.2 Second, we give a post-mortem of the German election. Third, we dissect U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May's speech in Florence. We remain positive on near-term and mid-term prospects for European assets. We have recently closed our unhedged long Euro Area equities trade for a 7.88% gain (open from January 25 to September 6). We have reopened the position on September 6 with a currency hedge given our view that there is some downside risk for the euro in the near term. We also remain long French industrials / short German industrials, with gains of 9.30% since February 3. The French Revolution Continues President Emmanuel Macron has ignored tepid union protests and signed five decrees overhauling French labor rules on September 22. While there is more to be done, Macron's swift action just five months after assuming office justifies our optimism about France earlier this year. As we posited in February, investors are surprised every decade by a developed market that defies all stereotypes and catches the markets off guard with ambitious, pro-market and pro-business structural reforms. Margaret Thatcher's laissez-faire reforms pulled Britain out of the ghastly 1970s. Sweden surprised the world in the 1990s. At the turn of the century, Germany's Social Democratic Party (SPD) defied its own "socialist" label and moved the country to the right of the economic spectrum. Finally, the past decade's reform surprise came from Spain, which undertook painful labor and pension reforms that have underpinned its impressive recovery. How do French labor reforms stack up against the German and Spanish efforts? Table 1 surveys the measures and classifies them into three categories. On unemployment benefits, Macron's effort falls short of the considerable cuts implemented as part of the Hartz reforms in Germany. However, while benefits will still be generous, France's unemployed will now be cut off if they refuse job offers that pay within 25% of the salary they previously held. On increasing labor market flexibility, we give France high marks. Reforms will simplify the termination process for economic reasons and cap damages that can be awarded to employees, in line with the Spanish experience. Macron has also managed to neuter the power of national unions by allowing firm-level collective bargaining to take precedence. France's labor bargaining reform is also a carbon copy of the Spanish effort and both are attempts to create a more German-like management-employee context. Table 1Measuring French Reforms Against German And Spanish Reforms
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
What should investors expect as a result? Spain is instructive. While its unemployment rate remains 5.8% above the Italian rate and 7.3% above the French rate, it still fell from a high of 26.3% in 2013 to 17.1% today. Meanwhile, Italian and French unemployment rates remain stubbornly high (Chart 2). In addition, Spain's export competitiveness has had one of the sharpest recoveries in Europe since 2008, whereas Italy and France continue to languish (Chart 3). Spain accomplished this feat via a considerable reduction in labor costs relative to peers (Chart 4). Chart 2Italy, France: Unemployment Still High
Italy, France: Unemployment Still High
Italy, France: Unemployment Still High
Chart 3Spain Regained Competitiveness
Spain Regained Competitiveness
Spain Regained Competitiveness
Chart 4Spain Cut Labor Costs
Spain Cut Labor Costs
Spain Cut Labor Costs
The key pillar of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's reforms was to create a more flexible labor market so as to restore competitiveness to the economy by aligning labor costs with productivity. Reforms, passed in February 2012, removed stringent collective bargaining agreements and replaced them with firm-level agreements. This has made it easier for firms to negotiate their own labor conditions, including reducing wages as an alternative to termination of employment. France is now on the path to do the same. True, it is difficult to establish a clear causal connection between Rajoy's structural reforms and Spain's economic performance since 2008. Nevertheless, reforms also work as a signaling mechanism, encouraging investment and unleashing animal spirits by affirming the government's commitment to a pro-business agenda. Under Rajoy's leadership, Spain has moved from 62nd in the World Bank "Ease of Doing Business" survey in 2009 to 32nd in 2017, 18 spots above Italy. Given the speed and commitment of the Macron administration, we would expect an even stronger signaling effect in France. German Hartz reforms are easier to assess because more time has passed since 2005 (when the final stage, Hartz IV, was implemented). Prior to the reforms, Germany's GDP growth rate was falling and unemployment was rising (Chart 5). At least on these two broad measures, it appears that reforms were positive. Chart 5Hartz Reforms Marked Turning Point In Germany
Hartz Reforms Marked Turning Point In Germany
Hartz Reforms Marked Turning Point In Germany
Chart 6German Long-Term Unemployment Benefits Were Cut Down To OECD Average
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Germany's problem prior to the Hartz reforms was that generous unemployment benefits discouraged unemployed workers from finding employment. Long-term benefits could be as high as 53% of the terminated salary and eligible for indefinite renewal! The Hartz IV reforms specifically targeted these benefits, with the intention of forcing the unemployed to get back to work. Germany brought these benefits into line with the OECD average (Chart 6). The long-term impact of the Hartz reforms was a dramatic decline in the unemployment rate from a bottom of 9.2% in 2001 to the still falling 3.7% of today! Reforms have also seen a steady increase in wage growth, despite the conventional view saying the opposite. Wages have been steadily rising since implementation in 2005, only slowing down during the global financial crisis and the subsequent European debt crisis (Chart 7). This does not mean that labor reforms failed. The intention of the Hartz reforms was to push people back into the labor force, not necessarily suppress their wages. Chart 8 shows the effect on the hours worked in the economy, with a clear uptrend after the reform was enacted. Chart 7German Wages Recovered...
German Wages Recovered...
German Wages Recovered...
Chart 8...While Working Hours Increased
...While Working Hours Increased
...While Working Hours Increased
In line with the previous labor reform efforts in Europe, we think that investors should expect three broad developments from French labor reforms: Competitiveness: As Chart 3 suggests, Spain and Germany have had the best export performance in Europe. By allowing companies some flexibility in setting costs, these economies were able to regain export competitiveness. As a play on this theme, we are long French industrials relative to German peers. Unemployment: Forcing the unemployed back to the labor market by ending their unemployment benefits if they refuse a job offer within 25% of the previous income level should encourage workers to get back to the labor force. Confidence: Macron's labor reforms are only the beginning of a packed agenda that also includes reducing the size of the public sector, reducing the wealth tax on productive assets, and cutting corporate taxes significantly. What of the opposition to the reform effort? What if the French leadership backs down in the face of protest? First, we must ask, what protest? The labor union response has been underwhelming. In part, this is because Macron's reforms are packed with pro-union clauses. The intention is to empower union activity at the firm level in order to neuter its activity at the national level. Second, Macron's electoral victory was overwhelming, both the presidential and legislative. Yes, turnout was low. And yes, many voted for Macron just so that Marine Le Pen would not become president. But the fact remains that 85% of the seats in the National Assembly are held by pro-reform parties, including the pro-business, right-wing Les Républicains, who want even stricter reforms. Bottom Line: Our clients, colleagues, friends, and family all tell us that France will not reform. But we have seen this film before, with Germany in the 2000s and Spain in the 2010s. One day, investors will wake up and France will be more competitive. Fin. A German Election Post-Mortem The media narrative before and after the German election tells of the rise of Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), a far-right party that campaigned on an anti-EU and anti-immigration platform. Indeed, the performance of the center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and center-left Social-Democratic Party (SPD), which have dominated German politics since the Second World War, was historically poor (Chart 9). Chart 9Germany's Dominant Parties Underperformed...
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Despite the media hysterics, there were no surprises this year. The AfD performed in line with its polls, only outperforming their long-term polling average by around 2%. Meanwhile, the historic underperformance of the CDU and SPD was also due to the solid performance of the other two establishment parties, the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP) and the center-left Greens (Chart 10). The FDP stormed back into the Bundestag by more than doubling their performance from 2013, while the Greens maintained their roughly 9% performance. Die Linke, a left-wing party whose Euroskeptic tendencies have dissipated, also gained around 9% of the vote. From a historical perspective, the combined CDU and SPD performance was bad, but roughly in line with their 2009 election result. Chart 10... While Minor Parties Outperformed
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
That said, there was no once-in-a-lifetime global recession this time around to excuse the poor performance of the two establishment parties. German GDP growth is set to be 2.1% in 2017 and the unemployment rate is at a historic 3.7%. Meanwhile, support for the euro is at 81% (Chart 11), which begs the question of why 12.6% voters decided to entrust AfD with their votes. Chart 11Germans Love The Euro
Germans Love The Euro
Germans Love The Euro
The simple answer is immigration and the 2015 asylum crisis. The more complex answer is that AfD's performance was particularly strong in East Germany, where the party is now the second largest after the CDU. The same forces that fueled the Brexit referendum and the election of President Donald Trump are at work in Germany. Voters who feel left behind by the transition to a globalized, service-oriented economy have rebelled against a system that favors the educated and mobile voters. In Germany, the angst is particularly notable in the East, where economic progress has lagged that of the rest of the country. On the other hand, it is ludicrous to compare AfD to Brexit and Trump. After all, AfD received only 12% of the vote. This is in line with, or slightly trails, the performance of other right-wing parties in Europe (Chart 12). Yes, it is disturbing to see a far-right party back in the Bundestag, but it was also naïve to believe that Germany could remain a European outlier forever. In fact, like other right-wing parties in Europe, the party is beset with internal rivalries. Party chairwoman Frauke Petry, who represents the moderate wing of the party, decided to quit one day after the election.3 We would suspect that the party will struggle going forward, particularly now that the influx of asylum seekers has trickled down to insignificance (Chart 13). Chart 12German Far Right Performed In Line With Other European Anti-Establishment Parties
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Chart 13Refugee Crisis Is Over In Germany And Europe
Refugee Crisis Is Over In Germany And Europe
Refugee Crisis Is Over In Germany And Europe
Going forward, Chancellor Angela Merkel will retain her hold on power. However, she will likely have to do so via a "Jamaica coalition" with the FDP and the Greens.4 Forming such a challenging coalition could take until the New Year. Particularly problematic are the positions of the FDP and the Greens on Europe. The former are mildly Euroskeptic, the latter are rabidly Europhile. Merkel's 2009-13 coalition with the FDP was similarly challenging. The FDP moved towards soft Euroskepticism after the Great Financial Crisis. It combined with CDU's Bavarian sister party - the Christian Social Union (CSU)5 - to vote against a number of European rescue efforts and institutional changes (Chart 14). Merkel had to rely on the opposition SPD, which is staunchly Europhile, to push several European reforms through the Bundestag. More broadly, both the FDP and the CSU were a brake on Merkel during this period, leading to Berlin's halting response to the Euro Area crisis. Chart 14The FDP Hampered German Rescue Efforts Amid Euro Crisis
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Going forward, a Jamaica coalition is investment-relevant for three reasons: First, it would likely pour cold water on recent enthusiasm about accelerated European integration spurred by the election of President Emmanuel Macron in France. But investors should not read too much into it. As Chart 11 clearly illustrates, Germans are not Euroskeptic. The Euro Area works for Germany. If there is a future crisis, Germany will react to it in an integrationist fashion, shoving aside any coalition agreements to the contrary. And if Merkel has to rely on opposition SPD votes to push through the evolving European agenda, she will do so, regardless of what is said between now and December. Second, Merkel will have to respond to the poor performance of her party. She has to give in to the right wing on illegal immigration. Investors should expect to see tighter border enforcement on Europe's external borders. More relevant to the markets, we expect mildly Euroskeptics critics in her own party, as well as in the FDP and CSU, to be satisfied by officially pushing for Jens Weidmann's presidency at the ECB. Weidmann has recently toned down his criticism of ECB policies - publically defending low interest rates - which is likely a strategy to make himself palatable as the next president. Third, it is widely being discussed that the FDP will demand the finance ministry from Merkel, replacing Wolfgang Schäuble. This would definitely complicate any future efforts to deal with Euro Area sovereign debt crises, were they to emerge. However, the FDP is making a mistake. If they take the finance portfolio, they will be signing off on bailouts in the future. That is a guarantee. Europe is full of moderately Euroskepic finance ministers who have done the same (see: Austria, Finland, and the Netherlands in particular). Finally, the election was a clear failure by Merkel to defend her brand. While she has not signaled a willingness to resign, it is highly likely that she will try to groom her successor over the next four years. The 63 year-old has been in power since 2005. At the moment, the list of potential names for CDU leadership is long, but devoid of star power (Box 1). The one quality of all the potential candidates, however, is that they are pro-Europe. Bottom Line: In the short term, markets have read German elections overly negatively. The euro reacted on the news as if the currency bloc breakup risk premium had risen. It hasn't. In fact, the election could prove to be a long-term bullish euro outcome, given that Merkel will likely have to acquiesce to Jens Weidmann's candidacy for the ECB presidency. The German Bundestag remains overwhelmingly pro-Europe. The now-in-opposition SPD is pro-integration, as are the likely new coalition members, the Greens. Die Linke has evolved from anti-capitalist, soft Euroskeptics to left-of-SPD Europhiles. While FDP remains committed to a mildly Euroskeptic line (pro-Europe, but opposed to further integration), its members will likely have to sacrifice this position in order to be in government in the long term. They won't say that they are doing that, but trust us, they are. The performance of Germany's populist right wing is largely in line with that of other European countries. As such, it signals that Germany is a "normal country," not that there is something particularly disturbing going on. Box 1 Likely Successors To German Chancellor Angela Merkel If Merkel decides to retire, who are her potential successors? Ursula von der Leyen (CDU): Leyen, who has served most recently as defense minister, is often cited as a likely replacement for Merkel. However, she is not seen favorably by most of the population: she has not won first place in her district in any of the past three general elections. She is a strong advocate of further European integration and has supported the creation of a "United States of Europe." Leyen has argued that the European refugee crisis and debt crisis are similar in that they will ultimately force Europe to integrate further. As a defense minister, she has promoted the creation of a robust EU army. She has also been a hardliner on Brexit, saying that the U.K. will not re-enter the EU in her lifetime. The markets and pro-EU elites in Europe would love Leyen, who handled U.S. President Trump's statements on Germany, Europe, Russia and NATO with notable tact. Thomas De Maizière (CDU): Maizière, who has served as minister of interior and minister of defense, is a close confidant of Chancellor Merkel. He was her chief of staff from 2005 to 2009. Like Schäuble, he is somewhat of a hawk on euro area issues (he drove a hard bargain during negotiations to set up a fiscal backstop, the European Financial Stability Fund, in 2010) and as such could become a compromise candidate between the Europhiles and Eurohawks within CDU ranks. Though he has been implicated in scandals as defense minister, he has remained popular by drawing a relatively hard line on immigration policy and internal security. Julia Klöckner (CDU): A CDU deputy chairwoman from Rhineland-Palatinate, Klöckner is a socially conservative protégé of Merkel and a hence a likely candidate to replace her. While remaining loyal to Merkel, she has taken a more right-wing stance on the immigration crisis. She is a staunch Europhile who has portrayed the Euroskeptic AfD as "dangerous, sometimes racist," though she has insisted that AfD voters are not all "Nazis" but are mostly in the middle of the political spectrum and need to be won back by the CDU. We think that she would be a very pro-market choice as she combines a popular, market-irrelevant wariness about immigration with a market-relevant centrism that favors further European integration. Hermann Gröhe (CDU): Gröhe last served as minister of health and is a former CDU secretary general. He is very close to Merkel. He is a staunch supporter of the euro and European integration. Markets would have no problem with Gröhe, although they may take some time to get to know who he is! Volker Bouffier (CDU): As Minister President of Hesse, home of Germany's financial center Frankfurt, Bouffier is in a position to capitalize on Brexit. He is a heavyweight within the CDU's leadership and a staunch Europhile. He has already declared he will run for the top state office again in 2018, though he will be 67 years old by then. The U.K.: Fall In Florence Prime Minister Theresa May tried to reset Brexit negotiations with the EU recently by giving a speech in Florence. We were told by clients and colleagues that it would be an important event, so we tuned in and listened. The speech was largely a dud. It confirmed to us the constraints on London's negotiating position as well as the challenges that Brexit poses to the British economy. May's team is struggling to navigate both. There are three things that investors should take from the speech - most which we have been emphasizing for over a year: The EU exit bill: The U.K. will pay. The one concrete point that Prime Minister May agreed with, for the first time ever, is that London will continue to pay into the current EU seven-year budget period (2014-2020). This should never have been in doubt. Britain's refusing to pay would be the equivalent of a tenant giving notice that he is ending his lease in 24 months, then refusing to pay in the interim. What May did not say is whether the U.K. would pay anything beyond its share of contribution to the EU budget. At the moment, the answer appears to be no, but we don't expect that to be the final word. Services really (really) matter: The U.K. has a competitive advantage in services. This is why May has tried to signal that she wants the broadest trade deal possible, since regular free trade agreements (FTAs) do not provide for deep integration in services. What will the U.K. give in return? May appears to want a Norway-type EU trade agreement with Canada-type liabilities. This won't fly in Brussels. The transition deal will last two years at minimum: This was never in doubt. But due to domestic political pressures, May was afraid of voicing it in public until today. Below we provide excerpts of the most relevant (or irrelevant, but comical) parts of May's speech.6 Our running commentary is in brackets. Theresa May's Florence Speech On Brexit, September 2017: A Reinterpretation By GPS It's good to be here in this great city of Florence today at a critical time in the evolution of the relationship between the United Kingdom and the European Union. It was here, more than anywhere else, that the Renaissance began - a period of history that inspired centuries of creativity and critical thought across our continent and which in many ways defined what it meant to be European. [GPS: Strong opening by May. Odd location for the speech, however. Unless she was looking to ingratiate herself with Matteo Renzi, former mayor of Florence, former prime minister of Italy, and current leader of the ruling Democratic Party]. * * * The British people have decided to leave the EU; and to be a global, free-trading nation, able to chart our own way in the world. For many, this is an exciting time, full of promise; for others it is a worrying one. I look ahead with optimism, believing that if we use this moment to change not just our relationship with Europe, but also the way we do things at home, this will be a defining moment in the history of our nation. [GPS: This is a crucial argument by proponents of Brexit, that leaving the EU is not just about leaving the bloc's oversight, but also about domestic renewal. At the heart of this view is the belief that the EU has shackled the U.K.'s potential economic output with its regulatory oversight and protectionist trade policies. For this to be true, the U.K. has to replace significance labor force growth - from the EU Labor Market - with even greater productivity growth. If the U.K. fails to do this, its potential GDP growth rate will be substantively lower in the future. We do not buy the optimism. For one, the EU has not been a drag on the U.K.'s World Bank Ease Of Doing Businness rankings, where the country ranks seventh. Second, several other EU member states are in the top 20, including Sweden, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Germany, Ireland and Austria. Third, developed economies have been dealing with sub-standard productivity growth for over a decade, both EU members and non-members. As such, we are pretty certain that the U.K.'s potential GDP growth rate will be lower over the next decade, not higher.] And it is an exciting time for many in Europe too. The European Union is beginning a new chapter in the story of its development. Just last week, President Juncker set out his ambitions for the future of the European Union. [GPS: A nod to the reality that without the U.K. stalling its integration, Europe is now better able to build its "ever closer union." May is essentially conceding here to Charles de Gaulle's argument, articulated in the 1960s, that letting Britain into the club would ultimately be a mistake.]7 There is a vibrant debate going on about the shape of the EU's institutions and the direction of the Union in the years ahead. We don't want to stand in the way of that. [GPS: Reality check: it has literally been the foreign policy of the U.K. to "stand in the way of" of a united Europe for at least six hundred years ...] * * * Our decision to leave the European Union is in no way a repudiation of this longstanding commitment. We may be leaving the European Union, but we are not leaving Europe. Our resolve to draw on the full weight of our military, intelligence, diplomatic and development resources to lead international action, with our partners, on the issues that affect the security and prosperity of our peoples is unchanged. Our commitment to the defence - and indeed the advance - of our shared values is undimmed. Our determination to defend the stability, security and prosperity of our European neighbours and friends remains steadfast. [GPS: As we have argued repeatedly, the U.K. and EU share crucial geopolitical and economic links. As such, it is difficult to see negotiations devolving into the sort of acrimony that many have expected. May understands this and is reminding Europe of how important the U.K. role is, and will continue to be, geopolitically for Europe.] * * * The strength of feeling that the British people have about this need for control and the direct accountability of their politicians is one reason why, throughout its membership, the United Kingdom has never totally felt at home being in the European Union. [GPS: A not-so-slight dig at Europe. Basically, May is saying that U.K. voters live in a democracy. EU voters live in something else.] And perhaps because of our history and geography, the European Union never felt to us like an integral part of our national story in the way it does to so many elsewhere in Europe. [GPS: This is true and can be empirically measured (Chart 15).] Chart 15Brits Have A Strong Sense Of National Identity
Brits And Only Brits
Brits And Only Brits
* * * For while the UK's departure from the EU is inevitably a difficult process, it is in all of our interests for our negotiations to succeed. If we were to fail, or be divided, the only beneficiaries would be those who reject our values and oppose our interests. [GPS: This is all true and very well put. But it also appears to be a line of argument designed to tug at Europe's emotional strings. Like a husband asking his wife to take it easy on him in a divorce "for the sake of the children."] So I believe we share a profound sense of responsibility to make this change work smoothly and sensibly, not just for people today but for the next generation who will inherit the world we leave them. [GPS: Literally the line about the kids followed immediately!] * * * But I know there are concerns that over time the rights of EU citizens in the UK and UK citizens overseas will diverge. I want to incorporate our agreement fully into UK law and make sure the UK courts can refer directly to it. Where there is uncertainty around underlying EU law, I want the UK courts to be able to take into account the judgments of the European Court of Justice with a view to ensuring consistent interpretation. On this basis, I hope our teams can reach firm agreement quickly. [GPS: An important concession - the first in the speech so far, and we are more than halfway through: London will apparently take into account ECJ rulings when dealing with EU citizens living in the U.K. That is a huge concession to Europe and an arrangement unlike anywhere else in the world.] * * * The United Kingdom is leaving the European Union. We will no longer be members of its single market or its customs union. For we understand that the single market's four freedoms are indivisible for our European friends. We recognise that the single market is built on a balance of rights and obligations. And we do not pretend that you can have all the benefits of membership of the single market without its obligations. [GPS: As we have said in the past, May's decision to concede this point in January was a major concession to the EU and is the reason that the negotiations are not and will not be acrimonious. If the U.K. demanded access to the Common Market without accepting the "four freedoms," it would have received an acrimonious response, given that its request would have been construed as "special treatment."] So our task is to find a new framework that allows for a close economic partnership but holds those rights and obligations in a new and different balance. But as we work out together how to do so, we do not start with a blank sheet of paper, like other external partners negotiating a free trade deal from scratch have done. In fact, we start from an unprecedented position. For we have the same rules and regulations as the EU - and our EU Withdrawal Bill will ensure they are carried over into our domestic law at the moment we leave the EU. [GPS: May is correct. The EU-U.K. trade negotiations should be relatively smooth given that the U.K. is not starting from scratch in negotiating the relationship. The Canada-EU FTA took seven years because they were starting from scratch.] So the question for us now in building a new economic partnership is not how we bring our rules and regulations closer together, but what we do when one of us wants to make changes. One way of approaching this question is to put forward a stark and unimaginative choice between two models: either something based on European Economic Area membership; or a traditional Free Trade Agreement, such as that the EU has recently negotiated with Canada. I don't believe either of these options would be best for the UK or best for the European Union. European Economic Area membership would mean the UK having to adopt at home - automatically and in their entirety - new EU rules. Rules over which, in future, we will have little influence and no vote. [GPS: We pointed out why such an arrangement would be illogical in March 2016. Essentially, the U.K. would leave the EU due to its onerous regulation and infringement on sovereignty only to accept the onerous regulation as a fait accompli with no room for British sovereignty (Diagram 1)!] Diagram 1The Central Paradox Of Brexit
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Is There Anything Left To Say About Europe?
Such a loss of democratic control could not work for the British people. I fear it would inevitably lead to friction and then a damaging re-opening of the nature of our relationship in the near future: the very last thing that anyone on either side of the Channel wants. As for a Canadian style free trade agreement, we should recognise that this is the most advanced free trade agreement the EU has yet concluded and a breakthrough in trade between Canada and the EU. But compared with what exists between Britain and the EU today, it would nevertheless represent such a restriction on our mutual market access that it would benefit neither of our economies. [GPS: This is, by far, the most critical part of May's speech. She is essentially saying that a Canadian FTA deal would benefit the EU more than it benefits the U.K., a point we have made for nearly two years now. This is true. The U.K. needs access to the EU services market, where British exporters have a comparative advantage. Were they to secure an FTA deal with the EU instead, they would be giving Europe a massive advantage, given the bloc's comparative advantage in tradable goods (Chart 16). However, this takes us back to Diagram 1. What kind of a relationship does May expect to get from the EU when she is unwilling to accept any of the liabilities inherent in such a deep trade deal? That is precisely what the Common Market is for.] Chart 16Brexit Hinders U.K.'s Comparative Advantage
Brexit Hinders U.K.'s Comparative Advantage
Brexit Hinders U.K.'s Comparative Advantage
Bottom Line: Prime Minister May's Florence speech has shown the limits of the U.K.'s negotiating position. May set a friendly tone with Europe, but she has nothing to bargain with. Much of the speech reiterated British commitment to Europe's security and its capacity to defend the continent from external threats. In exchange, May argues, the U.K. ought to receive the deepest and most expansive access to the EU Common Market without any of the liabilities that go with it. In particular, she wants access to the EU's services market, where U.K. exporters have a comparative advantage. The problem with the tradeoff between U.K. geopolitical benefits and EU economic benefits is that it suggests that London has an alternative to being a geopolitical ally to Europe! As if it could suddenly shift its geopolitical, military, and diplomatic focus elsewhere. Berlin, Brussels, and Paris will call London's bluff. The U.K. is not in North America, it is in Europe. As such, Europe's problems are the U.K.'s problems, and the U.K. must defend against them even if it receives little in return. We expect the U.K. to succumb to the reality that the EU holds most of the cards in the negotiations. The U.K. will have a lower potential GDP growth rate after Brexit. But before Brexit is solidified, we expect considerable domestic political upheaval. In the short term, there is some upside for the pound. In the long term, it is a sell. Marko Papic, Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist marko@bcaresearch.com Jesse Anak Kuri, Research Analyst jesse.kuri@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook, "Strategic Outlook 2017: We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy and Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, "The French Revolution," dated February 3, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 3 Although she has herself played a role in kicking out the original, even more moderate, founders of the party. 4 The CDU, FDP, and Greens coalition is dubbed the "Jamaica coalition" because of their traditional colors - black, yellow, and green - which combine to make the colors of the Jamaican flag. 5 The CSU does not directly compete against the CDU on the federal level. It only fields candidates in Bavaria, where the CDU does not compete. 6 For the full transcript, please see "Theresa May's Florence speech on Brexit, full text," The Spectator, September 22, 2017, available at blogs.spectator.co.uk. 7 In turn, this will allow the EU to build up its power, develop a navy, and finally conquer the British Isles with a new armada somewhere around 2066! Geopolitical Calendar
Highlights The Fed will shrink its balance and is determined to raise rates. Implications of synchronized global growth and global NAIRU. Consumers are upbeat and ready to spend. What's the signal from record high consumer expectations for equities? Feature Risk assets and Treasury yields rose up to and after last week's Fed meeting, but late-week saber-rattling by North Korea left most asset classes little changed on the week. The U.S. economic data released last week continued to be impacted by Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, but the Fed notes that the storms are "unlikely to materially alter the course of the national economy beyond the next few months". The backdrop has turned more bearish for bonds even before the Fed's recommitment last week to raising rates gradually and shrinking its balance sheet. The Fed's hawkish stance short term and dovish stance long term will allow risk assets to outperform Treasury bonds and cash, but a sudden move higher in inflation would challenge that view. FOMC: Short Term Hawkish... The Fed sent a hawkish short-term signal on the outlook for monetary policy at its meeting last week. The vast majority of FOMC members, 12 out of 16, expect to raise rates again by December (Chart 1). A 0.2% downward revision to the Fed's 2017 core PCE inflation forecast was offset by an equal 0.2% upward revision to its GDP growth forecast. Moreover, Fed Chair Janet Yellen downplayed this year's soft inflation figures and stressed that inflation expectations remain "reasonably well anchored". Although the relationship may have weakened somewhat recently, the Fed is loath to throw the Phillips curve model into the dust bin just yet. The unemployment rate forecasts were lowered from 4.2% to 4.1% for 2018 and 2019, while the Fed kept its NAIRU estimate at 4.6%. The tightening labor market is expected to place upward pressure on wage inflation and push PCE inflation to the 2% target by 2019. Chart 1Market Expects A Hike In December
Market Expects A Hike In December
Market Expects A Hike In December
Incoming data on actual inflation and inflation expectations will determine whether the Fed will be able to pull the trigger in December. Further softness in the core PCE inflation and CPI will raise doubts as to whether the inflation undershoot is indeed transitory. And especially worrisome will be a decline in inflation expectations. It is noteworthy that 10-year inflation breakevens fell nearly 4bps immediately following yesterday's FOMC announcement. At 1.85%, 10-year breakevens are already running below the 2.4-2.5% range that is consistent with the Fed's 2% target for PCE inflation. Any further decline in breakevens will call into question the Fed's view that inflation expectations remain well anchored. Further, with the decline in inflation expectations, the 2/10-year yield curve flattened following the Fed's announcement. This is could be considered a sign of a slight lowering in growth expectations. Finally, there was little surprise on the Fed's balance sheet announcement. For now, the Fed is committed to slowly unwinding its bond holdings. Janet Yellen said that the Fed will only resume full reinvestment of maturing bonds after it had cut the policy rate back to the zero bound. In other words, the Fed funds rate is now the primary tool to set monetary policy. The odds of another Fed rate hike by year-end have certainly increased (Chart 1). This need not upset risk assets if the incoming data justify higher rates. Only a policy error, where the Fed hikes rates even as inflation expectations decline and the yield curve flattens, will trigger a sizeable pullback in risk assets. This is not our baseline scenario. Softness in inflation and inflation expectations will force the Fed to back down. ...But Long Term Dovish Although the Fed signaled a greater probability of an interest rate hike in the near-term, it lowered the long-run outlook for policy rates. First, the median FOMC member now expects only two rate increases in 2019, down from three in the June forecast (not shown). Second, the estimate for the terminal rate was lowered to 2.75% from 3.0% (Chart 2, panel 4). With the long-run inflation target being 2% (Chart 2, panel 3), this means that the FOMC collectively believes the long-term neutral real Fed funds rate to be just 0.75%. Currently, the Laubach-Williams estimate of the neutral real Fed funds rate is near zero (Chart 3). Therefore, the FOMC sees it rising only modestly from current levels over the coming years. Chart 2The FOMC's "Long Run" Forecasts Since 2012
The FOMC's "Long Run" Forecasts Since 2012
The FOMC's "Long Run" Forecasts Since 2012
Chart 3Neutral Real Rate Near Zero
Neutral Real Rate Near Zero
Neutral Real Rate Near Zero
For any given term premium, a lower short-term interest rate path will mean a lower 10-year yield. If estimates for the terminal policy rate outside the U.S. remain unchanged, the Fed's lower projection will mean narrower interest rate differentials, reducing the relative attractiveness of the dollar. As for equities, a lower estimate for the long-run policy rate would be a wash if it also reflected a lower estimate for long-term GDP growth. However, the Fed kept its longer run real GDP growth estimate unchanged at 1.8% (Chart 2, panel 1). If that proves accurate, lower interest rates and a weaker dollar will be more supportive for U.S. equities over the long-term. Notably, the Fed did not adjust its view of NAIRU, keeping it at 4.6%, where it has been since April (Chart 2, panel 2). Bottom Line: In terms of investment implications, the lower estimate of the long-run neutral rate is supportive for 10-year Treasuries, negative for the dollar and positive for equities. Stay overweight stocks versus bonds and short duration. Don't Downplay NAIRU Synchronous global growth remains in place in 2017 and will persist into 2018, but this growth alone may not be enough to push up inflation. BCA's OECD Real GDP Diffusion Index is at 100% after it dipped to 14% during the financial crisis. The index was also above 90% from 1994 through 1998, and then again from 2001 through 2007. Moreover, the OECD expects that GDP growth will climb above zero in all the member countries in BCA's diffusion index again in 2018. The broad-based global GDP growth has historically been associated with a rising stock-to-bond ratio, rising global trade flows, a narrowing output gap and accelerating industrial production (Chart 4). However, there is no consistent pattern on the dollar, the unemployment rate, or core inflation. Chart 5 shows that during prior periods of robust global growth, equities beat bonds, the U.S. output gap tightened and industrial production increased. U.S. exports tend to contribute more to GDP growth during these phases, but not in a uniform way. Meantime, the Fed has both raised and lowered rates during these periods. Chart 4Widespread##BR##Global Growth...
Widespread Global Growth...
Widespread Global Growth...
Chart 5... Supports Risk Assets,##BR##Trade And A Narrower Output Gap
... Supports Risk Assets, Trade And A Narrower Output Gap
... Supports Risk Assets, Trade And A Narrower Output Gap
Nonetheless, while the dollar jumped in the 1990s when BCA's OECD growth index was above 90%, it fell from 2001 to 2007, and it's performance since 2015 has been mixed. The unemployment rate declined in the mid-to-late 1990s, but initially rose in the 2001-2007 period and has dropped since 2010. The Fed both raised and lowered rates during the previous episodes, but has only boosted rates in the current phase. Core inflation slowed in the 1990s when 90% of countries saw positive GDP growth, but accelerated in the early 2000s. Since 2015, core inflation has both climbed and decelerated. What will trigger higher inflation if more than 90% of the globe is experiencing positive economic growth? BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy service notes that1 67% of OECD nations have unemployment rates under the organization's assessment of "global NAIRU", a level not seen since before the Great Recession when inflation expanded in both the goods and service sectors (Chart 6). However, the link between inflation and NAIRU waned during and just after the 2007-2009 recession and only reconnected lately. The implication for investors is that there is a global NAIRU level (or global output gap), which is more important in determining worldwide inflation rates than individual country NAIRU measures. Chart 6The NAIRU Concept Is Not Dead Yet
The NAIRU Concept Is Not Dead Yet
The NAIRU Concept Is Not Dead Yet
Bottom Line: Surging global growth is a precondition for higher inflation, but sustained improvement in the labor market is needed to drive up inflation and prompt more action from the Fed. Investors may be downplaying the NAIRU concept at a time when it is finally set to bite. If that is the case, inflation expectations around the world are too low, although it will take some evidence of faster realized inflation (especially in the U.S. and Europe) before the markets begin to discount that view in bond yields. Stay underweight duration. Flow Of Funds Update On Consumer And Corporate Health The latest readings on the health of household and corporate balance sheets from the Fed's flow of funds accounts reinforce BCA's stance that consumer spending will provide strong support for the U.S. economy through 2017 and 2018. Household net worth continues to rise and is well above average at this point in a long expansion (Chart 7). The total wealth effect for consumer spending is still lagging prior cycles, but remains supportive. Debt-to-income ratios are at multi-decade lows. The ongoing repair of consumer balance sheets has led to an all-time high in FICO scores (Chart 7, panel 4). Last week's U.S. flow of funds report also allows us to update BCA's Corporate Health Monitor (CHM) (Chart 8). The level of the CHM improved slightly between Q1 and Q2, but the overall level still suggests corporate balance sheets are deteriorating. The progress in Q2 was broadbased, as all the components improved, notably the net leverage component. Profit growth surged while debt moved up modestly in Q2, modestly reducing leverage. The Monitor has been a reliable indicator of the trend in corporate bond spreads. The upswing in the CHM in Q2 - and particularly the dip in leverage - supports our corporate bond overweight. On the consumer front, while the recent weakness in vehicle sales and overall retail sales are noteworthy, they do not signal the end of the business cycle. We found2 that a peak in vehicle sales leads the end of the economic cycle by two years. Moreover, Hurricane Harvey weighed on August's retail sales report and Irma will have the same impact on September's sales.3 Instead, the backdrop for consumer spending remains strong. For example, the most recent Fed Senior Loan Officer's Survey suggests that the banking sector is willing to lend to households and that consumers are open to borrowing, although household demand for loans has weakened in recent quarters (Chart 9). Chart 7Support For The Consumer##BR##Remains In Place
Support For The Consumer Remains In Lace
Support For The Consumer Remains In Lace
Chart 8Improved A Bit In Q2##BR##But Still Deteriorating
Improved A Bit In Q2 But Still Deteriorating
Improved A Bit In Q2 But Still Deteriorating
Chart 9Senior Loan Officers##BR##Survey Still Supportive
Senior Loan Officers Survey Still Supportive
Senior Loan Officers Survey Still Supportive
In addition, consumer spending intentions remain in an uptrend and the decade-high readings on "plans to buy" a house and a car are telling (Chart 10, panels 1 and 2). Overall measures of consumer confidence remain at 16-year peaks (Chart 10, panel 3). Furthermore, the sturdy labor market, modest wage growth and low inflation are all factors that support a solid pace of real income growth, which reinforces the spending backdrop (Chart 10, panel 4). Student loan debt increased again in Q2 and investors are concerned by the risks posed by the upswing. The Bank Credit Analyst covered the topic in a comprehensive report in November 2016.4 The key message was that student debt is a modest drag on economic growth, but is not a threat to U.S. government finances and does not represent the next subprime crisis. Nearly a year later, BCA's conclusions remain unchanged. A recent report5 by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York provides data on student loans through Q2 2017. The report noted that while student debt levels were little changed between Q1 and Q2 2017, they are up $85B from a year ago and at record highs (Chart 11). Although student loan delinquencies ticked higher in Q2, and remain elevated by historical standards, they have moved sideways in recent years. We will continue to monitor all types of consumer indebtedness as we assess hazards in the U.S. economy. Student loans are only a mild economic headwind and do not represent a source of systemic financial risk. Chart 10Consumers Upbeat And Ready To Spend
Consumers Upbeat And Ready To Spend
Consumers Upbeat And Ready To Spend
Chart 11Student Loan Debt Is Elevated
Student Loan Debt Is Elevated
Student Loan Debt Is Elevated
Bottom Line: The consumer - a key driver of the U.S. economy and corporate earnings - will provide a solid backdrop for the economy through 2017 and beyond. This climate will allow the Fed to boost rates one more time this year and begin paring its balance sheet starting next month. The solid underpinnings for the consumer will sustain corporate earnings growth and, ultimately, higher stock prices. However, favorable consumer attitudes toward U.S. equity prices are a mild concern. Signals From Stock Sentiment Surveys Record U.S. consumer optimism - as measured by the University of Michigan (UM) - on forward stock returns does not necessarily signal a market top. On the other hand, it supports BCA's view that investors be prudent with risk allocations. Respondents to the UM Survey of Consumers assign a 65% probability that the U.S. stock market will move higher in the next 12 months, surpassing the previous zenith in mid-2004. Interestingly, before the 2014 high (60%), the top reading was in mid-2007 (62%), only three months prior to the October 2007 equity market peak. A cursory look at Chart 12, panel 1 shows that peaks on this metric line up with those in equities. We view it another way. Investors should not assume that stocks are peaking based on the UM data. The bottom panel of Chart 12 shows that at just 5.6%, the annual change in the percentage of respondents who expect stocks to move higher in the next 12 months is not at an extreme. The 12-month change was as high as 18% in early 2004 and again in March 2010. Stock returns in the 12 months after these peaks in sentiment were lower than in the 12 months prior. However, we are not yet in the danger zone based on this indicator. Furthermore, BCA's Investor Sentiment Composite Index (not shown) is not at an extreme, although it is at the top end of its bull market range. We expect the stock-to-bond ratio to move higher in the next 6-to-12 months, despite the elevated readings on households' expected return on stocks. Our position is driven more by our bearish stance on Treasury bond prices than on an overly bullish call on equity returns. Chart 13 illustrates this point across three time horizons given our view of fair value on the 10-year Treasury yield (2.67%).6 Our analysis assumes a 2% annualized dividend yield on the S&P 500. Panel 1 shows the ratio between now and year end will remain positive if U.S. equities dip by 5%. Looking ahead 6 and 12 months (Panels 2 and 3), the S&P 500 will have to drop by between 5% and 10% to signal a localized peak in the stock-to-bond ratio. Chart 12Consumers' Expectations For Equity Returns Are Elevated
Consumers' Expectations For Equity Returns Are Elevated
Consumers' Expectations For Equity Returns Are Elevated
Chart 13Scenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio
Scenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio
Scenarios For Stock-To-Bond Ratio
Bottom Line: Despite heightened consumer sentiment toward equities, we expect the stock-to-bond ratio to move higher in the next 6 to 12 months. Nonetheless, investors should be prudent with risk assets, paring back any maximum overweight positions and holding some safe-haven assets within diversified portfolios. John Canally, CFA, Senior Vice President U.S. Investment Strategy johnc@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see BCA's Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report, "Have Bond Yields Peaked For The Cycle? No.", September 12, 2017. Available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Disconnected," September 11, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see BCA's U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Shelter From The Storm, "September 5, 2017. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, "Student Loan Blues: Can't Replay What I Borrowed", November 2016. Available at bca.bcaresearch.com. 5 https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/interactives/householdcredit/data/pdf/HHDC_2017Q2.pdf 6 Please see BCA's U.S. Bond Strategy Portfolio Allocation Summary, "The Cyclical Sweet Spot Rolls On," September 5, 2017. Available at usbs.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights This week's FOMC statement telegraphed another rate hike in December and three more hikes in 2018. The ability of the Fed to deliver on these hikes will depend on whether inflation picks up. We think it will. Stronger GDP growth will push the unemployment rate below 4% next year, the threshold at which the Phillips curve becomes quite steep. The often-cited reasons for why the Phillips curve has become defunct - well-anchored inflation expectations, decreased union bargaining power, a more globalized economy, and technological trends - are less convincing than they appear. Underweight long-term government bonds and overweight equities for the next 12 months. Look to reduce risk exposure late next year. The beleaguered dollar could catch a bid over the coming months. We are closing our long Brent oil trade for a gain of 13.8%. Feature The Fed Delivers A "Hawkish Hold" Going into this week's FOMC meeting, there was some speculation among market participants that the Fed would signal a reluctance to raise rates in December and reduce the number of rate hikes planned for next year. In the end, that didn't happen. Twelve of the sixteen participants indicated that they expected the fed funds rate to rise in December, exactly the same number as in June. The Fed downplayed the effects of the hurricanes, noting that they would not "materially alter" medium-term growth prospects. The median number of rate hikes planned for next year also remained at three. The FOMC kept the long-term estimate of unemployment at 4.6%, despite trimming the forecast for end-2018 unemployment rate from 4.2% to 4.1%. The only substantive dovish changes to the dots came in the form of a cut in the number of hikes planned for 2019 from three to two, and a reduction in the terminal rate from 3% to 2.75%. Not surprisingly, the somewhat hawkish tone of the FOMC statement caused the implied odds of a December rate hike to jump from about one-in-two to two-in-three. The dollar also rallied, with the euro falling a full big figure against the greenback immediately following the release of the statement. Don't Write Off The Phillips Curve Just Yet Last week's higher-than-expected inflation print undoubtedly increased the Fed's willingness to keep raising rates. Nevertheless, despite the tentative rebound in inflation, core CPI inflation is down 0.6 percentage points since January on a year-over-year basis, while core PCE inflation is down 0.5 points over the same period. The failure of inflation to accelerate in response to diminished economic slack has convinced many people that the Fed will not be able to continue scaling back monetary stimulus. It has also prompted numerous commentators to pen obituaries for the so-called Phillips curve. Named after New Zealand economist William Phillips, the curve predicts that falling unemployment will lead to rising inflation. It is certainly true that the Phillips curve has become flatter over the past few decades (Chart 1). However, we think that it is premature to write it off as a useful tool for predicting inflation. This is because the Phillips curve tends to become much steeper once the economy reaches full employment. As we have discussed in the past, a variety of measures suggest that the U.S. is approaching this "kink" in the curve (Chart 2).1 Chart 1The Phillips Curve Has Gotten Flatter
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
Chart 2U.S. Economy At Full Employment
U.S. Economy At Full Employment
U.S. Economy At Full Employment
The idea that the Phillips curve steepens at low levels of unemployment is very intuitive: If excess capacity is high to begin with, a modest decline in slack will still leave many workers idle. In such a setting, inflation is unlikely to rise. However, once the output gap is fully closed, any further decline in slack will cause bottlenecks to emerge, pushing wages and prices higher. The empirical evidence supports this conclusion. Chart 3 shows that U.S. wage growth has tended to accelerate once the unemployment rate falls into the range of 4%-to-5%. Chart 3U.S. Wage Growth Accelerates Once The Unemployment Rate Falls To Low Levels
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
The Absence Of Evidence Is Not Evidence Of Absence The past three U.S. business-cycle expansions never reached the stage where the economy had the chance to fully overheat. The 1982-90 cycle was cut short by the spiraling effects of the Savings & Loan crisis, while the 2001-2007 cycle was short-circuited by the housing bust. The closest the economy came to boiling over was during the 1990s expansion. However, that cycle was also prematurely terminated by the dotcom bust and the adverse knock-on effect this had on business investment spending. Moreover, the late 1990s expansion occurred against the backdrop of a soaring dollar, turmoil in emerging markets, and plummeting commodity prices. These external deflationary forces arguably overwhelmed the inflationary impulse stemming from an overheated domestic economy. The tendency of financial imbalances to metamorphize into full-blown recessions before inflation has had a chance to take off means that the U.S. has spent the past 30 years on the flat side of the Phillips curve. One can see this point analytically: Between 1964 and 1980, the unemployment rate was below the Fed's estimate of NAIRU 79% of the time, compared to only 29% of the time since 1980. It is thus no wonder that the Phillips curve looks dead - it has not been given a chance to come alive. This makes us sceptical of studies such as the recent one by the Philadelphia Fed which purported to show that the Phillips curve is no longer useful for forecasting inflation.2 The Kinky Sixties We argued several weeks ago that the next recession could resemble the "classic recessions" of the post-war era, which were caused by the Fed's decision to raise rates aggressively after realizing it was behind the curve in normalizing monetary policy.3 The 1960s provides a useful lesson in that regard. Just like today, inflation hovered below 2% during the first half of that decade, even though unemployment was trending downward over this period. To most observers back then, the Phillips curve would have also appeared defunct. However, once the unemployment rate fell below 4%, core inflation took off, rising from 1.5% in early 1966 to nearly 4% in 1967 (Chart 4). The kink in the Phillips curve had been reached. Inflation ultimately made its way to 6% in 1970, four years before the first oil shock struck. One might challenge the 1960s comparison on four grounds: First, inflation expectations are allegedly better anchored today; Second, trade unions play a much smaller role in the wage bargaining process; Third, globalization has purportedly made both product and labour markets much more competitive than they were back then, thus severely limiting the scope of firms to raise prices and wages; Fourth, the deflationary impact of new technologies such as robotics and online commerce has become more pervasive. We think all four of these explanations leave much to be desired. As far as inflation expectations are concerned, it is certainly true that central banks did not pursue explicit inflation targets during the 1960s. However, this does not mean that inflation expectations were necessarily poorly anchored. Ten-year Treasury yields averaged 4.1% in the first half of the sixties, well below the 6.6% pace of nominal GDP growth. Investors back then were clearly quite relaxed about inflation risk. This is not that surprising, given that the U.S. had not seen a period of sustained inflation since the Civil War. A decline in unionization rates is also often cited as a reason for why the Phillips curve may be flatter today. The problem with this argument is that it is very U.S.-centric. For example, while the U.S. has experienced a pronounced drop in unionization rates since the 1960s, Canada has not (Chart 5). Yet, the sensitivity of inflation to economic fluctuations has fallen in both countries by roughly the same magnitude. Likewise, the increased use of inflation-linked wage contracts in the 1970s appears mainly to have been a response to rising inflation rather than the cause of it (Chart 6). Chart 4Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4%
Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4%
Inflation In The 1960s Took Off Once The Unemployment Rate Fell Below 4%
Chart 5Inflation Fell In Canada Despite A High Unionization Rate
Inflation Fell In Canada Despite A High Unionization Rate
Inflation Fell In Canada Despite A High Unionization Rate
Chart 6Wage Indexation Was Mainly A Response To Rising Inflation
Wage Indexation Was Mainly A Response To Rising Inflation
Wage Indexation Was Mainly A Response To Rising Inflation
Globalization And The Phillips Curve The extent to which globalization has flattened the Phillips curve remains the subject of intense debate. The empirical evidence is mixed, with most studies leaning towards the conclusion that globalization has had only a limited impact on the slope of the curve in large economies such as the U.S. This makes perfect sense, considering that the import share in U.S. personal consumption stands at less than 15%.4 Supporting this conclusion is the fact that wage growth appears to be just as sensitive to changes in the unemployment rate in industries that are highly exposed to trade as those which face little import competition. Upon deeper inspection, many of the arguments for why globalization has led to a flatter Phillips curve are really arguments for why globalization has limited the degree of movement along the Phillips curve. In a highly globalized world, a decline in slack in one country - unless matched by reduced slack in other countries - will lead to higher interest rates in that country and a stronger currency. A stronger currency, in turn, will choke off growth, preventing the unemployment rate from falling as much as it otherwise would. Clearly, such a sequence of events has not applied to the U.S. dollar since the start of the year. This suggests that the unemployment rate will either keep falling towards the steeper part of the Phillips curve, or the Fed will be forced to turn more hawkish. The Effects Of Technology What about the possibility that technological advances have led to a flatter Phillips curve? The problem here is that the data do not fit the story. As my colleague Mark McClellan has pointed out, almost all of the decline in inflation since the Great Recession has occurred in categories of the CPI - such as energy, food, and rent - that have little to do with e-commerce (Table 1).5 Also keep in mind that while online sales have grown rapidly during the past two decades, they still account for only 8.9% of total retail sales and less than 5% of the U.S. Consumer Price Index. Amazon's recent growth has actually lagged behind what Walmart experienced during its heyday (Chart 7). Table 1Comparison Of Pre- And Post-Lehman Inflation Rates
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
Chart 7Amazon Vs. Walmart: Who's More Deflationary?
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
Is The Phillips Curve Dead Or Dormant?
The proliferation of big-box retailers pushed up productivity growth in the retail sector to 3.9% between 1992 and 2007. Productivity growth in this sector has fallen to 2.1% since then. This undercuts the notion that the explosion in e-commerce has produced major efficiency gains for the broader economy, thus contributing to deflationary pressures.6 Investment Conclusions U.S. inflation is likely to trend higher over the coming months as a variety of one-off factors that depressed inflation earlier this year fall out of the equation. The effects of the hurricanes complicate the picture, but history suggests that both inflation and growth tend to renormalize fairly quickly after such disasters. Hence, the markets will look through any near-term noise in the data, focusing instead on the cyclical growth outlook, which remains reasonably upbeat. Chart 8 shows that fluctuations in the ISM manufacturing index have often predicted changes in inflation. The current level of the ISM implies that core inflation will rebound to about 2% by the second half of next year. Risk assets are unlikely to suffer if inflation rises towards the Fed's target against the backdrop of stronger growth. However, if inflation moves above the Fed's target due to brewing supply bottlenecks, the Fed will have little choice but to pick up the pace of rate hikes. This could unsettle markets and sow the seeds for the next recession, which we tentatively expect to occur in the second half of 2019. What should investors do? Right now, none of our leading indicators are warning of an imminent economic downturn (Chart 9). Thus, we continue to recommend a cyclically overweight position in equities. However, we would not fault longer-term investors for starting to take money off the table, especially in light of today's lofty valuations. Chart 8ISM Has Often Predicted Changes In Inflation
ISM Has Often Predicted Changes In Inflation
ISM Has Often Predicted Changes In Inflation
Chart 9No Warnings Of An Imminent Downturn
No Warnings Of An Imminent Downturn
No Warnings Of An Imminent Downturn
The Fed is likely to raise rates in December and three or four more times in 2018. We are positioned for this by being short the December 2018 Fed funds futures contract, a trade that has gained 22 basis points so far. Considering that the market is pricing in only 42 basis points of hikes between now and the end of next year, there is plenty of juice left in this trade. A more aggressive-than-expected Fed could give the beleaguered dollar a much-needed lift. We see EUR/USD falling back to 1.15 by the end of the year and USD/JPY moving to 115. We are less bearish towards the British pound and the Swedish krona. Our short EUR/GBP and long SEK/CHF trades are up 2.6% and 5.4%, respectively, since we initiated them. Finally, we are closing our long December 2017 Brent oil futures contract for a gain of 13.8%. We still see modest upside for oil prices, and are expressing this view by being long the Canadian dollar and Russian ruble against the euro. Both currency trade recommendations remain in the money. Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Secular Bottom In Inflation," dated July 28, 2017; and "What's the Matter With Wages?" dated August 11, 2017. 2 Michael Dotsey, Shigeru Fujita, and Tom Stark, "Do Phillips Curves Conditionally help To Forecast Inflation?"Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Working Paper no. 17-26 (August 2017). 3 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "From Slow Burn Recovery To Retro-Recession?" dated August 18, 2017. 4 Galina Hale and Bart Hobijn, "The U.S. Content of "Made in China"," FRBSF Economic Letter 2011-25 (August 8, 2011). 5 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst, "Did Amazon Kill The Phillips Curve?" dated August 31, 2017. 6 Ironically, if technological change has made the Phillips curve more flat, it may be because it has reduced competition rather than fostered it. The shift to a digital economy has allowed more companies to dominate their markets by virtue of network and scale effects. The expansion of such "winner-take-all markets" helps explain why industry concentration has risen over the past few decades, boosting profit margins in the process. A recent NBER working paper by Jan De Loecker and Jan Eeckhout found that the average U.S. publicly-listed firm set prices 67% above marginal costs in 2014 compared to 30% in 1990 and 18% in 1980. Economic theory suggests that firms with significant market power will tend to raise prices by less than highly competitive firms in response to costs increases. This would make the Phillips curve more flat. Strategy & Market Trends Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Dear Client, We are sending you a Special Report prepared by my colleague Matt Gertken, associate vice president of our Geopolitical Strategy team. This report focuses on the upcoming 19th Party congress and discusses its implications on China’s economic and political outlook, as well as its impact on financial markets. I trust you will find this report insightful. Best regards, Yan Wang, Senior Vice President China Investment Strategy Highlights The Communist Party will hold its nineteenth National Congress on Oct. 18. This is the "midterm election" for President Xi Jinping, whose political capital will be replenished; Recent Chinese leaders have a greater impact in their second term than their first; Base case: Xi consolidates power while preserving a balance on the Politburo Standing Committee; Stay long Chinese equities versus emerging market peers. Feature China's Communist Party will hold the nineteenth National Party Congress on October 18-25. This is a critical "midterm" leadership reshuffle that will also mark the halfway point of General Secretary Xi Jinping's term in office. Investors around the world will watch closely to see what insight can be gained about the political trajectory of the world's second-largest economy. This report serves as a "primer" for readers to understand the party congress and its investment takeaways. Why Is The Party Congress Important? Because it rotates China's political leaders! Chart 1So Long To The 18th Central Committee
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
In a political system without popular representation, the rotation of personnel according to promotion and retirement is the only way to rejuvenate the policy process. The average rate of turnover on the Communist Party's Central Committee at each five-year congress has been 62%, which is a remarkably high rate (Chart 1). It reveals an underrated dynamism in Chinese politics. This leadership rotation also allows the top leader (Xi Jinping) to consolidate power by putting his supporters into key positions. This in turn alters the policymaking environment and the way in which China formulates policies and responds to external events. China has a "parallel" political system in which the ruling Communist Party operates alongside (and above) the state. Xi Jinping is "General Secretary" of the party, president of the People's Republic of China, and (not least) chairman of the Central Military Commission. The party maintains supremacy by independently controlling the state and the army. Since fall 2016, Xi has been dubbed the "core" of the Communist Party, putting him on a par with previous core leaders Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin.1 The party's nearly 90 million members convene large congresses of about 2,000 members every five years to select the membership of the key decision-making bodies (Diagram 1), a practice known as "intra-party democracy."2 The key body is the Central Committee, which consists of about 200 full members and another 100-some alternative members. The Central Committee then "elects" the General Secretary, Political Bureau (a.k.a. "Politburo," the top 25 or so leaders) and Politburo Standing Committee (the "PSC," the top five-to-nine leaders) - though in reality the Politburo and the PSC are chosen through intense negotiations among the incumbent PSC and former leaders. Diagram 1National Party Congress Of The Communist Party Of China
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
The handful of men on the PSC are the chief decision-makers in China, often in league with the broader Politburo (and former PSC members who exercise some power through the back door). Most of the key personnel decisions will have been made before the Central Committee votes.3 Hence the current top leaders have a chance to put their loyalists and supporters in key positions, potentially improving the implementation of their agenda. The outgoing eighteenth Central Committee will meet for its last session on October 11, and then the nineteenth party congress will meet on October 18 to elect a new Central Committee. It will in turn ratify the new Politburo and PSC. At the beginning of the party congress, Xi Jinping will deliver a keynote political report on the state of the party and nation, reviewing the progress of the past five years and mapping out a vision for the next five. The party congress will also amend the Communist Party constitution.4 By the end of the week, the members of the new PSC will step out to meet the press together for the first time. Only later will the party's key decisions be incorporated by the state, i.e. China's central government, including key personnel appointments and policy initiatives. This will occur when the legislature, the National People's Congress ("NPC," not to be confused with party congress), convenes at its annual "Two Sessions" in early March 2018. Chart 2Bold Action Can Follow Midterm Congresses
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
Any NPC session following a five-year party congress carries more weight than usual not only because it approves of the party congress's leadership decisions but also because it kicks off major new policy initiatives. For instance, Premier Zhu Rongji was appointed to launch the "assault stage" of President Jiang Zemin's reforms of state-owned enterprise at the NPC in March 1998 (Chart 2). Similarly, Hu Jintao's Premier Wen Jiabao launched extensive administrative reforms at the NPC meeting in early 2008.5 How does a "midterm" party congress differ from others? Typically, in even-numbered years, the top two leaders change over, as with Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang in 2012. These transitions are highly significant as they mark a leadership succession, a transfer of power to a new general secretary in a heavily centralized, authoritarian system that does not have a codified succession process. By contrast, in odd-numbered years like 2017, the Communist Party promotes, demotes, and retires a large number of other top leaders. Thus Xi Jinping's place is assured, and Li Keqiang's place is probably assured as well, but most likely the other five members of the PSC will be gone.6 This year's transition is also significant because the total turnover on the Central Committee is expected to be higher than usual (perhaps 70%) as a result of President Xi's aggressive anti-corruption campaign and other factors (see Chart 1 above).7 Leaders often spend the bulk of their first five years consolidating power and the second five years pushing forward their true policy agenda. Even President Hu Jintao, who failed to see his preferred social safety-net policies fully implemented, had a vastly more influential second term than first term in office: the 2007-12 period saw the 4 trillion RMB stimulus package to thwart the Global Recession. Moreover, Chinese leaders do not normally become "lame ducks" toward the end of their last term: Deng Xiaoping recommitted the country to pro-market reforms in 1992, after having stepped down as general secretary, while Jiang Zemin reached the height of his power at the end of his term in 2002, when he chose to hang onto the position of top military leader for two extra years. Many observers suspect that Xi Jinping will hold onto power beyond 2022. Bottom Line: The National Party Congress coincides with a sweeping rotation of the Chinese political elites, which is a critical way of ensuring that China, unlike a monarchy or personalized "dictatorship," has an orderly way of updating its policy-makers and (hopefully) policies. Midterm reshuffles allow top leaders to promote supporters and re-energize the implementation of their policy agenda. The past two Chinese leaders were more consequential in their second term than their first. How Is The Nineteenth Congress Unique? Chart 3Xi Jinping's Generation Taking Command
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
The most important change this year is the passing of a generation.8 China's political elites are classified into "leadership generations," with Mao Zedong symbolizing the first generation, Deng Xiaoping the second, Jiang Zemin the third, Hu Jintao the fourth, and Xi Jinping the fifth generation. The current reshuffle will see the following generational trends: The End of the Jiang Zemin Era: The key figures retiring on the PSC are those who were born before 1950 and put in place by Jiang Zemin. Thus in a very real sense, Jiang Zemin's influence is coming to a close (Chart 3).9 This generational shift is likely to force the retirement of 11 of the 25-member Politburo, and five of the seven PSC members (Table 1), as well as other major figures, such as the long-serving central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan. Table 1Chinese Leaders Set To Retire On Politburo And Politburo Standing Committee
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
Jiang-era leaders are defined by certain characteristics that are now fading. As Chart 4 demonstrates, these leaders came of age in the early, idealistic days of the Revolution, leading them to have a conservative streak in ideological matters. Yet they are well-known pragmatists in economic matters. They studied engineering and natural sciences in answer to the call for the young to develop the country's heavy industry. They tended to hail from capitalist-leaning coastal provinces, and often gained first-hand experience operating China's state-owned enterprises. This last point became especially important when they pioneered pro-market corporate reforms in the 1990s. By contrast, fewer of them served as government ministers on the State Council (China's cabinet) than subsequent generations. Chart 4Leadership Characteristics Of The Politburo Standing Committee
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
The Middle of the Hu Jintao Era: The passing of Jiang's cohort will necessarily give his successor Hu Jintao's cohort a boost in relative influence at the top levels. Hu's generation is marked by leaders who studied the "soft sciences" (like law and economics). Several of them (including Hu and Premier Wen Jiabao) have links with the politically liberal wing of the party. They have far less experience in the military or state-owned business, but are more likely to have governing experience in the central government and especially the provinces (Chart 4 above). This includes the interior provinces from which they often hail. They are thus highly attuned to the problem of maintaining social stability, arguably to the neglect of economic dynamism. Hu Jintao's influence may be underrated. Xi's administration has shown important continuities with Hu's, and Hu's followers are well positioned in the Central Committee, the Politburo, and the provincial governments (though not the current PSC). If Xi does not take decisive moves to replace some of Hu's acolytes on the PSC at the coming party congress, then Hu's men will likely outnumber Xi's on the PSC as they graduate up the ladder from the Politburo.10 A strong showing by Hu's faction could affect China's policy priorities, given that Xi showed different preferences from Hu in the first few years of his rule (Table 2). However, the factions do not maintain consistent policy platforms. The bottom line is that Hu's faction could act as more or less of a constraint on Xi regardless of what policies the latter pursues. Table 2Fiscal Priorities Of Recent Chinese Presidents
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
The True Beginning of the Xi Jinping Era: Xi's generation has yet to reveal its full character - the demographics of the new Central Committee will help determine it. So far it is a continuation of the trends above: more likely than not to come from interior than coastal provinces, to have studied the humanities, to have governed in the provinces or central ministries, and to lack military or business experience (Chart 4 above). The coming reshuffle could initiate a change in some of these trends, given some of Xi's revealed preferences, but that will not become clear until this fall.11 Xi is not stereotypical when it comes to China's political cycles: he consolidated power rapidly in his first term.12 The question, then, is whether Xi can continue to accrue power at the party congress, or whether his second term will become complicated by an infusion of Hu Jintao supporters into top party posts. Thus the success of Hu's supporters (particularly on the PSC) is the critical moving part that could determine the political constraints on Xi Jinping from 2017-22. Will Xi be able to arrange a favorable power-sharing agreement? Or will he go further and try to remove this political constraint entirely, even at the risk of political instability? The above points raise two critical questions: Will Chinese politics become more institutionalized? Investors should expect China to maintain a stridently informal political system. Rules and norms can and will be bent, but key principles will be upheld. In other words, the goal posts can be moved, but not too far. Going beyond certain limits would be destabilizing for China's political, institutional, and factional balances, and so far Xi has exhibited poise and the desire to maintain stability that is characteristic of post-1978 Chinese leaders.13 We think there is a low probability that Xi will overthrow all the norms of leadership selection and overturn the balance of power on the Politburo and PSC. If he does, it will raise alarms that he is setting up a new "cult of personality" like Mao, which could cause domestic economic and market instability. Rather, we expect him to modify the rules to maintain control of the PSC without excluding Hu Jintao's faction from power. Will Xi initiate the succession process for 2022? Some commentators suspect that Xi will use the party congress to pave the way for him to cling to power beyond 2022. Clearly Xi could retain the top military post and stay within recent precedent. But any hints at altering recent succession patterns, despite the fact that they are informal, are dangerous for investors in the long run because they raise deep uncertainty about the range of possibilities and political conflicts that could occur upon the actual change of power in 2022. Nevertheless, bear in mind the following points: The question of succession will not be resolved this October. If Xi plans to hang on beyond 2022, then he will continue amassing power and positioning loyalists over the next five years so that he will have full institutional support at the critical moment in 2022 - like Jiang Zemin did when he chose to hang onto the military chairmanship from 2002-04. Thus while Xi may lay some groundwork that makes political observers uneasy, the question will not be resolved either way this fall. Xi's tenure will be an ongoing topic for investors to monitor. Xi is already set to be the most powerful Chinese leader well into the 2020s. Xi's anti-corruption campaign is remarkable evidence of his strength as a ruler. Significantly, this campaign has focused on rooting out Jiang Zemin's influence. Yet Jiang stepped down way back in 2004! In other words, Jiang wielded massive influence between 2004 and 2017. Indeed, Xi's boldest move this year so far was to remove Sun Zhengcai, a Jiang acolyte. It stands to reason that, even if Hu Jintao's faction pulls off a relative victory this year, Xi Jinping's faction will likely be well positioned for a victory in 2022. And if Hu loses out this year, Xi's followers will be better positioned in 2027, as well as 2022. In short, market participants are unlikely to be able to tell the difference this October between (1) Xi getting a boost of political capital for his second term and (2) Xi getting such a big boost that he is on track to overstay his second term.14 Xi might intend to become a dictator and cling to power for longer, but all the market will know for certain is that he has maintained control of the PSC and his general policy framework will be more or less continuous, which is likely a relief in the near term. Finally, investors may not initially care if Xi seizes additional power at the expense of party norms and the succession process. A-shares sold off, but H-shares rallied, when Jiang Zemin decided not to step down entirely in 2002 (Chart 5). Russian stocks and the RUB/USD only fleetingly sold off when Vladimir Putin made clear his intention to return to the presidency yet again in 2011 (Chart 6). Chart 5Foreign Investors Cheered Jiang's Clinging To Power
Foreign Investors Cheered Jiang's Clinging To Power
Foreign Investors Cheered Jiang's Clinging To Power
Chart 6Russian Investors Cheered Putin's Second Presidency
Russian Investors Cheered Putin's Second Presidency
Russian Investors Cheered Putin's Second Presidency
While it is impossible to know whether markets will cheer any signs of "Papa Xi" doing away with term limits, it is bad for China's governance in the long run if Xi does not clearly begin grooming a successor with this fall's promotions. An heir-apparent for 2022 would reduce the risks of disruptive power-struggle and would impose a personal deadline on Xi Jinping's reform agenda. That is, a deadline above and beyond the 2020 deadline in the 13th Five Year Plan and the 2021 deadline for the 100th anniversary of the Communist Party's founding. That reform agenda, in turn, is essential for improving China's long-term productivity.15 Bottom Line: The Chinese political system is informal, which means that rules and norms can be bent without altering the underlying principles of balance among the key factions and stability of the regime and society as a whole. Our baseline scenario is a market-positive one: that Xi Jinping will win a victory at the party congress, but that he will not overthrow Hu Jintao's followers and abandon the "collective leadership" model, since that would destroy the overall balance of power and heighten domestic political risks. If Xi loses out to the Hu faction, then we would expect Chinese and China-exposed risk assets to sell off, at least initially. If Xi romps to total victory, excluding Hu's clique from power, we would fade any market rally. Such a development would heighten political risks for the foreseeable future. Investment Conclusions The prospect of a Xi-dominated, yet stable, PSC in China is promising because it suggests that China will have at least a marginally improved policy framework for managing the immense challenges it faces. On the economic front, the loss of the demographic dividend threatens to make China old before it gets rich (Chart 7). Xi will need a unified party, as well as loyal supporters in key posts, if he is to re-energize his productivity-enhancing reforms. On the socio-political front, China's intensifying focus on domestic security is symbolized by draconian media censorship ahead of the party congress and, more broadly, a faster rate of spending on public security than national defense in recent years (Chart 8). Such trends suggest that policy makers are concerned about public support. Income inequality and regional disparities are burning issues in an authoritarian country with a larger and more connected middle class and an incipient civil rights movement. Chart 7Rising Participation Boosted Euro Area Labor Force Growth China's Demographic Challenge
Rising Participation Boosted Euro Area Labor Force Growth China's Demographic Challenge
Rising Participation Boosted Euro Area Labor Force Growth China's Demographic Challenge
Chart 8Social Stability A Major Concern In China
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
China's Nineteenth Party Congress: A Primer
In terms of the likely economic and market response, we have highlighted in the past that larger macro-economic trends tend to swamp any effects of China's five-year party congresses. There is no observable correlation between these events and the deviations of China's nominal GDP, credit, or fixed investment from long-term averages going back to 1992 (Chart 9). Chart 9No Clear Policy Impact From Past Party Congresses
No Clear Policy Impact From Past Party Congresses
No Clear Policy Impact From Past Party Congresses
Moreover, China only has two midterm party congresses to compare to today's party congress, and both occurred in the thick of global financial crises (1997, 2007). This makes it difficult to draw firm conclusions about any impact on Chinese risk assets. A-shares were mostly flat after the 1997 congress but fell after 2007, while H-shares broadly fell after both meetings, as one might expect given the crises raging around them (Chart 10 A&B). Chart 10AChinese Stocks Were Flat Or Down ...
Chinese Stocks Sold Off After Past Midterm Congresses
Chinese Stocks Sold Off After Past Midterm Congresses
Chart 10B... After Past Midterm Party Congresses
Chinese Stocks Sold Off After Past Midterm Congresses
Chinese Stocks Sold Off After Past Midterm Congresses
H-shares, being highly responsive to global financial market turmoil, fell relative to emerging market (EM) equities as well in 1997 and 2007. A-shares were more insulated and outperformed EM stocks during the 1997 crisis, though not in the 2007 crisis (Chart 11 A&B). What is clear - for Chinese domestic investors - is that A-shares outperformed H-shares after the party congresses in 1997 and 2007 (Chart 12). Chart 11AChinese Stocks Sold Off In Relative Terms...
Chinese Stocks Sold Off In Relative Terms...
Chinese Stocks Sold Off In Relative Terms...
Chart 11B...Except A-Shares During The Asian Crisis
...Except A-Shares During The Asian Crisis
...Except A-Shares During The Asian Crisis
Chart 12A-Shares Outperformed H-Shares After Midterm Congresses
A-Shares Outperformed H-Shares After Midterm Congresses
A-Shares Outperformed H-Shares After Midterm Congresses
This fall, it would not be surprising to see Chinese and global risk-on attitudes prevail in the immediate aftermath of China's party congress: in the broadest sense, the meeting represents a political recapitalization for the Xi administration. Moreover, the backdrop is positive: global and Chinese growth are on a synchronized upswing, Chinese industrial profits have improved, the Fed is on hold, and China's growth risks and capital outflow pressures have diminished.16 This suggests a marginal positive impact for H-shares as well as A-shares. However, Chinese stocks are no longer trading at a discount relative to peers. Moreover, BCA's Geopolitical Strategy believes that the Xi administration's reform reboot will likely bring tougher financial and environmental regulation that will slow credit growth and cut into corporate profits.17 It also seems likely that 2018 will see the dollar stage a comeback as inflation recovers and the Fed resumes hiking rates.18 For all these reasons, we recommend staying long Chinese stocks relative to EM, on the basis that China's reform efforts will be positive for China's productivity outlook but negative for commodities and EM in 2018. Matt Gertken, Associate Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com 1 Mao's successor Hua Guofeng, and Xi's predecessor Hu Jintao, are the two leaders who did not obtain "core" status. 2 The current norms developed mostly in the 1980s and have evolved since. The list of candidates is mostly pre-arranged by the top leaders. The party congress then votes on which candidates to include, leaving a remainder of about 10% who do not take seats in the Central Committee. 3 Nevertheless, the Central Committee could produce a few surprises. It is almost inevitable that a few major personalities will fail to get promoted into key positions, while others will be catapulted to higher places. There will also be some tea leaves to read about the share of negative votes or abstentions and the implications for different candidates. 4 The political report is filled with arcane Communist Party jargon but is very important. It is a consensus document that takes multiple committees a year or more to draft, though Xi Jinping will give the finishing touches. It will cover a comprehensive range of policies and will be scrutinized closely by experts for slight changes of terminology, emphasis, or omission. Key things to watch for are whether Xi adds or removes entire sections; whether he alters developmental goals outlined in previous administrations; and whether he inserts new concepts or revises party ideology to make way for contentious reforms. As for the party's constitution, the main question of any change is whether Xi's leadership philosophy is incorporated into the Communist Party's guiding thought, and if so, whether Xi's name is explicitly attached to it. The latter in particular would be a sign that Xi's political capital within the party is massive. For additional commentary, please see Alice Miller, "How To Read Xi Jinping's 19th Party Congress Political Report," China Leadership Monitor 53 (2017), available at www.hoover.org. 5 For the "assault stage" of reform, see Robert Lawrence Kuhn, The Man Who Changed China: The Life And Legacy Of Jiang Zemin (NY: Crown, 2004). Jiang had first targeted SOE reform in 1996 in a speech, he launched the policy itself at the party congress in September 1997, and the state began to implement it at the NPC in March 1998. For Hu Jintao's and Wen Jiabao's administrative reforms after the seventeenth party congress, see Willy Wo Lap Lam, "Beijing Unveils Plan For Super Ministries," China Brief, Jamestown Foundation, February 4, 2008. These reforms, which were only part of the overall agenda after the congress, included restructuring the State Council, empowering the National Development and Reform Commission, and setting up "Super-Ministries" to streamline cabinet-level functions. 6 Rumor has it that Xi will keep his anti-corruption chief, Wang Qishan, on the PSC beyond the 69-year mandatory retirement age, and that he could even replace Premier Li Keqiang. We do not expect either to happen, but both are well within the realm of political possibility - particularly retaining Wang. 7 For this estimate, please see Cheng Li, Chinese Politics In The Xi Jinping Era: Reassessing Collective Leadership (Washington, D.C.: Brookings, 2016), chapter 9. 8 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 9 Traces of Jiang's power will persist here and there, especially if Wang Qishan remains on the PSC, but the overall effect will be a diminishment of this powerful leadership cohort. Symbolically, just as Deng Xiaoping's death loomed over the fifteenth party congress in 1997, Jiang's impending death will loom over the nineteenth party congress today. 10 Indeed judging solely by the cyclical rotation of Chinese leaders according to generation and faction, Hu Jintao's acolytes are favored to outnumber Jiang Zemin's and Xi Jinping's in the 2017 reshuffle. Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy, "China: Two Factions, One Party," dated September 2012, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. However, Xi's effectiveness and good luck since coming to power lead us to believe that he will secure his followers on the PSC and Politburo this year: please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Strategic Outlook 2017, "We Are All Geopolitical Strategists Now," dated December 14, 2016, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 11 For example, Xi Jinping's recent promotions have re-emphasized SOE managers and his policies have supported large "state champion" SOEs. Please see Cheng Li and Lucy Xu, "The rise of state-owned enterprise executives in China's provincial leadership," Brookings, February 22, 2017, available at www.brookings.edu. 12 He came to the top office at a time of significant public dissatisfaction (2012), which meant that he received a kind of "mandate" to make big changes. His faction dominated the PSC, and his sweeping anti-corruption campaign purged the party and state of formidable rivals. In the fall of 2016 he clinched his status as the "core" of the party. 13 As to specific rules, no one should be surprised if they are altered. Take the age limit, which is hotly debated: Jiang Zemin introduced a hard age limit into the PSC in 1997, specifically in a way that prevented the promotion of a heavy-hitting politician, Qiao Shi, while allowing Jiang to continue in power. Now, assume Xi alters the rules to preserve Wang Qishan: this would not necessarily mean that Xi plans to overstay his term limits, though some observers will take it that way. For market participants, the important point is that slight tweaks to informal rules are unlikely to have a big market impact. Consider that Wang has overseen a massive crackdown on corruption, helping clean up the party's image, and is known to be competent in financial regulation as well. If he is retained, will the market really protest? We doubt it. Having said that, we expect him to retire according to the existing rule of thumb. 14 The exception to this statement is if Xi reforms Communist Party political institutions, as some commentators suspect he might, in order to allow the Central Committee to elect the Politburo and PSC directly from its members, thus expanding "intra-party democracy" while also giving Xi a higher likelihood of staying in power. Please see Bo Zhiyue, "Commentary: Sweeping Reforms Expected At Party Congress, But Will Xi Jinping Get All He Wants?" Channel News Asia, August 20, 2017, available at www.channelnewsasia.com. 15 Please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, "Reflections On China's Reforms," in "The Great Risk Rotation - December 2013," dated December 11, 2013; and Special Report, "Taking Stock Of China's Reforms," dated May 13, 2015, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. Please also see BCA China Investment Strategy, "Understanding China's Master Plan," dated November 20, 2013, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 16 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Reports, "China: Earnings Scorecard And Market Tea Leaves," dated September 7, 2017, and "Monitoring Chinese Capital Outflows And The RMB Internationalization Process," dated August 24, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 17 Please see BCA China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "A Closer Look At Chinese Equity Valuations," dated August 31, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. For the reform agenda, please see BCA Geopolitical Strategy Special Report, "China: Looking Beyond The Party Congress," dated July 19, 2017, available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see BCA Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Central Bank Showdown," dated September 8, 2017, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations