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Dear Client, Instead of our regular Weekly Report, this week we are sending you a Special Report written on February 20 by our Geopolitical Strategy service colleagues that discusses China’s recent stimulating efforts. We have only made a few minor revisions to account for the past month’s events. We trust that you will find this Special Report useful and insightful. Best regards, Anastasios Avgeriou, U.S. Equity Strategist   Highlights So What? China’s January-February credit data suggest that stimulus is here. Why? China’s early-year credit and fiscal policies suggest that stimulus risks are to the upside. January-February credit was a blowout number and fiscal spending is up. Equity bourses in South Korea and Russia are the most likely to benefit from Chinese stimulus. Industrial metals such as copper will also benefit – with a delay. Feature New credit data for China in January-February improves the chances that Beijing’s stimulus measures will overshoot this year, causing China’s economy to bottom in 2019 and jumpstart global growth. In our annual outlook for this year we argued that while China was stimulating the economy, the magnitude of stimulus would be the decisive factor for the global macro environment in 2019. We argued that the type of stimulus would remain primarily fiscal – tax cuts for households and small and medium-sized enterprises – and hence that it would be modest as fiscal easing would merely offset relatively weak credit growth. This view stemmed from our assessment of the Xi Jinping administration, highlighted in April 2017, as an “elitist” (not populist) administration. Its policy priorities are to discipline the Chinese economy, and in particular to contain systemic financial risk, which President Xi has cited as a national security threat. This view is not wrong, but the latest data clearly show that Xi has decided to pause these painful efforts at limiting leverage and rebalancing China’s economy. Witness January-February’s decisive uptick in both total social financing (total private credit) and local government bond issuance (Chart 1). Chart 1Higher Risk Of An Overshoot Higher Risk Of An Overshoot Higher Risk Of An Overshoot A massive spike in new credit is the single most important criterion in our “Checklist For A Stimulus Overshoot.” Thus, from a policy perspective, we are now at higher risk of an overshoot (Table 1). Not only credit as a whole but also informal lending saw a surge in January-February, implying that the government is relenting in its crackdown on the shadow banks. The approval of local government bond issuance for early in the year – and the People’s Bank of China’s announcement of a “Central Bank Bills Swap” program – reinforce this policy shift.1 Table 1Checklist For A Chinese Stimulus Overshoot In 2019 China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks   A stimulus overshoot is positive for Chinese demand in the short run but negative for potential GDP in the long run. A “traditional” credit surge of this nature cannot be surgically targeted at SMEs or households. It will go to state-owned enterprises, privileged corporations, property developers, and the like, which have always had the advantage in China’s financial system. SOEs have taken a much larger share of new loans than private companies in recent years,2 and the only silver lining of this trend was the possibility that tighter credit controls would discipline the SOEs. That silver lining is now fading, barring some new and surprising development on the reform front. China needs to create 26 trillion renminbi in new credit over the course of the year to avoid a corporate earnings contraction. These January-February numbers put China on track to do just that (Chart 2), assuming that President Xi and U.S. President Donald Trump agree to a short-term, framework trade deal this year. Chart 2On Track To Avoid An Earnings Contraction On Track To Avoid An Earnings Contraction On Track To Avoid An Earnings Contraction Of course, a few caveats are in order. First, January-February’s credit number is only one data point and credit growth is always abnormally strong in the first month of the year. Early in the year, banks seek to expand their assets rapidly in a bid to get as much market share as possible before administrative credit quotas kick in. Because of Chinese New Year, it is best to combine January and February data to get a sense of the rate of credit expansion in the first part of the year. This year’s January-February numbers are very strong relative to previous years (Chart 3) and the context is more accommodative than the 2017 January-February credit surge, when authorities were beginning to tighten rather than ease macroprudential policy. Still a rapid rate of credit expansion will have to be sustained in the coming months in order to meet the 26 trillion RMB requirement highlighted above. Image Second, there is some risk that China’s households and private businesses will not respond as positively today as in the past. The intensification of Communist Party control over the society and economy, President Xi’s cancellation of term limits, and the strategic confrontation with the United States have created a bearish sentiment in the private sector. Our Emerging Markets Strategy would point out that if the propensity to consume, and money velocity,3 do not accelerate, then a surge in new credit may fail to ignite a reacceleration in China (Chart 4). Chart 4Chinese Are Holding On To Their Money Chinese Are Holding On To Their Money Chinese Are Holding On To Their Money Still, what we now know is that Xi Jinping and his top economic adviser, Vice Premier Liu He, are not initiating the “assault phase of reform” that their predecessors initiated in the late 1990s in order to cleanse China’s economy of bad loans and zombie companies. Instead, they are likely reestablishing the “Socialist Put” in order to reverse the current deceleration, demonstrate China’s continued economic might and face down the United States’ threat of tariffs. Bottom Line: China’s stimulus measures are increasingly likely to overshoot, with positive implications for both Chinese and global growth. China is still facing a corporate earnings recession, but the odds of averting it are increasing. Trade Deadline More Likely To Be Extended What of the trade war? First, we would warn clients that China’s annual credit origination is a much bigger factor for the global economy than China’s exports to the United States (Chart 5). The trade war can escalate from here and yet, if China’s stimulus works as it has in the past, the results will be manageable for China’s economy save for Chinese companies expressly exposed to the U.S. economy through exports. In reality, both the U.S. and China are now effectively stimulating their economies and in this sense global trade as a whole will benefit regardless of bilateral tariffs. Chart 5Watch China Credit, Not So Much The Trade War Watch China Credit, Not So Much The Trade War Watch China Credit, Not So Much The Trade War But it is possible that just as global equity markets ignored China’s economic slowdown and only sold off when the tariffs were levied (Chart 6), they may not continue to rally much on China’s credit data. Given the already considerable rally in global risk assets since October, markets may not be satisfied merely with one or two months of solid credit data out of China without a clear resolution to the trade conflict. After all, if a collapse in U.S.-China trade talks portends a new Cold War, then institutional investors may be justified in taking a wait-and-see approach despite China’s credit cycle upswing. Chart 6Will Equities Ignore China Data (Again)? Will Equities Ignore China Data (Again)? Will Equities Ignore China Data (Again)? In the past, we have highlighted that the U.S. and China are not economically prohibited from engaging in a trade war – the export exposure is too small – and China’s new stimulus reinforces this point. However, President Trump is concerned about causing a sell-off in the tech sector and hence the broad equity market which could translate into a bear market and raise the probability of a recession occurring prior to November 2020. Meanwhile, in China, given Beijing’s reported trade concessions, there is apparently a desire to pacify the relationship and discourage U.S. unilateral tariffs and sanctions that could become seriously destabilizing for the Chinese economy and society. The need to have a happy 2021 centenary celebration for the Communist Party may factor into policymakers’ thinking. The latest news flow is mildly positive for the odds of getting a framework deal sometime this year. President Trump visited the Chinese negotiators in Washington, D.C. while President Xi reciprocated with the American negotiators in Beijing. A new round of two-week shuttle diplomacy is beginning. Trump has extended the tariff ceasefire and the two sides reportedly have arrived at an agreement on currency and are drafting written agreements on other areas of dispute. China’s National People’s Congress has passed a new Foreign Investment Law that ostensibly guarantees many of the American demands on forced tech transfer, intellectual property theft, and discriminatory treatment of U.S. companies (Table 2). Table 2New Foreign Investment Law Would Be A Positive For U.S.-China Negotiations China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks However, Presidents Trump and Xi have yet to schedule a new summit, which is probably necessary for a final deal. And there are murmurs from the press suggesting that China’s new law and other concessions are not going to satisfy the U.S. negotiators on the critical point of “structural changes” and a verification process. This leaves us inclined to change our trade war probabilities to increase the odds of an extension (Table 3). The improvement in U.S. financial conditions and China’s stimulus, if anything, make it more likely that negotiations will be extended, as both sides feel their economic and financial constraints less acutely. Table 3Updated Trade War Probabilities China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks Bottom Line: Global and Chinese risk assets should rally on China’s credit uptick, but the lack of resolution of the trade war could continue to inhibit animal spirits – and the odds of a March 1 resolution are declining. Who Are The Equity Winners Of China’s Stimulus? China’s strong January-February credit number is supportive of global equity markets. That much is obvious. But which equity markets will benefit the most? In what follows we examine the relationship between Chinese credit and MSCI equity returns of various countries. We find that Malaysian, Australian, South Korean, and Indonesian equities are the most highly correlated with Chinese credit growth and are thus most likely to benefit from the recent upturn (Chart 7). On the other hand, France and Italy stand out as countries whose bourses are more insulated. Chart 7 Out of the markets that are positively correlated, South Korea and Russia stand out as relatively cheap (Chart 8). Thus we expect these equities to do especially well. By contrast, while Indonesia and the Philippines are highly leveraged to China, these markets are currently relatively expensive. BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy is currently overweight Korean and Russian equities within the EM space, neutral Turkey (although recently upgraded from underweight), and underweight Indonesia and the Philippines. Chart 8 In addition to credit stimulus, we expect Chinese household consumption to also gain support going forward. This will likely be driven by policy stimulus targeting the consumer specifically and is best exemplified by the recently announced tax cuts (Chart 9), which we expect to trickle down to greater consumer demand and growth in retail sales. Our base case calls for 8%-10% growth in household consumption over the coming 12 months, up from the current 3.5%. Chart 9 However, consumer sentiment in China is weak. BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy’s proxy for household marginal propensity to spend ticked up recently, after falling since early last year (see Chart 4 above). A resumption in the decline would highlight that households are increasingly unwilling to spend, which would translate into weaker retail sales despite policy efforts to boost consumption. Such a scenario – in which credit growth accelerates without a substantial uptick in consumer spending – is plausible, given that it occurred between mid-2015 and mid-2016 (Chart 10). In any case, whether Chinese stimulus comes in the form of the traditional credit channel, or instead in the form of fiscal stimulus to household consumption, the same equity markets will generally benefit the most (Chart 11). Chart 10...But Flattish Retail Sales Are Also A Possibility ...But Flattish Retail Sales Are Also A Possibility ...But Flattish Retail Sales Are Also A Possibility Chart 11 Indeed, global equity markets react the same way regardless of the type of stimulus implemented. For instance, MSCI returns for the Philippines, Sweden, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Turkey are more closely correlated to both Chinese credit growth and retail sales growth compared to Italy, Japan, and France. The same conclusion is reached when we look at the correlations between Chinese credit growth or consumption growth and individual MSCI sectors such as industrials and consumer discretionary (Chart 12). Chart 12 The relatively stronger correlation between Chinese credit growth and equity returns – as opposed to Chinese retail sales and equity returns – can be put down to the nature of Chinese imports. While industrial goods account for the bulk of China’s purchases of foreign goods, consumer goods excluding autos make up only 15% of China’s imports (Table 4). However, as Chart 12 illustrates, the relationship between China’s retail sales growth and global equities is much tighter in the case of the consumer discretionary sector, whether the latter is compared to global industrials sectors or the overall MSCI index. Table 4Import Composition Of Chinese Imports China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks China: Stimulating Amid The Trade Talks Equity market exposure to China is not always in line with the extent of each country’s trade exposure to China (Chart 13). Chart 13 There are some clear exceptions – most notably Mexico, which has the highest correlation coefficient with Chinese credit and consumption variables since 2010. However, this is likely due to idiosyncratic factors.4 Correlation does not imply causation, and we cannot conclude with certainty that Mexican equities will outperform amid China’s new round of stimulus. Nevertheless, given that Mexico is a very deeply liquid market that benefits amid EM bull markets, this may not be entirely coincidental. The correlations between global equity markets and Chinese credit peak two months after the stimulus measures are first implemented (Chart 14). This is more or less in line with adjusted total social financing’s correlation versus industrial metals. However, BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy has shown that copper’s correlations versus other measures of Chinese money and credit peak after roughly three quarters (Chart 15).5 This is evident in both the 2012 and 2015-16 stimulus episodes in which the bottom in copper prices lagged the bottom in China’s credit growth. Thus we may witness a rebound in equity markets on the back of China’s credit splurge before we see an improvement in annual returns on copper prices. Chart 14 Chart 15Copper Rallies Lag China Credit Stimulus Copper Rallies Lag China Credit Stimulus Copper Rallies Lag China Credit Stimulus Bottom Line: South Korean and Russian equities are best positioned to benefit from the positive surprise in China’s credit data. France and Italy are the worst positioned. Copper prices will rebound with a delay.  Investment Implications BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy recommends that investors stay long Chinese equities ex-tech relative to the emerging market benchmark. This is a tactical call initiated in August 2018 that is now becoming a cyclical call on the basis of the credit upswing. We also remain long the “China Play Index,” a basket of China-sensitive assets. A rebound in China’s credit data and stronger global growth will support copper demand. Prices are still 15% below the mid-2018 peak and are poised to benefit in this environment, especially given that global inventories are already falling. BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy recommends that investors go long copper. Meanwhile, BCA’s China Investment Strategy recommends (for now) staying only tactically overweight Chinese equities relative to the global benchmark, pending higher conviction that the pace of credit growth will be strong enough to overwhelm the negative ramifications of a continued deceleration in actual activity over the coming few months on sentiment and 12-month forward earnings expectations. Over the long run, Geopolitical Strategy would look to underweight Chinese equities, as we are not optimistic about China’s productivity and potential GDP. This is because of the negative structural consequences of continuing the Socialist Put (i.e., bad loans, zombie companies, trade protectionism). We would expect CNY/USD to remain relatively buoyant in the context of both trade negotiations with the U.S. and fiscal-and-credit stimulus. The trade talks can hardly succeed if CNY/USD is falling. Depending on whether and how soon China’s stimulus results in a durable economic bottom, global growth could stabilize and the USD could see a substantial countertrend selloff.   Matt Gertken, Vice President Geopolitical Strategy mattg@bcaresearch.com Roukaya Ibrahim, Editor/Strategist roukayai@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1          Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Special Report titled “China: Prepping A Bazooka?” dated February 14, 2019 available at ems.bcaresearch.com 2      Please see Nicholas Lardy, “The State Strikes Back: The End Of Economic Reform In China?” Peterson Institute For International Economics, January 29, 2019, available at piie.com. 3          Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report titled “Dissecting China’s Stimulus,” dated January 17, 2019 available at ems.bcaresearch.com 4       The 2012 election of President Enrique Peña Nieto caused Mexican equities to outperform their EM counterparts. Similarly in 2015-16, U.S. outperformance relative to EM also supported Mexico relative to EM because Mexico’s economy is highly leveraged to its northern neighbor. In both periods Mexico’s outperformance was not caused by – but instead coincided with – Chinese credit stimulus. These idiosyncratic events biased the correlation between Mexico’s equity markets and Chinese credit growth to the upside. 5      Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report titled “Trade Wars, China Credit Policy Will Roil Global Copper Markets,” dated June 21, 2018, available at ces.bcaresearch.com.                  
Highlights The yield curve has inverted: The 10-year Treasury bond yield fell below the 3-month T-bill rate following the March FOMC meeting and has remained there since. We never say it’s different this time, but there is not yet sufficient evidence to change course: The yield curve is almost always early as a standalone signal, and the depressed term premium may make it less sensitive right now. Monetary policy still looks decidedly accommodative to us, … : Our estimate of the equilibrium fed funds rate says policy’s easy, and that it’ll stay that way until the Fed gets serious about hiking rates again. … so asset allocation should continue to favor risk assets: There are global forces restraining Treasury yields, but the fed funds rate cycle is only partway through a stretch that has been uniformly unfavorable for Treasuries. Feature Last week’s data were soft, as the U.S. economy continues to show signs of decelerating. The consumer confidence survey disappointed hopes for an extended bounce back from January’s shutdown-shadowed release, housing starts were uninspiring, and the Case-Shiller index revealed that home-price gains continue to sag. Beyond the U.S., the message from manufacturing PMIs is glum, although the services sector seems to be holding up just fine. Our traveling colleagues report that investors around the world have developed a decided aversion to European assets. We remind our clients that deceleration is nothing new. It’s been the story so far this year, as the incremental decline in fiscal thrust ensured it would be. The inversion of the yield curve is new, however, and it’s commanding attention from the financial media and from investors drawn to a leading indicator that consistently works. We like the yield curve, too, and it’s one of the three components of our recession indicator, but it’s only one. The other two components have yet to confirm its message, and the way things look now, it may well be awhile before they do. The Yield Curve Has Inverted, The Yield Curve Has Inverted The 3-month-to-10-year segment of the yield curve inverted after the March FOMC meeting, and it dipped a little further into negative territory last week as the 10-year Treasury yield continued to melt. An inverted curve is one of the three components of our simple recession indicator,1 and we believe it can send an important signal about the economy’s vigor and the state of monetary policy. By itself, however, an inverted curve is not a sufficient precondition for a recession. It has also been something less than a timely guide to asset allocation, inverting a year ahead of a recession, on average, and six months before the S&P 500 peaks (Table 1). The yield curve has been a reliable recession warning signal, but it tends to be too early to serve as a practical guide to money management and asset allocation. Table 1Inverted Yield Curves, 1968 - 2018 Keep Calm And Carry On Keep Calm And Carry On   An inverted yield curve has called eight of the seven recessions that have occurred over the last 50 years, making it a dependable leading indicator (Chart 1). Year-over-year contraction in the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index (LEI) has compiled the same enviable track record, calling all seven of the last half-century’s recessions with just one false positive (Chart 2). LEI tends to be timelier, however, sounding the alarm an average of five months after the curve inverts (Table 2). For our recession indicator, we also add a comparison of the fed funds rate to our estimate of the equilibrium fed funds rate, because recessions have only occurred when the fed funds rate has exceeded our estimate of the equilibrium rate (Chart 3). Chart 1The Yield Curve Has Been Reliable, Albeit Early The Yield Curve Has Been Reliable, Albeit Early The Yield Curve Has Been Reliable, Albeit Early Chart 2LEI Has Been Timelier LEI Has Been Timelier LEI Has Been Timelier Table 2LEI Contractions, 1968 - 2018 Keep Calm And Carry On Keep Calm And Carry On   The cycle is extended, and the inverted curve has made us even more alert for trouble in the economy and financial markets, but we do not think trouble is imminent. The LEI is clearly decelerating, but it has yet to contract. We currently peg the equilibrium fed funds rate at about 3⅛%, and project that it will rise to 3⅜% by the end of the year. We can’t know the equilibrium rate with exact precision in real time, but our estimate has been a reliable guide to financial market performance, and the fact that the fed funds rate is four 25-basis-point hikes from crossing the line gives us some comfort that neither a recession nor a bear market is waiting just around the corner. Chart 3Recessions Only Occur When Policy Is Tight Recessions Only Occur When Policy Is Tight Recessions Only Occur When Policy Is Tight Bottom Line: We are not dismissing the inverted yield curve, but our other recession-indicator inputs are not confirming its warning. Given the Fed’s new guidance, we expect that the next recession will not arrive before mid-to-late 2020. It’s A Little Bit Anomalous This Time At its best, an inverted yield curve is a signal from the bond market that the Fed has tightened monetary policy too much, heralding future rate cuts and a sharp slowdown. Anything affecting yields at the long end, however, has the potential to skew the curve’s signal. If long yields were somehow inflated, the curve would be less prone to invert and the signal would be delayed. If long yields were restrained, the curve would be prone to invert sooner and the signal might come especially early. Rate hikes invert the curve once the bond market decides they’re unnecessary, or expects that they’re going to be reversed soon. We believe that the yield curve currently has a bias to invert even earlier than it otherwise would. The question of how much the Fed’s asset purchases have affected the term premium,2 if at all, is far from settled within either the Fed or BCA, and is beyond the scope of this report. Nonetheless, we do think that QE1, QE2, and QE3 must have made some contribution to the decline in the term premium on long-term bonds (Chart 4). The bottom line is that we think the curve was disposed to invert earlier this time around. Its signal is still worth incorporating into our analysis, but we will seek confirmation from our other recession indicators before revamping our asset-allocation recommendations in line with an approaching inflection point in the business cycle. Chart 4The Curve Inverts More Easily When The Term Premium Is Negative The Curve Inverts More Easily When The Term Premium Is Negative The Curve Inverts More Easily When The Term Premium Is Negative The Fed And The Yield Curve We subscribe to the idea that the Fed induces recessions by removing monetary accommodation in an attempt to keep the economy from overheating. It’s simply too difficult to achieve a soft landing with policy tools that influence activity indirectly and with long and variable lags, given that the dual-mandate metrics are themselves lagging indicators. Compared to the path by which the Fed influences the economy, the path by which it inverts the curve is simple and straightforward. It raises short rates, and the long end rises as well, as the bond market discounts higher inflation and/or stronger growth, until investors no longer believe that inflation or growth prospects merit tighter policy, and long rates fall behind short rates. We reviewed moves in 10-year yields and 3-month rates across the different phases of the fed funds rate cycle (Chart 5) to see how the process has unfolded empirically. As the mechanics of yield curve inversion imply – short rates rise, long rates rise less or fall – the curve bear flattens when the Fed hikes the fed funds rate, and bull steepens when it cuts it (Table 3). The outcome fits the intuition: if the Fed’s attempt to slow the economy with higher short rates is successful, real interest rates will decline, inflation pressure will ease and bond yields should fail to keep pace with bill rates, especially if investors associate tightening campaigns with recessions. Conversely, if the Fed successfully boosts the economy with lower short rates, bond yields should fall less than short rates as the real component of rates rises, and the curve should steepen. Chart 5 Table 3The Yield Curve And The Fed Funds Rate Cycle Keep Calm And Carry On Keep Calm And Carry On Depicting our stylized fed funds rate as a bell curve makes for an appealing picture, but it obscures the fact that the Fed often pauses for a while after hiking rates to their cyclical peak, or cutting them to their cyclical trough. Phase II doesn’t end until the beginning of the next rate-cutting campaign, and Phase IV doesn’t end until the beginning of the next series of rate hikes. A stricter representation of the fed funds rate cycle would have two phases of active hiking, followed by a state of limbo between the last hike and the first cut, then two phases of active cutting, followed by a lull during which the Fed waits for signs that it should remove accommodation. The expanded fed funds rate cycle is therefore composed of active hiking in Phase I and Phase II(a), pre-easing in Phase II(b), active easing in Phase III and Phase IV(a), and pre-hiking in Phase IV(b). Table 4 shows the average monthly changes in the yield curve and its components in the expanded fed funds rate cycle. There is quite a difference between Phase II(a), when the curve aggressively bear flattens, and Phase II(b), when the curve modestly bull flattens. Phase IV(a) features a sharp bull steepening, while the long end drifts higher in Phase IV(b) and short rates barely budge. Ultimately, the real action happens when the Fed is actively adjusting monetary policy, and the duration positioning implications are quite sensitive to the transitions into and out of the active phases. Table 4The Yield Curve And The Expanded Fed Funds Rate Cycle Keep Calm And Carry On Keep Calm And Carry On Bonds And The Fed Funds Rate Cycle An inverted yield curve has provided a reliable early-warning signal about recessions, but it can be too early to drive asset-allocation decisions for a manager judged on relative returns. The curve moves in Tables 3 and 4 offer more timely implications for duration positioning within fixed-income portfolios across the fed funds rate cycle. It comes as no surprise that Treasuries perform better when the Fed is cutting rates (Phases III and IV) than they do when the Fed is hiking them (Phases I and II). Their returns should be inversely correlated with the direction of rates, and longer-maturity instruments should exhibit greater sensitivity to changes in the fed funds rate (Table 5). Table 5Treasuries And The Fed Funds Rate Cycle Keep Calm And Carry On Keep Calm And Carry On Overweight duration within bond portfolios from when the Fed stops hiking rates until it stops cutting them; underweight duration when it’s actively hiking. Expanding the fed funds rate cycle to account for active hiking, active easing, and the pre-hiking/pre-cutting limbo periods makes the duration-positioning road map clearer. Treasuries lose ground in real terms when the Fed is actively hiking, with longer-maturity instruments bearing the brunt (Table 6). They deliver in a big way when the Fed is actively easing (Phase III and Phase IV(a)), with the Barclays Bloomberg Long Treasury Index posting double-digit annualized total returns. Longer Treasuries shoot out the lights once the Fed stops hiking (Phase II (b)), and they generate real total returns that compare favorably with bull-market equities when aggregating Phase II(b)’s pre-easing results with active-easing Phases III and IV(a). Table 6Treasuries And The Expanded Fed Funds Rate Cycle Keep Calm And Carry On Keep Calm And Carry On Our terminal and equilibrium fed funds rate estimates are admittedly far from the consensus. Markets are skeptical of the FOMC’s one-more-hike projection, much less our three, four, or more terminal-rate call. With “secular stagnation” searches ascendant on Google Trends (as of Friday morning, the partially complete March 24-30 period already had the most searches of any week over the last twelve months), our equilibrium estimate is also surely out of step with the herd. If the Fed is not done, however, history says it’s not yet time to overweight duration. If we’re right, Treasuries still have the full Phase II(a) ahead of them, and won’t be a buy until the Fed desists, sometime in 2020 or beyond. Investment Implications We have taken note of the inverted yield curve, but we will not overreact to it. While it has been a reliable recession indicator for the last half-century, it consistently sounds the alarm too early to merit immediate investment action. Neither the LEI nor our equilibrium fed funds rate model has yet corroborated its warning, and the bombed-out term premium may have biased it to inverting even sooner than it otherwise would. There’s no need for Paul Revere to ready his horse just yet. We did not anticipate that the 10-year Treasury yield would decline as much as it has. The extent of the Fed’s dovishness caught us off guard, and the 10-year Treasury is having a very hard time escaping the gravity of the decline in major-economy sovereign yields around the world. Our Global Fixed Income Strategy service (GFIS) points out that the global yield decline has become extended (Chart 6), and it contends that global bond prices incorporate too much pessimism about global economic momentum. The GFIS team also notes that there’s no guarantee stock prices will fall to align with bond yields – over the last couple years, stocks and bonds have recoupled following yield scares via bond, not equity, sell-offs (Chart 7). Chart 6Enough Is Enough Enough Is Enough Enough Is Enough Chart 7Equities Have Been Smarter Than Bonds The Last Few Years Equities Have Been Smarter Than Bonds The Last Few Years Equities Have Been Smarter Than Bonds The Last Few Years We therefore remain constructive on the economy and financial markets, and advise that balanced portfolios should still maintain exposure to riskier assets. Much of that view depends on Chinese authorities relaxing their deleveraging campaign, global trade tensions easing, and some hint of green shoots appearing in the rest of the world. If those elements of our base-case scenario fail to materialize, we will likely become more cautious. We are not happy that the vindication of our high-conviction view on the terminal fed funds rate has been indefinitely delayed, but the silver lining of the Fed’s dovish surprise is that the bull market in equities and other risk assets has been granted an open-ended extension.   Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 Please see the U.S. Investment Strategy Special Report, “How Much Longer Can The Bull Market Last?,” published August 13, 2018. Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Long-term bond yields can be decomposed into the expected path of short-term rates and a term premium, which compensates an investor for the uncertainties that can arise over the extended time period that s/he is locking up his/her money by buying a longer-maturity instrument.
Highlights Global equities and other risk assets will trade sideways with elevated volatility over the coming weeks before grinding higher for the remainder of the year, as global growth finally accelerates after a series of false starts.  We now see the Fed raising rates more slowly than we had previously envisioned, but ultimately having to scramble to hike rates in order to quell inflation. The fed funds rate will probably plateau at 4% in 2021, implying nine quarter-point hikes more than the market is currently discounting.   Over a 12-month horizon, investors should overweight global equities, underweight government bonds, and maintain a neutral allocation to cash. The dollar will peak in the second quarter and then weaken over the remainder of the year and into 2020, before starting to strengthen again late next year. Investors should prepare to temporarily upgrade EM and European stocks over the coming weeks, while increasing exposure to cyclical equity sectors. Industrial metals and oil will strengthen over the course of the year. Gold should be bought on any dip. Investors should begin to de-risk their portfolios in late-2020 in anticipation of a recession in 2021. Chart 001   Feature Here We Go Again? After having become more defensive last June, we turned bullish on stocks following the December post-FOMC meeting plunge. As stocks continued to rebound, we tempered our optimism. In the beginning of March, we wrote that “having rallied since the start of the year, global stocks will likely enter a ‘dead zone’ over the next six-to-eight weeks as investors nervously await the proverbial green shoots to sprout.”1 Last Friday’s release of disappointing European PMI data poured some herbicide on the green shoots thesis. Germany’s manufacturing PMI hit a six-year low, with the new orders component registering the weakest reading since the Great Recession. This took the 10-year German bund yield into negative territory for the first time since 2016. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield also fell to a 15-month low, causing the 3-month/10-year curve to invert. Historically, an inverted yield curve has been a reliable predictor of U.S. recessions (Chart 1). Chart 1Yield Curve Inversions, Recessions, And The Term Premium Yield Curve Inversions, Recessions, And The Term Premium Yield Curve Inversions, Recessions, And The Term Premium President Trump’s decision to appoint TV commentator Stephen Moore to the Fed’s Board of Governors did not help matters. Recommended by fellow supply-side “economist” Larry Kudlow, Moore is best known for dismissing concerns over the state of the housing market in 2007, his spot-on 2010 prediction that QE would cause hyperinflation, and his belief that the Trump tax cuts would lead to a smaller budget deficit. Global Growth Will Accelerate In The Second Half Of The Year Given all these worrisome developments, is it time to turn cyclically bearish on the economic outlook and risk assets again? We do not think so. While the next few weeks could be challenging for equities – a risk that our MacroQuant model is currently flagging – sentiment should improve as global growth finally accelerates after a series of false starts.  Indeed, some positive signs are already visible: The diffusion index of our global leading economic indicator, which tracks the share of countries with rising LEIs, has moved higher (Chart 2). It leads the global LEI. Service sector PMIs have also generally improved, suggesting that the weakness in global growth remains concentrated in trade and manufacturing. And even on the trade front, a few forward-looking indicators such as the Baltic Dry Index and the weekly Harpex shipping index, which measures global container shipping activity, have bounced off their lows. We would downplay the signal from the yield curve, as it currently is severely distorted by a negative term premium. If the 10-year Treasury term premium were back to where it was in 2004, the 3-month/10-year slope would be more than 200 bps steeper, and nobody would be talking about this issue. In fact, given today’s term premium, the curve would have almost certainly inverted in 1995. Anyone who got out of stocks back then would have missed out on one of the greatest bull markets in history. It should also go without saying that some of the decline in the U.S. 10-year yield reflects a positive development: The Fed has turned more dovish! If one looks at the 10-year/30-year portion of the yield curve, it has actually steepened. This is a sign that the market is seeing the Fed’s actions as being reflationary in nature. There is no clear causal mechanism by which an inverted yield curve slows economic activity, apart from it potentially becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy where the yield-curve inversion scares investors, thereby leading to a tightening in financial conditions (Chart 3). Such “doom loops” are conceptually possible, but as we discussed earlier this year, they are unlikely to occur in the current environment.2 At any rate, financial conditions have eased since the start of the year. This should boost growth in the coming months.   Chart 2Global Growth May Be ##br##Starting To Stabilize Global Growth May Be Starting To Stabilize Global Growth May Be Starting To Stabilize Chart 3Easier Financial Conditions Since The Start Of The Year Bode Well For Global Growth Easier Financial Conditions Since The Start Of The Year Bode Well For Global Growth Easier Financial Conditions Since The Start Of The Year Bode Well For Global Growth Chinese Credit Growth Set To Rise Global growth has been weighed down by a slowing Chinese economy. Last year’s deleveraging campaign led to a significant deceleration in investment spending, which had negative repercussions for capital equipment and commodity producers all over the world (Chart 4). Historically, China has loosened the reins on the financial sector whenever credit growth has fallen towards nominal GDP growth (Chart 5). It appears we have reached this point. Despite a weak seasonally-distorted February print, credit growth has finally accelerated on a year-over-year basis. Chart 4China: The Deleveraging Campaign Had Adverse Effects On Investment Spending China: The Deleveraging Campaign Had Adverse Effects On Investment Spending China: The Deleveraging Campaign Had Adverse Effects On Investment Spending Chart 5Historically, China Has Scaled Back On Deleveraging When Credit Growth Has Fallen Close To Nominal GDP Growth Historically, China Has Scaled Back On Deleveraging When Credit Growth Has Fallen Close To Nominal GDP Growth Historically, China Has Scaled Back On Deleveraging When Credit Growth Has Fallen Close To Nominal GDP Growth We do not expect Chinese credit growth to rise as much as in past releveraging cycles. However, this is because the economy is in better shape, not because there is some intrinsic constraint to increasing debt from current levels. China’s elevated savings rate has kept interest rates well below trend nominal GDP growth, which is the key determinant of debt sustainability (Chart 6).3 As long as the central government maintains an implicit guarantee on most local and corporate debt, as it is currently doing, default risk will remain minimal. In any case, given that total debt stands at 240% of GDP, even a one percentage-point increase in credit growth would generate a hefty 2.4% of GDP in credit stimulus. The Chinese credit impulse leads imports by about six-to-nine months (Chart 7). This bodes well for global trade in the second half of the year. Chart 6China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth Chart 7Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse   A Lull In The Trade War? A de-escalation in the trade war would help matters. As a self-professed master negotiator, Donald Trump needs to secure a deal with China before next year‘s presidential election, while also convincing American voters that the agreement was concluded on favorable terms for the United States. Reaching a deal with China early on in his term would have been risky for Trump if it had failed to bring down the bilateral trade deficit – an entirely likely outcome given how pro-cyclical U.S. fiscal policy is. At this point, however, Trump could crow about making a great deal with China while reassuring voters that the product of his brilliance will be realized only after he has been re-elected. Thus, the likelihood that Trump will seek to strike a deal has risen. For their part, the Chinese want as much negotiating leverage as they can muster. This means being able to convincingly demonstrate that their economy is strong enough to handle the repercussions from turning down a trade deal that fails to serve their interests. Since the credit cycle is the dominant driver of Chinese growth, this requires putting the deleveraging campaign on the backburner. Faster Global Growth And Stronger Domestic Demand Will Benefit Europe Stronger Chinese growth will help the European export sector later this year. The export component of the Chinese Caixin PMI has moved up from its lows. It leads the euro area PMI by about three months. Meanwhile, euro area domestic demand will benefit from a more accommodative fiscal policy and lower bond yields. The decline in bond yields will be especially helpful to Italy. The spike in yields and loss of business confidence following the election of a populist government last March plunged the economy into recession (Chart 8). Now that the 10-year BTP yield has fallen more than 100 bps from its highs, the Italian economy should start to perk up. The ECB will not raise rates this year even if domestic growth speeds up, but the market will probably price in a few rate hikes in 2020 and beyond. This will allow for a modest re-steepening of yield curves in core European bond markets, which should be positive for long-suffering bank profits. Brexit remains a concern. The ongoing saga has reached the farcical stage where: 1) The U.K. has voted to leave the EU; but 2) Parliament has voted to stay in the EU unless it reaches a satisfactory deal with Brussels; while 3) rejecting the only deal with Brussels that was on offer. Given that most British voters no longer want Brexit (Chart 9), we think that the government will kick the proverbial can down the road until a second referendum is announced or a “soft Brexit” deal is formulated. Either outcome would be welcomed by markets. Chart 8Italian Bond Yields Are A Headwind No More Italian Bond Yields Are A Headwind No More Italian Bond Yields Are A Headwind No More Chart 9U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win   What Will The Fed Do? Chart 10 Last year’s “Christmas Crash” clearly shifted the Fed’s reaction function in a more dovish direction. We do not expect Jay Powell to raise rates over the next few months, but a reacceleration in global growth is likely to prompt the Fed to tighten anew in December. The Fed will continue raising rates once per quarter in 2020, before accelerating the pace of tightening in 2021 in response to rising inflation. In all, we see the fed funds rate increasing to around 4% by the end of this cycle. This represents nine quarter-point hikes more than the market is currently discounting (Chart 10). We were stopped out of our short fed funds futures trade, but we recommend that clients short the June-2021 fed funds futures or a similar instrument. The U.S. Economy: Great Again Fundamentally, the U.S. economy is on solid ground and can handle higher interest rates. Unlike a decade ago, the housing market is in good shape (Chart 11). The homeowner vacancy rate stands near a record low. Judging by FICO scores, the quality of mortgage lending remains high. The labor market is also firm, with job openings hitting another record high in February (Chart 12). The combination of a healthy housing and labor market is invariably good for consumers. Chart 11U.S. Housing Fundamentals Are Solid U.S. Housing Fundamentals Are Solid U.S. Housing Fundamentals Are Solid Chart 12The U.S. Labor Market Is Firm The U.S. Labor Market Is Firm The U.S. Labor Market Is Firm Chart 13 The personal savings rate currently stands at 7.6%, notably higher than one would expect based on the ratio of household net worth-to-disposable income (Chart 13). A decline in the savings rate would allow consumer spending to increase more quickly than income. With the latter being propped up by rising wages, this will be bullish for consumption. Capital spending intentions have dipped over the past few months, but remain elevated by historic standards (Chart 14). The real nonresidential capital stock has grown by an average of only 1.7% since the start of the recovery, down from 3% in the pre-recession period (Chart 15). A cyclical upswing in productivity growth, rising labor costs, and low levels of spare capacity should all motivate businesses to invest in new plant and equipment. Chart 14Capital Spending Intentions Have Softened, But Remain Elevated Capital Spending Intentions Have Softened, But Remain Elevated Capital Spending Intentions Have Softened, But Remain Elevated Chart 15There Is Room For More U.S. Capital Investment There Is Room For More U.S. Capital Investment There Is Room For More U.S. Capital Investment   Corporate Debt: How Much Of A Risk? Chart 16U.S. Corporate Debt Is Not Extreme By Global Standards U.S. Corporate Debt Is Not Extreme By Global Standards U.S. Corporate Debt Is Not Extreme By Global Standards Corporate debt levels have increased significantly in recent years, while underwriting standards have deteriorated, as evidenced by the proliferation of covenant-lite loans. Nevertheless, the situation is far from dire. Relative to other countries, U.S. corporate debt is quite low (Chart 16). At 143% of GDP, corporate debt in France is twice that of the United States. This is not to suggest that everything is fine in the French corporate sector; but the fact is that France has not had a corporate debt crisis. This signals that the U.S. is not at imminent risk of one either. Netting out cash, U.S. corporate debt as a share of GDP is at the same level it was in 1989, a year in which the fed funds rate was close to nine percent. The ratio of corporate net debt-to-EBITD remains reasonably low. The interest coverage ratio is above its historic average. In addition, corporate assets have also risen quite briskly over the past few years, which has kept the corporate debt-to-asset ratio broadly stable (Chart 17). The corporate sector financial balance – the difference between corporate income and spending – is still in positive territory at 1% of GDP. Every recession in the past 50 years began when the corporate sector financial balance was in deficit (Chart 18). Chart 17U.S. Corporate Debt: How High? U.S. Corporate Debt: How High? U.S. Corporate Debt: How High? Chart 18Corporate Sector Financial Balance Still In Surplus Corporate Sector Financial Balance Still In Surplus Corporate Sector Financial Balance Still In Surplus Unlike mortgages, which are often held by leveraged institutions, most corporate debt is held by unleveraged players such as pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, and ETFs. Bank loans account for only 18% of nonfinancial corporate sector debt, down from 40% in 1980 (Chart 19). The share of leveraged loans held by banks has declined from about 25% a decade ago to less than 10% today. Moreover, banks today hold much more high-quality capital than in the past (Chart 20). This makes corporate debt less systemically important for the economy.   Chart 19Banks Have Reduced Their Exposure To The Corporate Sector Banks Have Reduced Their Exposure To The Corporate Sector Banks Have Reduced Their Exposure To The Corporate Sector Chart 20U.S. Banks Are Well Capitalized U.S. Banks Are Well Capitalized U.S. Banks Are Well Capitalized One of the reasons we turned more bullish on risk assets in December was because stocks had plunged and corporate spreads widened without much follow-through in financial stress indices. For example, the infamous TED spread barely budged (Chart 21). Chart 21TED Spreads Are Well Behaved, Indicating No Major Signs Of Financial Stress TED Spreads Are Well Behaved, Indicating No Major Signs Of Financial Stress TED Spreads Are Well Behaved, Indicating No Major Signs Of Financial Stress Everyone Agrees With Larry Given the lack of major imbalances in the U.S. economy, why do investors believe that the Fed cannot raise rates further even though the Fed funds rate in real terms is barely above zero? The answer is that investors appear to have bought into Larry Summers’ secular stagnation thesis, which posits that the neutral rate of interest is much lower today than it was in the past. We have some sympathy for this thesis, but it is important to remember that it is a theory about the long-term determinants of interest rates such as productivity and demographic trends. The theory says little about the cyclical drivers of interest rates, including the amount of spare capacity in the economy, the stance of fiscal policy, credit growth, and wage trends. Earlier this decade, when we were still very bullish on bonds, one could have plausibly argued that the economy needed extremely low interest rates: The output gap was still large; the deleveraging cycle had just begun; home and equity prices were depressed; wage growth was anemic; and fiscal policy had turned restrictive after a brief burst of stimulus during the Great Recession. Far From Neutral? All of the forces mentioned above have either fully or partially reversed course over the past few years. Take fiscal policy as one example. The IMF estimates that the U.S. structural budget deficit averaged 3.3% of GDP in 2014-15. In 2019-20, the IMF reckons the deficit will average 5.6% of GDP. To what extent has easier fiscal policy raised the U.S. neutral rate of interest? Let us conservatively assume that every $1 of additional fiscal stimulus adds $1 to aggregate demand. In this case, fiscal policy has added 2.3% of GDP to aggregate demand over the past five years. Suppose that a one-percentage point increase in aggregate demand raises the neutral rate of interest by 1%, which is in line with the specification of the Taylor Rule that former Fed Chair Janet Yellen favored. This implies that fiscal policy alone has raised the neutral rate by over two percentage points. The discussion above suggests that cyclical factors may have pushed up the neutral rate considerably, even if long-term structural factors are still dragging it down. Since the Fed is supposed to set interest rates with an eye on what is appropriate for the economy over the next year or two, rates may end up staying too low for too long. This will cause the economy to overheat, eventually leading to a surge in inflation. The Inflation Boogeyman The good news is that none of our favorite indicators point to a major imminent inflationary upswing (Chart 22): Despite higher tariffs, consumer import price inflation has slowed; core intermediate producer price inflation has decelerated; the prices paid components of the ISM and regional Fed surveys have plunged; inflation surprise indices have rolled over; and both survey and market-based measures of inflation expectations remain below where they were last summer. In keeping with these developments, BCA’s proprietary Pipeline Inflation Indicator has fallen to a two-and-a-half-year low. Wage growth has accelerated, but productivity growth has increased by even more. As a result, unit labor cost inflation has been coming down since the middle of last year. Unit labor costs lead core CPI inflation by about 12 months (Chart 23). This implies that consumer price inflation is unlikely to reach uncomfortably high levels at least until the second half of next year. Chart 22No Symptoms of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... No Symptoms of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... No Symptoms of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... Chart 23... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being ... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being ... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being At that point, risks are high that inflation will move up. This could force the Fed to start raising rates aggressively in early-2021, a course of action that will push up the dollar and cause equities and spread product to sell off. The resulting tightening in financial conditions will probably plunge the U.S. and the rest of the world into recession in mid-to-late 2021.   Stay Bullish Global Equities For Now, Turn Defensive Late Next Year Chart 24Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted The two-stage Fed tightening cycle discussed above – gradual rate hikes starting in December and continuing into 2020, and more aggressive hikes thereafter in response to rising inflation – shapes our investment views over the next few years. The Key Financial Market Forecasts Chart at the beginning of this publication provides a rough sketch of where we think the main asset classes are heading. We suspect that equities and other risk assets will be able to digest the first stage of rate tightening, albeit with heightened volatility around the time when the Fed starts preparing the market for another hike later this year. Unlike last September, earnings estimates are much more conservative. Bottom-up estimates foresee EPS rising by 3.9% in the U.S. and 5.4% in the rest of the world in 2019 (Chart 24). The combination of faster growth, easier financial conditions, and ongoing share buybacks implies some upside to these numbers. Perhaps more importantly, unlike in September, the Fed will only start hiking rates if the economy is performing well. Powell erred in saying that “rates were a long way from neutral” just when the U.S. economy was starting to slow. Had he uttered those words when U.S. growth was still accelerating, investors would have probably disregarded them. Jay Powell won’t make the same mistake again. Rather, he will make a different one: He will let the economy overheat to the point where the Fed finds itself clearly behind the curve and forced to scramble to catch up. The resulting stagflationary environment – where growth is slowing due to a shortage of available workers and inflation is on the upswing – will be toxic for equities and other risk assets. While it is difficult to be precise about timing, we recommend that investors maintain a modestly pro-risk stance over the next 12-to-18 months. However, they should pare back exposure to equities and spread product late next year before the Fed ramps up the pace of rate hikes. Prepare To Temporarily Upgrade International Stocks The U.S. stock market tends to be “low beta” compared to other bourses. If global growth accelerates in the second half of this year, international stocks will outperform their U.S. counterparts. We sold our put on the EEM ETF for a gain of 104% on Jan 3rd, and now recommend being outright long EM equities. We will be looking to upgrade both EM and European equities to overweight in the coming weeks in currency-unhedged terms once we see more confirmatory evidence of a global growth revival. We have mixed feeling about Japanese stocks. Stronger global growth will benefit Japanese multinationals, but firms focused on the domestic market may suffer if the government goes ahead and raises the sales tax in October. We would hold off upgrading Japanese stocks for the time being. At the global sector level, we pared back our defensive tilt earlier this year, after having turned more cautious last summer. We recommend that investors overweight energy and industrials. We are also warming up to financials and materials. The former will benefit from a steepening in yield curves later this year as well as from faster credit growth. The latter will gain from a more robust Chinese economy. We would maintain a neutral allocation to health care, info tech, and communication services. Real estate and utilities will both suffer once bond yields start moving higher. Classically defensive sectors such as consumer staples will also underperform.  Global Bond Yields Likely To Rise Global bond yields are likely to rise over the next 12-to-18 months as growth surprises on the upside. Yields will continue rising into the first half of 2021 as inflation accelerates. Unlike in past risk-off episodes, Treasurys will not provide much of a safe haven in the lead up to the next recession. As noted above, one of the reasons that bond yields are so low today is because the term premium is very depressed. The cumulative effect of Fed bond purchases has probably depressed the term premium, but the bigger impact has stemmed from the fact that investors see Treasurys as an insurance policy against various macro risks. Investors are accustomed to thinking that when an economy slides into recession, equity prices will fall, the housing market will deteriorate, wage gains will recede, job prospects will worsen, but at least the value of their bond portfolio will go up! The problem with this reasoning is that it is only valid when the Fed is hiking rates in response to stronger growth. If the Fed is hiking rates because inflation is getting out of hand, Treasury yields could end up rising while stocks are falling. This was actually the norm between the late-1960s and early-2000s (Chart 25). Chart 25Treasury Yields Could Rise While Stocks Fall Treasury Yields Could Rise While Stocks Fall Treasury Yields Could Rise While Stocks Fall If Treasurys lose their safe-haven status, the term premium will move higher. A vicious circle could develop where rising bond yields weaken the stock market, causing investors to flood out of both stocks and bonds and into cash, leading to even higher bond yields and lower equity prices. Investors should maintain a modest short duration stance towards Treasurys over the next 12 months, and then move to maximum underweight duration in mid-2020 as inflation starts to break out. Going long duration will only make sense once the Fed has raised interest rates into restrictive territory and the economy slides into recession. That is not likely to occur until the second half of 2021. Regionally, we favor European, Canadian, Australian, New Zealand, and especially Japanese government bonds over the next 12 months relative to U.S. Treasurys. The U.S. economy is at the greatest risk of overheating. In currency-hedged terms, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield is among the lowest in the world (Table 1). Japanese 10-year bonds, for example, offer 2.72% in currency-hedged terms, while German bunds command 2.94%. Table 1Bond Markets Across The Developed World Second Quarter 2019 Strategy Outlook: From Dead Zone To End Zone Second Quarter 2019 Strategy Outlook: From Dead Zone To End Zone   The U.S. Dollar: Heading Towards A Soft Patch Gauging the outlook for the U.S. dollar is a bit tricky. Even though the Fed will only be raising rates gradually over the next 12 months, it will still hike more than what is discounted by markets. With most other central banks still sitting on the sidelines, short-term rate differentials are likely to move in favor of the greenback. That said, aside from Japan, stronger global growth will likely prompt investors to price in a few more rate hikes in other developed economies in 2020 and beyond. Consequently, long-term yield differentials may not widen by as much as short-term differentials. Perhaps more importantly, the U.S. dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it moves in the opposite direction of global growth (Chart 26). This countercyclicality stems from the fact that the U.S. economy is more geared towards services than manufacturing compared with the rest of the world (Chart 27). As such, when global growth accelerates, capital tends to flow from the U.S. to the rest of the world, translating into more demand for foreign currency and less demand for dollars. Chart 26The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Chart 27The U.S. Is A Low-Beta Play On Global Growth The U.S. Is A Low-Beta Play On Global Growth The U.S. Is A Low-Beta Play On Global Growth If global growth picks up in the back half of this year, the dollar will likely peak in the second quarter and weaken over the remainder of 2019 and into 2020. The dollar’s trajectory may thus follow a similar course to the one in 2017, a year in which the Fed raised rates four times, but the broad trade-weighted dollar nevertheless managed to weaken by 7%. Chart 28The Yen Is A Risk-Off Currency The Yen Is A Risk-Off Currency The Yen Is A Risk-Off Currency As was the case in 2017, the euro will probably gain ground later this year against the U.S. dollar as will most EM and commodity currencies. However, just as the Japanese yen failed to participate in the rally that most currencies experienced against the dollar in 2017, it will struggle to gain much traction against the greenback. The yen is a “risk-off” currency and thus tends to fall whenever global risk assets rally (Chart 28). In addition, the yen will suffer if global bond yields move up relative to JGB yields later this year, as will likely be the case if the BoJ is forced to prolong its yield curve control regime in the face of tighter fiscal policy. We would go long EUR/JPY on any break below 123. After First Weakening, The Dollar Will Rally Again Late Next Year As the U.S. economy encounters ever more supply-side constraints in 2020, growth will slow and inflation will accelerate. The Fed will respond by hiking rates more quickly than inflation is rising. The resulting increase in real interest rates will put upward pressure on the dollar. In this stagflationary environment, equities will tumble and credit spreads will widen. Tighter U.S. financial conditions will reverberate around the world, causing global growth to decelerate even more than it would have otherwise. This will further turbocharge the dollar. The greenback will only peak once the Fed starts cutting rates in late-2021. Commodities: Getting More Bullish A weaker dollar later this year, along with stronger global growth led by a resurgent China, will be bullish for commodities. BCA’s commodity strategists recommend going long copper at current prices. They are also maintaining their bullish bias towards oil. They expect Brent to average $75/bbl this year and $80/bbl in 2020. Higher U.S. shale output will be offset by delays in building out deepwater export facilities, which will keep supply fairly tight. In past reports, we discussed the merits of buying gold as an inflation hedge. However, we held back from doing so because of our bullish dollar view. Now that we see the dollar peaking over the next few months, we would be buyers of gold on any break below $1275/ounce.   Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Gretzky’s Doctrine,” dated March 1, 2019. 2      Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Low Odds Of An FCI Doom Loop,” dated January 4, 2019. 3      Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Is There Really Too Much Government Debt In The World?” dated February 22, 2019. Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Chart 29 Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights For the Eurostoxx50 to outperform the S&P500, the big euro area banks have to outperform the big U.S. tech stocks. Tactically overweight Eurostoxx50 versus S&P500 as well as other pro-cyclical positions such as overweight EM versus DM… …but prepare to take profits in the summer months. In the medium term, the euro area versus U.S. long-bond yield spread has plenty of scope to compress from its current -180 bps… …and EUR/USD has the scope to head higher. Feature Without a shadow of a doubt, the chart that causes the greatest stir among our clients is the Chart of the Week. It shows that one of the biggest investment decisions, the choice between the euro area and U.S. equity markets, reduces to the choice between the three large euro area banks – Santander, BNP Paribas, and ING – and the three U.S. tech behemoths – Apple, Microsoft, and Google.  Chart of the WeekEurostoxx50 Vs. S&P500 Is Just 3 Banks Vs. 3 Tech Stocks! Eurostoxx50 Vs. S&P500 Is Just 3 Banks Vs. 3 Tech Stocks! Eurostoxx50 Vs. S&P500 Is Just 3 Banks Vs. 3 Tech Stocks! Clients are simultaneously amazed and unsettled by this manifestation of the Pareto Principle, which states that the vast majority of an effect is explained by a tiny minority of causes. Financials feature large in the Eurostoxx50 while tech giants dominate the S&P500. But the amazing thing is that almost all of the relative performance can be explained by just three stocks in each market. The vast majority of an effect is explained by a tiny minority of causes.  The chart creates a cognitive dissonance. What about the things that are supposed to matter for stock market selection: relative economic growth, profits growth, margins, valuations and geopolitics? The answer is that all of these are interesting areas of study, but they are mere details in the big picture. For the Eurostoxx50 to outperform the S&P500, the big euro area banks have to outperform the big U.S. tech stocks (Chart I-2). Period.  Chart 2For The Eurostoxx50 To Outperform The S&P500, Euro Area Banks Have To Outperform U.S. Tech For The Eurostoxx50 To Outperform The S&P500, Euro Area Banks Have To Outperform U.S. Tech For The Eurostoxx50 To Outperform The S&P500, Euro Area Banks Have To Outperform U.S. Tech Our view is that in the immediate future this is certainly possible, but that over the long haul it will prove to be a very tall order. When The Mean Is Meaningless The structural performances of vastly different equity sectors can diverge for a very long time. How long? Japanese banks have underperformed U.S. tech for thirty years and counting! In this situation, mean-reversion and ‘standard deviations’ from the mean become meaningless concepts (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Japanese Banks Have Underperformed U.S. Tech For Thirty Years And Counting! Japanese Banks Have Underperformed U.S. Tech For Thirty Years And Counting! Japanese Banks Have Underperformed U.S. Tech For Thirty Years And Counting! The statistical concept of a standard deviation is only meaningful if the underlying data is stationary, which is to say mean-reverting. If it isn’t, then it is impossible to say that a sector price or valuation is stretched either versus another sector, or versus its own history.  One problem is that sector performances and valuations undergo phase-shifts when they enter a different economic climate. The structural outlook for bank profits experiences a phase-shift when a debt super-cycle ends. Therefore, comparing a bank valuation after a debt super-cycle with the valuation during a debt super-cycle is as meaningless as comparing your height as an adult to your height when you were a child! Sector performances and valuations undergo phase-shifts when they enter a different economic climate. To which, a frequent riposte is: within the same sector, euro area companies appear cheaper than their counterparts elsewhere in the world. But again, this apparent value is deceptive because it is simply an adjustment for the so-called ‘currency translation effect’ and the anticipated long-term moves in exchange rates. If investors anticipate the euro ultimately to strengthen – because they see that it is trading well below purchasing power parity – then a multinational company listed on a euro area bourse will suffer a future headwind to its mixed-currency denominated profits when they are translated back to a stronger euro. To discount this anticipated headwind, the euro area multinational must trade cheaper compared with a peer in, say, the U.S. But the cheapness is a false impression. Pulling together these complexities of sector effects, phase-shifts in sector valuations and currency effects, making the big call between Europe and America on the basis of performance or valuation mean-reversion is dangerous. Instead, we come back to the basic question: should you tilt towards euro area financials or towards U.S. tech? Own Banks For The Short Term Only Japanese financial sector profits peaked in 1990 and stand at less than half that level today. Euro area financial sector profits peaked in 2007, and are tracking the Japanese experience with a 17-year lag. If euro area financial profits continue to follow in Japan’s footsteps, expect no sustained growth through the next 17 years (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Euro Area Financial Profits Are Following Japanese Footsteps Euro Area Financial Profits Are Following Japanese Footsteps Euro Area Financial Profits Are Following Japanese Footsteps In a post credit boom era, banks lose the lifeblood of their business: credit creation. This loss becomes a multi-decade headwind to financial sector profit growth and share price performance. Bank profits are dependent on two other drivers. One is operational leverage – the amount of equity held against the balance sheet. More stringent European regulation is making this a headwind too. Banks have to hold more equity capital against assets, diluting their profitability. The other driver is the net interest margin – the difference between rates received on loans and rates paid on deposits. In this regard, both fintech and the blockchain are likely to create a further headwind to bank profitability. Japan’s experience suggests that euro area financials will struggle to outperform structurally. Admittedly, U.S. tech may also face its own headwinds or phase-shift, most obviously antitrust lawsuits to counter its near-monopoly status. But even allowing for this, Japan’s experience suggests that euro area financials will struggle to outperform structurally. Rather, financials is a sector to play for outperformance phases lasting no more than a few quarters. Last autumn, we noted that short-term credit impulses in the major economies were flipping from a sharp down-oscillation into an up-oscillation phase (Chart I-5). On that basis, we recommended a tactical overweight to Eurostoxx50 versus S&P500 as well as other pro-cyclical positions such as overweight EM versus DM. Those pro-cyclical sector positions have broadly succeeded, but they are still appropriate given that up-oscillation phases very reliably last around nine months. Chart I-5Short-Term Credit Impulses Have Flipped To Up-Oscillations Short-Term Credit Impulses Have Flipped To Up-Oscillations Short-Term Credit Impulses Have Flipped To Up-Oscillations The caveat is: prepare to take profits in the summer months. The Fed Is Now At ‘Neutral’, But Where Is The ECB? Last week, the Federal Reserve confirmed that “the Federal funds rate (at 2.5 percent) is now in the broad range of estimates of neutral – the rate that tends neither to stimulate nor to restrain the economy.”  This begs the question: where is the ECB policy rate (now at 0 percent) relative to its neutral? Our very high conviction view is that the ECB policy rate is well below neutral. Financials is a sector to play for outperformance phases lasting no more than a few quarters. The twenty year life of the euro captures multiple manias and crises, some centred in Europe, some in the U.S. Through these twenty years, the euro area versus U.S. long bond yield spread has averaged -50 bps1 (Chart I-6). Over this same period, the euro area versus U.S. annual inflation differential has also averaged -50 bps (Chart I-7). Ergo, the real interest rate differential has averaged zero. Meaning, the ex-post neutral real interest rates in the euro area and the U.S. have been exactly the same. Chart I-6The Euro Area Vs. U.S. Yield Spread Has Averaged -50 Bps... The Euro Area Vs. U.S. Yield Spread Has Averaged -50 Bps... The Euro Area Vs. U.S. Yield Spread Has Averaged -50 Bps... Chart I-7...The Euro Area Vs. U.S. Inflation Spread Has Also Averaged -50 Bps ...The Euro Area Vs. U.S. Inflation Spread Has Also Averaged -50 Bps ...The Euro Area Vs. U.S. Inflation Spread Has Also Averaged -50 Bps With little difference in the neutral real rates over the past two decades, is there a valid reason to expect a difference in the future? An obvious response is the fragility of the euro area’s banking system will require the ECB to persist with its zero interest rate policy for years. In Germany and France, bank lending is healthy, and could easily weather modestly tighter monetary policy. In fact, the evidence suggests that this fear is exaggerated. In Germany and France, bank lending is healthy, and could easily weather modestly tighter monetary policy (Chart I-8). The problem has been localised in Italy, where bank lending relapsed once again in 2018. Chart I-8Bank Lending Is Healthy In Germany And France Bank Lending Is Healthy In Germany And France Bank Lending Is Healthy In Germany And France However, on closer examination this was a direct result of political tensions. Recently, Italian bank lending has been a very tight (inverse) function of the Italian bond yield. The BTP yield spiked last year when Rome escalated its budget spat with Brussels, and bank lending took a hard hit. But now that the Italian bond yield has retraced, lending should recover (Chart I-9). Chart I-9Italian Bank Lending Should Recover Now That The Bond Yield Has Come Down Italian Bank Lending Should Recover Now That The Bond Yield Has Come Down Italian Bank Lending Should Recover Now That The Bond Yield Has Come Down The central issue is can the U.S. policy rate – which is at neutral – and the ECB policy – which is below neutral – diverge much from here? Our high conviction answer is no. Therefore, in the medium term, the euro area versus U.S. long-bond yield spread has plenty of scope to compress from its current -180 bps, one way or the other (Chart I-10). Chart I-10Can Interest Rate Expectations Diverge Much From Here? Can Interest Rate Expectations Diverge Much From Here? Can Interest Rate Expectations Diverge Much From Here? It also implies that after remaining range-bound in the immediate future, EUR/USD has the scope to head higher. Dhaval Joshi, Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading System This week’s recommended trade is to go long SEK/NOK, as it is close to the limit of tight liquidity that has signaled many previous technical reversals in this currency cross. Set a profit target of 1.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, the on-going rally in government bonds caused the short position in 30-year T-bonds to hit its stop-loss. This leaves us with five open positions. Long SEK/NOK. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment’s fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-11 Long SEK/NOK Long SEK/NOK The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report “Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model,” dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Calculated from the over 10-year government bond yield: euro area average, weighted by sovereign issue size, less U.S. Fractal Trading System Recommendations Asset Allocation Equity Regional and Country Allocation Equity Sector Allocation Bond and Interest Rate Allocation Currency and Other Allocation Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Highlights Driven by its fear that deflation is a more intractable danger than inflation, the Federal Reserve has enshrined its pause for the remainder of 2019 in order to lift inflation expectations. Since the U.S. business cycle expansion is not over, the Federal Reserve’s plan to put policy on hold this year raises the odds that the economy will overheat. Global growth is set to bottom during the second quarter in response to easier financial conditions. Accommodative policy, rebounding global economic activity and a softening dollar will boost risk asset prices during the remainder of the year. Safe-haven bonds, including Treasurys, will underperform cash over the coming 12 to 18 months. The rally in risk assets will ultimately prove the last hurrah as the Fed will resume tightening later this year or in 2020, and a bear market lies down the road. Only investors with tactical investment horizons should aggressively play this rally. Those with longer investment horizons should use this rally to lighten up their exposure to risk. Feature Introduction Following the introduction of the word “patience” into the Federal Reserve’s lexicon, a move lower in the so-called Fed dots was to be anticipated. The FOMC now expects no rate increases in 2019 and only one hike in 2020. The interest rate market remains skeptical that the Fed will be able to deliver on its forecast. For now, the OIS curve is pricing in a 75% probability of a cut this year, and rates at 1.9% by the end of 2020. With the 10-year/3-month yield curve inverting last week and the U.S. Leading Economic Indicator still decelerating, it is no wonder that investors are betting on the Fed becoming ever more dovish (Chart I-1). BCA is inclined to take the Fed at its word – the next move will be a hike, not a cut. This call rests on our view of the business cycle: The fed funds rate is still somewhat below neutral, U.S. economic activity can expand further, and global growth is likely to trough soon. The current dovish inclination of global central banks will only nurture the cycle a little bit longer. Consequently, we continue to recommend a positive stance on stocks for the coming quarters, while keeping in mind that the cycle is long in the tooth, and that beyond this last climb lies a significant bear market. The U.S. Business Cycle Has Further To Run… The Fed remains data dependent, but this now means that depressed inflation expectations in the private sector need to be vanquished before the hiking can resume (Chart I-2). With the view that low realized inflation has curtailed expectations now common across major central banks, this implies that a temporary overshoot in actual core PCE will be tolerated in order to lift expectations. Chart I-1Worrisome Signs For Growth Worrisome Signs For Growth Worrisome Signs For Growth Chart I-2The Fed Wants To Lift Inflation Expectations The Fed Wants To Lift Inflation Expectations The Fed Wants To Lift Inflation Expectations   Since consumer prices are a lagging variable, lifting both realized and anticipated inflation will only be possible if we move ever further along the business cycle, further pressuring the economy. Our base case remains that the risk of a recession is low in 2019, and is even receding in 2020. First, U.S. credit-dependent cyclical spending currently constitutes only 25.3% of potential GDP. As Chart I-3 illustrates, this is in line with its historical average, and well below the levels recorded near the end of previous business cycles. This suggests that the amount of vulnerability caused by misallocated capital is not yet in line with previous cycles. It also indicates that the share of output generated by the sectors most sensitive to higher rates is also low. Chart I-3U.S. Cyclical Spending: Limited Signs Of Vulnerability U.S. Cyclical Spending: Limited Signs Of Vulnerability U.S. Cyclical Spending: Limited Signs Of Vulnerability Second, the consumer remains in good shape. Households have deleveraged, and debt-service payments relative to disposable income are still near multi-generational lows (Chart I-4). Moreover, thanks to a saving rate of 7.6%, consumer spending is likely to move in line or even outperform income growth. On this front, the outlook is also good. As Chart I-5 demonstrates, the link between wages and salaries relative to the employment-to-population ratio for prime-age workers – a measure of labor utilization unaffected by the demographic changes that have muddied the interpretation of the unemployment rate – is still as tight as it was 20 years ago. Thus, as long as the labor market does not suddenly collapse, wage growth will continue to accelerate, supporting household income and consumption.   Chart I-4Household Balance Sheets Are Solid Household Balance Sheets Are Solid Household Balance Sheets Are Solid Chart I-5 Third, at 0.4% of GDP, the fiscal thrust remains positive. In other words, fiscal policy will still add to GDP in 2019. Fourth, we do not see the traditional symptoms associated with a fed funds rate above neutral. After dipping sharply in the second half of 2018, mortgage for purchase applications are back near their cycle highs (Chart I-6). Moreover, the performance of homebuilders’ equities relative to the broad market has begun to rebound, which is inconsistent with a fed funds rate above neutral. Chart I-6Mortgage Applications Do Not Suggest Policy Is Tight Mortgage Applications Do Not Suggest Policy Is Tight Mortgage Applications Do Not Suggest Policy Is Tight Fifth, there is scope for the contribution from housing sector activity to morph from a negative to a positive. A fed funds rate below neutral historically is correlated with an improving housing market. Rising mortgage rates from 3.8% to 4.6% depressed home sales and construction output, and the fall in mortgage rates over the past x month 4.3% should stimulate housing activity (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Residential Activity Will Rebound This Year Residential Activity Will Rebound This Year Residential Activity Will Rebound This Year Bottom Line: U.S. first-quarter GDP growth will be dismal, but one quarter does not make a trend. The low degree of economic vulnerability in the U.S., and the likelihood that the fed funds rate will stay below neutral for a while suggest that growth should rebound to the 2-2.5% range and should remain above-trend for the remainder of 2019. … And Global Growth Will Soon Trough As the cliché goes, it is darkest before the dawn. This is a fitting description of the world economy outside the U.S. right now. Global trade is depressed, global PMIs are moribund and nothing feels good. But it is exactly when nothing is going well that one needs to wonder what may cause the outlook to turn for the better. Thankfully, green shoots are emerging. To begin with, central banks around the world have taken a more dovish slant. This dovish forward guidance is nurturing global activity via a significant easing in global financial conditions, which is undoing the severe brake-pumping imposed on global growth in the fourth quarter of 2018 (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Global Financial Conditions Are Easing Global Financial Conditions Are Easing Global Financial Conditions Are Easing This more dovish forward guidance has helped our Financial Liquidity Index, which sharply deteriorated through 2009, rebound. Historically, this presages an improvement in the BCA Global Leading Economic Indicator (Chart I-9). Improving liquidity conditions have already been reflected in lower real rates around the globe, creating a reflationary impulse. EM financial conditions are responding positively, pointing to an upcoming pick-up in industrial activity, as measured by our Global Nowcast (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Improving Global Liquidity Backdrop Improving Global Liquidity Backdrop Improving Global Liquidity Backdrop Chart I-10A Tailwind From EM? A Tailwind From EM? A Tailwind From EM? Our Global LEI diffusion Index has begun to reflect some of these developments. After forming a trough in 2018, more than 50% of the countries in our Global LEI are currently experiencing a sequential improvement in their LEIs. We are now entering the normal lag after which a broadening growth impulse converts into aggregate activity moving higher (Chart I-11). Most interestingly, investors do not seem to be anticipating such a rebound. There is therefore room for growth surprises around the world. Chart I-11Scope For Growth Surprises Scope For Growth Surprises Scope For Growth Surprises China has a role to play in this story, will likely morph from a headwind to global growth to a positive. Positive may be a strong word, but at the very least, we expect China to stop detracting from global growth. Premier Li-Keqiang recently put the accent on stability and preserving employment, suggesting Chinese policymakers are likely to de-emphasize deleveraging over the coming 12-18 months. For Chinese growth to improve, deleveraging does not even have to stop. As both theory and history have shown, a slower pace of deleveraging means that the credit impulse moves back into positive territory and growth re-accelerates, even if only temporarily (Chart I-12). Chart I-12Growth Can Improve Even If Deleveraging Continues Growth Can Improve Even If Deleveraging Continues Growth Can Improve Even If Deleveraging Continues As a thought experiment, if Chinese leverage were to stabilize this year and nominal growth were to hit 8% – the lower bound of the real GDP target of 6-6.5% and inflation of 2% – the Chinese credit impulse would surge to more than 10% of GDP (Chart I-13)! We are not forecasting such a large rebound in the impulse, but this exercise clearly shows that if the Chinese authorities – who are cutting taxes and trying to ease credit conditions for small- and medium-sized enterprises – want to favor stability and employment for just one year, the impact on growth will be non-negligible, even if deleveraging continues. Since domestic demand responds to the credit impulse, and imports sport an elevated beta to domestic demand, Chinese imports are likely to soon morph from a negative to something more neutral – maybe even a small positive for the rest of the world. Chart I-13A Thought Experiment A Thought Experiment A Thought Experiment Finally, as weak as Europe is right now, it will likely be an important source of positive surprises in the second half of the year. To begin with, Europe is much more sensitive to EM growth conditions than the U.S. (Chart I-14). In the same way as Europe felt the full force of the deceleration in global trade last year, it will benefit from any improvement in trade this year. Chart I-14 A myriad of idiosyncratic shocks rammed through the euro area last year, worsening an already difficult situation. The new WLTP emission standards caused German auto production to collapse by nearly 20%. Nonetheless, as contracting domestic manufacturing orders and a large inventory pullback in the final quarter of last year suggest, the inventory overhang has been worked off (Chart I-15, top panel). Chart I-15Passing European Idiosyncratic Shocks Passing European Idiosyncratic Shocks Passing European Idiosyncratic Shocks Just as critically, Italy’s technical recession should end soon. The country’s economic malaise reflected the tightening in financial conditions that followed the violent battle between Rome and Brussels early last year. Ultimately, Rome folded: The budget deficit is 2.3% of GDP, not above 6%, and threats of leaving the union have been abandoned. Consequently, financial conditions are easing. Italian bond auctions are massively oversubscribed this year, and rising bond prices are supporting the solvency of the Italian banking system. The last hurdle affecting Europe was the fact that funding stress in the Italian and Spanish banking systems have been directly addressed by the TLTRO-III announced three weeks ago by the European Central Bank. Spanish and Italian banks have to refinance EUR 425 billion of TLTRO-II this June, in a year where a sizeable amounts of European bank bonds also needs to be refinanced. This is simply too much. With the ECB again bankrolling Italian and Spanish financial institutions, funding stress in the periphery can decline. Consequently, the European credit impulse, which had formed a valley in 2018 Q1, can continue its ascent (Chart I-15, bottom panel). Bottom Line: Investors expect little from the global economy outside the U.S., yet easing liquidity and financial conditions, a temporary shift in Chinese policy preferences and passing idiosyncratic shocks in Europe all point to improvement in global economic activity. U.S. Inflation Expectations Will Allow The Fed To Resume Rate Hikes Above-potential growth in the U.S. and rebounding economic activity in the rest of the world are consistent with higher – not lower – U.S. inflation. First, rebounding global growth is normally associated with a weakening dollar (Chart I-16). This time will not be different, especially as U.S. equity valuations relative to global stocks suggest that investors are particularly pessimistic on non-U.S. growth. A weaker dollar will lift import prices, commodity prices, and goods prices, helping inflation move higher. Chart I-16The USD Is Counter-Cyclical The USD Is Counter-Cyclical The USD Is Counter-Cyclical Second, the change in the velocity of the money of zero maturity in the U.S. is consistent with a further strengthening in core inflation (Chart I-17). Chart I-17The Fisher Equations Points To Gently Rising Inflation The Fisher Equations Points To Gently Rising Inflation The Fisher Equations Points To Gently Rising Inflation Third, above-trend U.S. growth in the context of elevated capacity utilization is also consistent with rising inflation (Chart I-18). Chart I-18Elevated U.S. Capacity Utilization Elevated U.S. Capacity Utilization Elevated U.S. Capacity Utilization If these three forces can cause core PCE inflation to move slightly above 2% in the second half of 2019, this will likely result in inflation expectations firming. Moreover, the combination of positive growth surprises around the world and easy monetary and liquidity conditions will prove supportive of asset prices globally, implying further easing in global and U.S. financial conditions. This set of circumstances will allow the Fed to shift its tone toward the end of 2019, in order to crystalize additional hikes in 2020. Additionally, we estimate the U.S. terminal policy rate to be around 3.25%. In fact, a longer-than-originally-anticipated Fed pause reinforces confidence in this assessment, even if it means that it will take longer to reach the terminal level than we previously thought. Bottom Line: Our growth outlook is consistent with robust inflation and improving inflation expectations. This means we disagree with interest rate markets and anticipate the Fed will resume its hiking campaign instead of cutting rates next year. Moreover, easier-for-longer policy also strengthens our view that the fed funds rate can end this cycle near 3.25%. Stay Positive On Risk Assets For Now… Most bear markets are linked to recessions. It follows that if the U.S. business cycle can be extended and the Fed remains on the easy side of neutral for longer, then the S&P 500 has more upside (Chart I-19). So do global equities. Chart I-19Low Bear-Market Risk Low Bear-Market Risk Low Bear-Market Risk This view is reinforced by the fact that buy-side analysts and investors alike have aggressively curtailed their expectations for EPS growth this year, to 3.9% for the U.S. and 4.9% outside the U.S. Yet, our profit model suggests that U.S. EPS growth is likely to come in at around 8.1% this year. Earnings revisions are pro-cyclical. Hence, our expectation that the BCA global Leading Economic Indicator meaningfully revives in the second half of 2019 points toward analysts having ample room to revise global earnings higher in the second half of the year (Chart I-20). Chart I-20Global Profit Margins Will Improve If Growth Rebounds Global Profit Margins Will Improve If Growth Rebounds Global Profit Margins Will Improve If Growth Rebounds Moreover, global valuations experienced a reset last year. Despite a rebound, the forward P/E ratio for the MSCI All-Country World Index remains in line with 2014 levels, 12.5% lower than at their apex last year. When looking at the U.S., our composite valuation index has also improved meaningfully (Chart I-21). This improvement in valuations increases the probability that a bottom in global growth will lift stock prices. Chart I-21Large Improvement In The Equity / Risk Reward Ratio Large Improvement In The Equity / Risk Reward Ratio Large Improvement In The Equity / Risk Reward Ratio Our Monetary Indicator further reinforces this message. After being a headwind for stocks over the past eight quarters, now that the Fed has paused and is essentially guaranteeing low real rates for an extended period, this gauge is growing more supportive of further equity price gains (Chart I-22). Chart I-22Stock-Friendly Monetary Backdrop Stock-Friendly Monetary Backdrop Stock-Friendly Monetary Backdrop A below-benchmark duration exposure for fixed-income portfolio still makes sense, even if the Fed has prolonged its pause. As per our U.S. Bond Strategy service’s “Golden Rule Of Treasury Investing,” if the Fed increases rates more than the market has priced in 12 months prior, Treasurys underperform cash (Chart I-23). Even if the Fed does nothing this year, it will still be more than the OIS curve is currently pricing in. Moreover, the dollar is likely to soften and the Fed is increasingly taking the risk of falling behind the realized inflation curve. This should create upside not only for inflation breakevens but also for term premia, which are depressed everywhere across the G-10. The yield curve should modestly steepen in this environment. It may take a bit more time than we originally expected, but safe-haven bond yields are trending higher, not lower. Chart I-23The Golden Rule Of Treasury Investing The Golden Rule Of Treasury Investing The Golden Rule Of Treasury Investing Spread products are also likely to continue to do well. Easy monetary policy, a soft U.S. dollar, an ongoing U.S. business expansion, an upcoming rebound in global growth and rising asset values all point toward a delay of the inevitable wave of defaults. Corporate bonds may offer poor value and credit quality has deteriorated, but an end to the business cycle and a tighter Fed will be key to catalyzing these poor fundamentals. We are not there yet. The Brexit saga continues to have the potential to unsettle markets. Nonetheless, we would fade any broad market sell-off linked to poor British headlines. As Marko Papic writes in this month's Special Report, despite continued political uncertainty in Westminster this year, the risk of a no-deal Brexit is dwindling by the minute, and political logic suggests that there is a high probability that the U.K. will ultimately remain in the EU in two to three years. Bottom Line: After the reset in valuations and earning expectations last year, markets should continue their ascent. The Fed has showed that its “put” is alive and well. This will both favor risk-taking and extend the duration of the business cycle. If global growth can rebound in the second quarter, it will create fertile ground for strong asset prices over the bulk of 2019. Treasury yields will also exhibit upside, even if achieving these higher rates will take more time now. … But Beware What Lurks Below The benign outlook for this year masks that the rally in risk assets is living on borrowed time. A Fed willingly falling behind the curve may fan speculative flames this year, but it doesn’t mean that policy will stay easy forever. On the contrary, the inevitable rise in inflation will push rates higher down the road and the unavoidable recession will ultimately materialize, most likely somewhere around 2021. Since asset valuations will only grow more inflated between now and then, a bigger fall will ultimately ensue. Our Composite Valuation Indicator may currently be flashing a positive signal, but dynamics within its components already point to brewing trouble down the road (Chart I-24). First, the balance sheet group of indicators has showed no improvement. In other words, without last year’s rebound in profitability, stocks would not be as attractively valued as the overall indicator suggests. Chart I-24Disconcerting Internal Dynamics Disconcerting Internal Dynamics Disconcerting Internal Dynamics Second, the interest rate group is currently flattering aggregate valuations. To remain supportive of higher returns ahead, this group depends on interest rates staying constrained. Here, the Fed will play a particularly perverse role. Its willingness to tolerate inflationary pressures right now means lower rates today at the price of a higher cost of capital tomorrow. Once it becomes obvious that the Fed is falling behind the curve – something more likely to happen once inflation expectations normalize – safe-haven yields will rise sharply. The interest rate group will suddenly look a lot less supportive than it does today. Third, the profit components of our valuation indicator may look healthy today, but this will not remain the case. At 31.7%, EBITD margins are currently extraordinary elevated. In fact, if the profit margins were to normalize to their historical average, the Shiller P/E would skyrocket to 40.3 from 29.9 today, implying the stock market may be just as expensive as it was at the start of 2000. For margins to remain wide, wages will have to stay depressed relative to selling prices (Chart I-25). However, the combination of an economy at full employment and the Fed goosing economic growth points to rising wages. Since the pass-through from wages to prices is below 100%, unless productivity rises more than labor costs, profitability will suffer and P/E ratios will start sending the same message as the price-to-sales ratio, a multiple that currently stands near record highs. Chart I-25Rising Wages Will Ultimately Hurt Profits Rising Wages Will Ultimately Hurt Profits Rising Wages Will Ultimately Hurt Profits Valuations are not the only danger lurking for stocks: Spread products will morph from a tailwind to a headwind for equities. Whether or not it steepens a bit this year, the yield curve’s previous big flattening already points toward rising financial market volatility (Chart I-26). The Fed’s recent dovish tilt can keep the VIX and the MOVE compressed for a while longer. However, since inflation expectations will ultimately move higher, likely within a year or so, the Fed will once again tilt to the hawkish side, and volatility will follow its path of least resistance higher. Carry trades of all kinds will suffer, and spreads will widen. The deteriorating credit quality this cycle, with BBB and lower-rated issues constituting 60.1% of the corporate universe, could make this widening more violent than normal. This phenomenon will hurt stocks. Chart I-26Volatility Is A Coiled Spring Volatility Is A Coiled Spring Volatility Is A Coiled Spring Finally, the improvement in global growth this year is likely to prove temporary. China may want to slow the pace of deleveraging this year, but pushing debt loads lower and reforming the economy remains Beijing’s number one priority on a multi-year horizon. China has created USD 26 trillion worth of yuan since 2008, making the Chinese money supply larger than the euro area’s and the U.S.’s together. As a result, China’s incremental output-to-capital ratio continues to trend lower, implying large misallocation of capital (Chart I-27). State-owned enterprises, the recipients of much of the credit created over the past 10 years, now generate lower RoAs than their cost of borrowing, an unmistakable sign of poorly allocated funds. Chart I-27The Biggest Threat To China's Long-Term Prosperity The Biggest Threat To China's Long-Term Prosperity The Biggest Threat To China's Long-Term Prosperity Correcting this structural impediment will require the Chinese credit impulse to once again move back into negative territory. This means that unless Chinese policymakers abandon their efforts to prise the country off easy credit, Chinese growth will morph back into a headwind for the world somewhere in 2020, i.e. not so late as to encourage excesses, but not so early as to sharply slow the economy ahead of the Communist Party’s one-hundredth birthday in July 2021. In 2018, the global economy nearly ground to a halt after China had shifted from stimulus to policy tightening. The next time around, we doubt that a global recession will be avoided. The second half of 2020 may set up to be one tumultuous period. Bottom Line: In all likelihood, global risk assets should perform well this year, but we are living on borrowed time. In the background, equity valuations are deteriorating meaningfully, a phenomenon that will worsen once the Fed’s desired outcome comes to fruition: higher inflation. Wage pressures and higher interest rates will reveal how fully rotten stock valuations genuinely are. Compounding this effect, higher volatility and a resumption of China’s deleveraging efforts will likely achieve the coup de grace for stocks in the second half of 2020. Conclusion The FOMC wants to lift inflation expectations in order to defuse any lingering deflationary risk. Consequently, the Fed’s pause will last longer than we originally anticipated, but terminal rates are likely to climb higher than would have otherwise been the case. Before last week’s Fed meeting, the U.S. was already set to grow above trend. Now, the Fed will only extend the business cycle further, fanning greater inflationary pressures in the process. This potentially misguided reflationary impulse, which is echoed around the world, will contribute to a rebound in global growth that will become fully evident by the summer. Consequently, we expect risk assets to climb to new highs over the coming 12 months. Treasurys will likely underperform cash over that timeframe, as interest rate markets are currently too sanguine. Investors are facing a real dilemma. On one hand, the potential for elevated stock market returns is high over the coming 12 months. On the other, poor valuations will only grow more onerous, and the Fed will ultimately have to tighten policy even more following the on-hold period. Moreover, Chinese policymakers are unlikely to ignore the pressing danger created by misallocating capital for an extended period of time. Consequently, the outlook for long-term returns is deteriorating. As a result, we recommend more tactically minded investors to stay long stocks, with a growing preference for international equities that are both cheaper and more exposed to global growth than U.S. ones. However, longer-term asset allocators should use this period of strength to progressively move out of stocks and into safer alternatives. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst March 28, 2019 Next Report: April 25, 2019   II. The State Of Brexit So What? It makes sense for long-term investors to buy the GBP. However, short-term investors should instead buy the 2-year call while selling 3-month ones. Why? The U.K. electorate is not staunchly Euroskeptic. In fact, Bregret has already set in. Volatility is the only sure bet over the tactical and strategic time horizons. The most likely scenario is that Theresa May either resigns and is replaced by a soft-Brexit Tory, or that she agrees to a long-term extension to give the U.K. time to call a new election. Brexit is unsustainable over the secular time horizon. Our low-conviction view is that in the long term, the U.K. will remain inside the European Union. The hour is late in the ongoing Brexit saga. The original deadline, once spoken of with religious reverence, will be tossed aside for one, potentially two, extensions. In this analysis, we attempt to consider the state of Brexit from multiple time horizons. First, we offer our tactical view, what will happen in the next several weeks and months. Second, we offer our strategic view, surveying the Brexit process to the end of the year. Third, we consider the secular view and attempt to answer the question of whether the U.K. will ever fully exit the EU. We then assign investment recommendations across the three time horizons. How Did We Get Here? In March 2016, three months ahead of the fateful June referendum, BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy and European Investment Strategy published a joint report on the topic that drew three conclusions: The probability of Brexit was understated by the market. “According to our modeling results, roughly 64% of Tory undecided voters would have to swing to the “Stay” camp in order to ensure that the vote crosses the 50% threshold in favour of continued EU membership … Conventional wisdom suggests that the probability of Brexit is around 30%, anchoring to the 1975 referendum results. Our own analysis of current polling data suggests that it is much closer to 50%, as in too close to call.” The biggest loser of Brexit, domestically, would be the Conservative Party. “The risk is that the British populace realizes that leaving the EU was a sub-optimal result and that little sovereignty was recovered. As such, there could be a backlash against the Tories in the next general election. In this scenario, the winner would not necessarily be UKIP, but rather the Jeremy Corbyn-led Labour Party – as close to the Michael Foot-led opposition in the early 1980s as any Labour Leadership.” The EU would survive, intact, with no further “exits.” “European integration is therefore a gambit for relevance by Europe’s declining powers. Brexit will not create centrifugal forces that tear the EU apart, and could in fact enhance the sinews that bind EU member states in a bid for 21st century geopolitical relevance.” Thus far, all three predictions have proven prescient. Not only was the probability of Brexit understated, but the electorate actually voted to exit the EU.1 The Conservative Party has wrapped itself into an intellectual pretzel trying to deliver on a referendum that the pro-Brexit Tories – a minority in the party – promised would not mean losing access to the Common Market. And the EU has not only seen no other “exits,” but has held firm and united in the negotiations with the U.K. while witnessing an increase in the support for its troubled currency union, both in the Euro Area in aggregate as well as in crisis-ridden Italy (Chart II-1). Chart II-1The Euro Area Stands Unified The Euro Area Stands Unified The Euro Area Stands Unified The net assessment we conducted in 2016 correctly gauged what the Brexit referendum was about and what it was not about. Our view was that behind the angst lay factors too general to be laid at the feet of European integration. Decades of supply-side reforms combined with competition from emerging economies led to a sharp rise in U.K. income inequality (Chart II-2), the erosion of its manufacturing economy (Chart II-3), and the ballooning of the country’s financial sector (Chart II-4). As a result, the U.K.’s income inequality and social mobility were, in 2016 as today, much closer to those of its Anglo-Saxon peer America than to those of its continental European neighbors (Chart II-5). Chart II-2Brits Saw Inequality Surge Brits Saw Inequality Surge Brits Saw Inequality Surge Chart II-3Manufacturing Jobs Collapsed Manufacturing Jobs Collapsed Manufacturing Jobs Collapsed Chart II-4The Financial Bubble Burst The Financial Bubble Burst The Financial Bubble Burst Chart II-5 The underlying economic angst has continued to influence British politics since Brexit. Campaigning on an anti-austerity platform in the summer of 2017, the Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn nearly won the general election, only underperforming the Conservative vote by 2% (Chart II-6). The election was supposed to politically recapitalize Theresa May and allow her to lead the U.K. out of the EU. But the failure to secure a single-party majority created the political math in the House of Commons that is today preventing the prime minister from executing on Brexit. There are simply not enough committed Brexiters in Westminster to deliver on the relatively hard Brexit – no access to the EU Common Market or customs union – that Prime Minister May has put on offer (Chart II-7). Chart II-6 Chart II-7 The decision not to pursue a customs union arrangement with the EU is particularly disastrous. As our colleague Dhaval Joshi – Chief Strategist of BCA’s European Investment Strategy – has pointed out, remaining in the customs union would have protected the cross-border supply chains that are vital to many U.K. businesses and would have avoided a hard customs border on the island of Ireland.2 However, the slim margin of the Tory victory in 2017 has boosted the influence of the 20-to-40 hard-Brexiters in the party. They pushed Theresa May to the extreme, where a customs union arrangement – let alone access to the Common Market – became politically unpalatable. Had the British electorate genuinely wanted “Brexit über alles,” or the relatively hard Brexit on offer today, the margin of victory for Leave would have been greater. Furthermore, the electorate would not have come so close to giving the far-left Corbyn – who nonetheless supports the softest-of-soft Brexits – a majority in mid-2017. The slim margin of victory effectively tied May’s hands in her subsequent negotiations with both the EU and her own party. But there was more to the 2016 referendum than just general malaise centered on the economy and inequality. There were idiosyncratic events that provided tailwinds for the Leave campaign. Or, as we put it in 2016: Certainly, a number of ills have befallen the continent in quick succession: the euro area sovereign debt crisis, Russian military intervention in Ukraine, rampant migrant inflows from Africa and the Middle East, and terrorist attacks in France. It is no surprise that the U.K. populace wants to think twice about tying itself even more closely to a Europe apparently on the run from the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. The two issues we would particularly focus on were the migrant crisis and terrorist attacks in Europe. Data ahead of the referendum clearly gave credence to the view that the influx of migrants was raising “concerns about immigration and race.” This angst was primarily focused on EU migrants who came to the U.K. legally (Chart II-8), but the influx of millions of migrants into the EU in 2015 – peaking at 172,000 in the month of October – certainly bolstered the anxiety in the U.K. (Chart II-9).3 Chart II-8EU Migrants A Source Of Anxiety In 2016 EU Migrants A Source Of Anxiety In 2016 EU Migrants A Source Of Anxiety In 2016 Chart II-9The Refugee Crisis Boosted Brexit Vote The Refugee Crisis Boosted Brexit Vote The Refugee Crisis Boosted Brexit Vote Terrorism was another concern. In the 18 months preceding the referendum, continental Europe experienced 13 deadly terror attacks. Two were particularly egregious: the November 2015 Paris terror attack that led to 130 deaths, and the March 2016 Brussels terror attack that led to 32 deaths. Both the migration and terror crises, however, were temporary and caused by idiosyncratic variables with short half-lives. BCA’s Geopolitical Strategy argued that both would eventually abate. The migration crisis would subside due to firming European attitudes towards asylum seekers and the exhaustion of the supply of migrants as the Syrian Civil War drew to its tragic close. The extremist Islamic terror attacks would dwindle due to the decrease in the marginal utility of terror that has been observed in previous waves of terrorism (Chart II-10). Neither forecast was popular with our client base, but both have been spot on. Chart II-10Fewer Attacks Due To Declining Marginal Utility Of Terror Fewer Attacks Due To Declining Marginal Utility Of Terror Fewer Attacks Due To Declining Marginal Utility Of Terror The point is that the British electorate was never as Euroskeptic as the Euroskeptics cheering on Brexit thought. Support for EU integration has waxed and waned for decades (Chart II-11). Instead, a combination of macro-malaise caused by the general plight of the middle class – the same factors that have given tailwinds to populist policymakers across developed markets – and idiosyncratic crises in the middle of this decade created the context in which the public voted to leave the EU. Whatever the vote was for, we can say with a high degree of certainty that it was not in favor of the current deal on offer, a relatively hard Brexit. After all, the pro-Leave Tories almost universally campaigned in favor of remaining in the Common Market post-Brexit.4 Chart II-11Data Does Not Support Euroskeptic U.K. Data Does Not Support Euroskeptic U.K. Data Does Not Support Euroskeptic U.K. Today, Bregret has clearly set in. Not only on the specific issue of whether the U.K. should leave the EU – where the gap between Bremorseful voters and committed Brexiters is now 8% (Chart II-12), a 12% swing since just after the referendum – but also on the more existential question of whether U.K. citizens feel European (Chart II-13). Chart II-12Bregret Has Set In... Bregret Has Set In... Bregret Has Set In... Chart II-13...And Brits Feeling More European ...And Brits Feeling More European ...And Brits Feeling More European The political reality of Bregret is the most important variable in predicting Brexit. Not only is it difficult for Prime Minister May to deliver her relatively hard Brexit in Westminster due to the mid-2017 electoral math, but it is especially the case when the electorate does not want it. Yes, the mid-2016 referendum is an expression of a democratic will that must be respected. But no policymaker wants to respect the referendum at the cost of disrespecting the current disposition of the median voter, which is revealed through polls. Doing so will cost them in the next election. Reviewing “how we got here” is essential in forecasting the tactical, strategic, and secular time horizons in the ongoing Brexit imbroglio. To this task we now turn. Bottom Line: The U.K. electorate is not staunchly Euroskeptic: data clearly support this fact. The Brexit referendum simply came at the right time for the Leave vote, as the secular forces of middle-class discontent combined with idiosyncratic crises of migration and terror. Three years following the referendum, the discontent remains unaddressed by British policymakers while the idiosyncratic crises have abated. As such, Bregret has set in, creating a new reality that U.K. policymakers must respond to if they want to retain political capital. Where Are We Going? The Tactical And Strategic Time Horizons The EU has offered a two-step delay to the Article 50 deadline of March 29. The first option is a delay until May 22, but only if Theresa May successfully passes her Brexit plan through Westminster. The second option is a delay until April 12. This would come in effect if the House of Commons rejects the deal on offer. The short time frame is supposed to pressure London to come up with the next steps, which the EU has inferred would either be to get out of the bloc without a deal or to plan for a long-term extension. Although there are no official conditions to awarding a long-term extension, it is clear that the EU only envisages three options: Renegotiate the terms of Brexit, to include either a customs union or full Common Market membership (a softer Brexit); Hold a general election to break the impasse; Hold another referendum. The EU is suggesting that it could deny the U.K. an extension if London does not come back with a plan. There are two reasons why we would call the EU’s bluff. First, it is likely an attempt to help May get the deal through the House of Commons by creating a sense of urgency. Second, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled in December 2018 that the U.K. could “revoke that notification unilaterally, in an unequivocal and unconditional manner, by a notice addressed to the European Council in writing.”5 The only requirement is that the notification be sent to Brussels prior to March 29 (or, in the case of a mutually agreed upon extension, prior to April 12). It is increasingly likely that, after the deal on offer fails, Theresa May will have to go “hat-in-hand” to the EU to ask for a much longer extension. She will have until April 12 to ask for that extension, but it would require participation in the European Parliamentary (EP) elections on May 23. Prime Minister May has said that the U.K. will not hold those elections. We beg to differ. Not holding the election would allow the EU to end the U.K.’s membership in the bloc, which would by default mean contravening the Parliament’s will to reject a no-deal Brexit (which it did in a rebuke to the government in March). As such, the U.K. will absolutely hold an EP election in May. Yes, it will be a huge embarrassment to the Conservative government. And we would venture that the election would turn out a huge pro-EU majority from the U.K., given that it is the Europhile side of the aisle that is now excited and activated, further embarrassing the ruling government. The most likely scenario, therefore, is that Theresa May either resigns and is replaced by a soft-Brexit Tory, or that she agrees to a long-term extension to give the U.K. time to call a new election. As we have been arguing throughout the year, the only way to break the impasse without calling a referendum – is to call a new election. A new election would be contested almost exclusively on the issue of Brexit – unlike the 2017 election, which Jeremy Corbyn managed to be almost exclusively contested on the issue of austerity. As such, the winner would have a clear political mandate to pursue the Brexit of their choice. If it is Jeremy Corbyn, this would mean a second referendum, given his recent conversion to supporting one. If Theresa May remains prime minister, it would be her relatively hard Brexit option; if another Tory replaces her, it would potentially be a softer Brexit. Intriguingly, Theresa May is coming up to the average “expiry date” of a “takeover” prime minister, which is 3.3 years (Chart II-14). Chart II-14 Why do we think that Theresa May would be replaced with a soft Brexit Tory? Because there are simply not enough members of parliament in the Conservative Party caucus to elect a hard Brexiteer. Furthermore, the current deal on offer, which is a form of hard Brexit, clearly has no chance of passing in the House of Commons. Theresa May herself did not support the Leave campaign, but she converted into a hard Brexiteer due to the pressures in the Conservative Party caucus. If, on the other hand, we are wrong and the Conservative Party elects a hard Brexit Tory as leader, the odds of losing the election to the Labour Party would increase. Furthermore, the impasse in the House of Commons would not be resolved as Theresa May would be replaced by a prime minister with essentially the same approach to Brexit. Confused? You are not alone. Diagram II-1 illustrates the complexity of the tactical (0-3 months) and strategic (3-12 months) time horizons. There are so many options over the next six months alone that we ran out of space in our diagram to consider the consequences of the general election. Chart II- Needless to say, an election would induce volatility in the market as it would put Jeremy Corbyn close to the premiership. While he has now promised a second referendum, his government would also implement policies that could, especially in the short term, agitate the markets. Our forecasts of the currency moves alone suggest that volatility is the only sure bet over tactical and strategic time horizons. We do not have a high-conviction view on a directional call on the pound or U.K. equities. However, global growth concerns, combined with political uncertainty, should create a bond-bullish environment. Bottom Line: Over the course of the year, political uncertainty will remain high in the United Kingdom. A general election is the clearest path to breaking the current deadlock. However, it is not guaranteed, as Labour’s recent decline in the polls appears to be reversing since Jeremy Corbyn finally succumbed to the demands that he support a new referendum (Chart II-15). Chart II-15Labour Party Revives On Referendum Support Labour Party Revives On Referendum Support Labour Party Revives On Referendum Support The Secular Horizon BCA Geopolitical Strategy believes that the median voter is the price maker in the political market place. Politicians are merely price takers. This is why Theresa May’s notion that the sanctity of the 2016 referendum cannot be abrogated is doubly false. First, she cannot truly claim from the slim 52%-48% result that U.K. voters want her form of Brexit. The referendum therefore may be a sacred expression of the democratic will, but her “no customs union” Brexit option is not holy water: It is an educated guess at best, pandering to hard Brexit Tories (a minority of the electorate) at worst. Given that 48% of the electorate wanted to remain in the EU and that a large portion of Brexit voters wanted a Common Market membership as part of Brexit, it is mathematically obvious that the softest of soft Brexit options was the desire of the median voter in June 2016. Furthermore, polling data (presented in Chart II-12 and Chart II-13 on page 28) now clearly show that the median voter is migrating away from even the softest of soft Brexit options to the “Stay” camp. Bregret has set in and a strong plurality of voters no longer supports Brexit. The question behind Chart II-12 is unambiguous. It clearly asks, “In hindsight, do you think Britain was right or wrong to vote to leave the EU?” What does all of this infer for the long term, or secular, horizon? First, an election this year could usher in a Labour government that delivers a new referendum. At this time, given the polling data and the geopolitical context, sans terror and migration crises, we would expect such a referendum to lead to a win for the Stay camp. Second, an election that produces a soft Brexit prime minister or negotiated outcome would allow the U.K. to leave the EU in an orderly fashion. A new Tory prime minister, pursuing a soft Brexit outcome, could even entice some Labour MPs to cross the aisle and support such an exit from the bloc. However, over a secular time horizon of the next two-to-three years, we doubt that a soft Brexit outcome would be viable. Investors have to realize that the vote on leaving the EU does not conclude the U.K. long-term deal with the bloc. That negotiating phase will last during the transition phase, over the next two-to-three years, and would conclude in yet another Westminster vote – and likely crisis – at the end of the period. If this deal entails membership in the Common Market, our low- conviction view over the long term is that it will ultimately fail. Take the financial community’s preferred soft Brexit option, the so-called super soft “Norway Plus” option. A Norway Plus option would entail the highest loss of sovereignty imaginable, given that the U.K. would essentially pay full EU membership fees with no ability to influence the regulatory policies that London would have to abide by. There is also a debate as to whether London would be able to constrict immigration from the EU under that option over the long term, a key demand of Brexiters.6 As such, the only viable option would be to switch to a customs union relationship. However, we fear that even this option may no longer be available to U.K. policymakers. Conservative Party leaders have wasted too much time and lost too much of the public’s good will. With only 40% of the electorate now considering Brexit the correct decision, it is possible that even a customs union arrangement will be unacceptable by the end of the transition period. Aside from the electorate’s growing Bregret, there is also the economic logic – or lack thereof – behind a customs union. A customs union would ensure the unfettered transit of goods between the U.K. and the continent, but not of services. This arrangement greatly favors the EU, not the U.K., as the latter has a wide (and growing) deficit in goods and an expanding surplus in services with the bloc (Chart II-16). Chart II-16Services Are Key For The U.K. Services Are Key For The U.K. Services Are Key For The U.K. The only logic behind selecting a customs union over the Common Market is that a customs union would allow the U.K. to conclude separate trade deals with the rest of the world. While that may be a fantasy of the few remaining laissez-faire free traders in the U.K. Conservative Party, the view hardly represents the desire of the median voter. Other than a potential trade deal with the U.S., it is practically inconceivable to expect the U.K. electorate to support a free trade agreement with China or India, both of which would likely entail an even greater loss of blue-collar jobs. Even a trade deal with the U.S. would likely face political opposition, given that the U.K. is highly unlikely to be given preferential treatment by an economy seven times its size.7 The fact of the matter is that the Conservative Party has wasted its window of opportunity to push a hard, or moderately hard (customs union), Brexit through Parliament. Bregret has set in, as the doyens of Brexit increasingly pursued an unpopular strategy. On the other hand, a Brexit that retains the U.K. membership in the Common Market has never had much logic to begin with. Where does this leave the U.K. in the long term? Given the time horizon and the uncertainty on multiple fronts, our low-conviction view is that it leaves the U.K. inside the European Union. Bottom Line: The combination of increasing Bregret, lack of economic logic behind a customs union membership alone, and the lack of a political logic behind a Common Market membership, suggests that Brexit is unsustainable over the secular time horizon. This imperils the ultimate deal between the U.K. and the EU, which we think will not be able to pass the House of Commons in two-to-three years when it comes up for approval. This is a low-conviction view, however, as political realities can change. Support for Brexit could turn due to exogenous factors, such as a global recession that renews the Euro Area economic imbroglio or a major geopolitical crisis. Both are quite likely over the secular time horizon. Investment Implications Today, cable is cheap, trading at an 18% discount to its long-term fair value as implied by purchasing-power parity models (Chart II-17). The growing probability that the U.K. may, down the road, remain in the European Union means that, at current levels the pound is indeed attractive, especially against the U.S. dollar. Chart II-17Cable Attractive On Higher Odds Of Bremain Cable Attractive On Higher Odds Of Bremain Cable Attractive On Higher Odds Of Bremain However, when it comes to short-term dynamics, the picture is much murkier. The low probability of a no-deal Brexit implies limited downside. However, the path to get the U.K. to abandon the current relatively hard Brexit is also one that involves a new election. This implies that before a resolution is reached, multiple scenarios are possible, including one where Corbyn becomes the next prime minister. Jeremy Corbyn could be the most left-of center leader of any G-10 nation since Francois Mitterrand in France in the early 1980s. Mitterrand’s audacious nationalization and left-leaning policies were met with a collapse in the French franc (Chart II-18). Chart II-18A Left-Wing Leader Bodes Ill For The Currency A Left-Wing Leader Bodes Ill For The Currency A Left-Wing Leader Bodes Ill For The Currency Global growth also has an impact on cable. Despite all the noise around Brexit, the reality remains that exports constitute 30% of U.K. GDP, a larger contribution to output than in the euro area. This means that if global growth deteriorates, GBP/USD will face another headwind. If, however, global growth improves, then cable would face a new tailwind. Since BCA is of the view that global growth will likely trough by the summer, we are inclined to be positive on the pound. Netting out all those factors, it makes sense for long-term investors to buy the GBP, using the dips along the way to build a larger position in this currency. Even on a six-to-twelve-month basis, the path of least resistance for cable is likely upward. The problem is that risk-adjusted returns are likely to be poor as volatility will remain very elevated. We therefore recommend that short-term investors instead buy the 2-year call while selling 3-month ones (Chart II-19). Chart II-19Volatility Will Be A Challenge For Short Term Investors Volatility Will Be A Challenge For Short Term Investors Volatility Will Be A Challenge For Short Term Investors Marko Papic Senior Vice President Chief Geopolitical Strategist Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst III. Indicators And Reference Charts Equities have had a volatile month of March, something that was bound to happen after the violent rally witnessed from the end of December to the end of February. When a rally is being tested, it always make sense to review our indicators to gauge whether or not a trend change is in the offing. Generally, our indicators remain broadly positive. Our Willingness-to-Pay (WTP) indicators for the U.S. and the euro area continue to improve. Meanwhile, it has begun to hook back up in Japan. The WTP 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 current readings in major advanced economies thus suggest that investors are still inclined to add to their stock holdings. Our Revealed Preference Indicator (RPI) has however once again deteriorated, suggesting that the period of churn in global equities prices could last a bit longer. This indicator is essentially saying that in order to resume their ascent, stocks need a bit more time to digest their previous surge. The RPI 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. According to BCA’s Composite Valuation Indicator, an amalgamation of 11 measures, the U.S. stock market remains slightly overvalued from a long-term perspective. Nonetheless, despite this year’s rally, the S&P 500 offers a much more attractive risk/reward profile than it did in the fall. Moreover, our Monetary Indicator has shifted out of negative territory for stocks, and is now decisively in stimulative territory. The Fed’s dovish forward guidance last week only reinforces the message from this indicator. Our Composite Technical Indicator for stocks had broken down in December, but it is finally flashing a buy signal. This further confirms that the current period of churn is most likely to ultimately make way for a continued rally in the S&P 500. The 10-year Treasury yield remains within its neutral range according to our valuation model. Moreover, our technical indicator flags a similar picture. This means that without signs of improvements in global growth, price action alone will not be enough to lift bond yields higher. That being said, since BCA expects that over the next 24 months, the Fed will lift rates more than the OIS curve anticipates, and since the term premium is incredibly low, once green shoots for global growth become evident, bonds could suffer a violent selloff. The U.S. dollar is still very expensive on a PPP basis. Our Composite Technical Indicator is not as overbought as it once was, but it is far from having reached oversold levels either. This combination suggests that the greenback could experience further downside this year. However, for this downside to materialize, global growth will first have to stabilize. 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 And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance Chart III-8Global Stock Market 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-10Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes Yield Curve Slopes 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   Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1       At the time of publication of our March report, we still had a low-conviction view that the vote would swing towards Stay at the last moment. 2       Please see BCA Research European Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Important Message From The Currency Markets,” dated March 14, 2019, available at eis.bcaresearch.com. 3       Trying to play up the threat of unchecked migration, the U.K. Independence Party ran a famous campaign poster showing hundreds of refugees on a road under the title of “Breaking Point – The EU has failed us all.” Despite the fact that the U.K. accepted only around 10,000 Syrian refugees since the 2015 crisis. Germany has accepted over 700,000 while Canada – which is located across the Atlantic Ocean on a different continent – accepted over 40,000. Even the impoverished Serbia has accepted more Syrian refugees than the U.K. 4       One of the most prominent Leave supporters, Boris Johnson, famously quipped after the referendum result that “There will continue to be free trade and access to the single market.” 5       Please see The European Court of Justice, “Judgement Of The Court,” In Case C-621/18, dated December 10, 2018, available at curia.europa.eu. 6       Proponents of the Norway Plus option point out that Article 112(1) of the European Economic Area (EEA) Agreement allows for restriction of movement of people within the area. However, these restrictions are intended to be used in times of “serious economic, societal or environmental difficulties.” It certainly appears to be an option for London to restrict EU migration, but it is not clear whether Europe would agree for this to be a permanent solution. Liechtenstein has been using Article 112 to impose quantitative limitations on immigration for decades, but that is because its tiny geographical area is recognized as a “specific situation” that justifies such restrictions. 7       President Donald Trump may want to give the U.K. preferential trade terms on the basis of the filial Anglo-Saxon relationship alone, but it is highly unlikely that the increasingly protectionist Congress would do the same. There is also no guarantee that President Trump will be around to bring such trade negotiations across the finish line. EQUITIES:FIXED INCOME:CURRENCIES:COMMODITIES:ECONOMY:
Highlights Duration: None of the economic indicators that have reliably signaled peak interest rates in prior cycles are sending a signal at the moment. This leads to the inevitable conclusion that further Fed rate hikes are likely at some point before the end of the cycle. With the Fed now projecting an essentially flat path for interest rates, the next surprise from the Federal Reserve will probably be a hawkish one. Fed: The Fed is currently waging a war on two fronts. It wants to keep interest rates low enough to send inflation expectations higher, back to levels consistent with its 2% target. But it also wants to avoid excessively easy financial conditions that could threaten the sustainability of the economic recovery. We expect that easier financial conditions will cause the Fed to shift back toward a tightening bias near the end of this year. Yield Curve: Inversion of the 3-month/10-year Treasury slope is cause for concern, if it persists. But we expect it to reverse in the coming months as global growth recovers and the Fed remains accommodative. Eventually, after financial conditions have eased sufficiently, the Fed’s next move will be a hawkish surprise. Investors can profit from this move by entering positive carry yield curve trades: short the 5-year or 7-year bullet and go long a duration-matched barbell. Feature The Last Dovish Surprise Or The Beginning Of The End? Treasury yields moved sharply lower following last week’s Fed meeting, as FOMC participants made larger-than-anticipated downward revisions to their interest rate projections. As of last December, 11 out of 17 Fed members expected to lift rates at least twice in 2019. Now, 11 out of 17 expect to keep rates flat (Chart 1). Chart 1Fed Sees No Hikes This Year Fed Sees No Hikes This Year Fed Sees No Hikes This Year Judging from the bond market’s reaction, the Fed clearly managed to deliver a dovish surprise at last week’s meeting. Now, the relevant question for investors becomes whether that dovish surprise can be repeated. With the Fed signaling an essentially flat path for interest rates, a dovish surprise from these levels would involve the suggestion of rate cuts. History tells us that rate cuts are only likely to occur if the economy is headed into recession, an event that still seems relatively far off. As such, we expect that the next surprise from the Fed will be a hawkish one, and that the next large move in Treasury yields will be higher. Our conviction that the economy is not yet close to recession comes from our analysis of economic markers that have reliably signaled peak interest rates in past cycles.1 For example, one such marker is when year-over-year nominal GDP growth falls below the 10-year Treasury yield (Chart 2). At present, year-over-year nominal GDP growth is running at 5.3%. That growth rate is bound to slow during the next few quarters, but it would need to slow a lot before it falls below the current 10-year Treasury yield of 2.40%. Chart 2GDP Growth Suggests That Monetary Policy Remains Accommodative GDP Growth Suggests That Monetary Policy Remains Accommodative GDP Growth Suggests That Monetary Policy Remains Accommodative The New York Fed’s GDP Nowcast projects that real GDP growth will be 1.29% in the first quarter. Incorporating 2% inflation, that is roughly 3.3% in nominal terms. If Q1 turns out to be the trough in growth for the year, it suggests that interest rates still have considerable room to rise before the economic recovery ends. Second, we have observed that peak interest rates tend to coincide with material declines in the 12-month moving averages of single-family housing starts and new home sales. While the housing data weakened somewhat in 2018, the data have rebounded sharply since mortgage rates fell near the end of last year. Housing starts have already jumped back above their 12-month moving average, as has the weekly Mortgage Application Purchase index (Chart 3). Chart 3Housing & Employment Support Higher Rates Housing & Employment Support Higher Rates Housing & Employment Support Higher Rates Finally, we have noted that peak interest rates tend to coincide with an uptrend in initial jobless claims. Much like with housing, the initial claims data sent a warning near the end of last year. But that tentative increase in claims has already reversed course (Chart 3, bottom panel). None of those historically reliable indicators suggest that we have reached peak interest rates for the cycle.  We will continue to keep a close eye on nominal GDP growth, the housing data and initial jobless claims. But all in all, none of those historically reliable indicators suggest that we have reached peak interest rates for the cycle. This leads to the inevitable conclusion that further Fed rate hikes are likely at some point and that the next surprise from the Federal Reserve will probably be a hawkish one. Given this skewed risk/reward trade-off, we recommend that investors maintain below-benchmark duration in U.S. bond portfolios on the view that the next large move in Treasury yields will be higher. The difficult part is timing when that move will occur. In the remainder of this report we provide some thoughts on how to think about that timing, and also some trade ideas that should be profitable in the meantime. The New Battleground: Inflation Expectations Vs. Financial Conditions Recent remarks from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and other FOMC participants have made it clear that an important rationale for the Fed’s pause is a desire to re-anchor inflation expectations at a level closer to the Fed’s target. For example, here is Chairman Powell from last week’s press conference: So, if inflation expectations are below two percent, they’re always going to be pulling inflation down, and we’re going to be paddling upstream and trying to, you know, keep inflation at two percent … And here is what the Chairman said about inflation expectations in his recent congressional testimony: In our thinking, inflation expectations are now the most important driver of actual inflation. With that in mind, consider that long-maturity TIPS breakeven inflation rates have been below “well anchored” levels for pretty much the entire post-crisis period, as have long-term inflation expectations from the University of Michigan Consumer survey (Chart 4). Chart 4The Fed Wants Higher Inflation Expectations The Fed Wants Higher Inflation Expectations The Fed Wants Higher Inflation Expectations The Fed has clearly made the re-anchoring of inflation expectations a priority, meaning that we should monitor TIPS breakeven inflation rates and survey measures of inflation expectations to assess when rate hikes might re-start. However, we don’t think that higher inflation expectations are absolutely necessary before the Fed resumes hiking. Consider what Fed officials were saying as recently as December: Governor Lael Brainard on December 7, 2018:2 The last several times resource utilization approached levels similar to today, signs of overheating showed up in financial-sector imbalances rather than in accelerating inflation. Chairman Powell on June 20, 2018:3 Indeed, the fact that the two most recent U.S. recessions stemmed principally from financial imbalances, not high inflation, highlights the importance of closely monitoring financial conditions.   In other words, until recently the Fed seemed more concerned with financial conditions than with inflation expectations. What changed? Quite simply, financial markets sold off and financial conditions no longer appear excessively easy (Chart 5). Chart 5The Fed Doesn’t Want An Asset Bubble The Fed Doesn’t Want An Asset Bubble The Fed Doesn’t Want An Asset Bubble The Financial Conditions component of our Fed Monitor remains “easier” than its historical average, but shows that conditions have tightened significantly since last October (Chart 5, top panel). Junk spreads have widened since last October (Chart 5, panel 2), as has the excess corporate bond risk premium after accounting for expected default risk (Chart 5, panel 3). 4 The S&P 500’s 12-month forward Price/Earnings ratio is down to 16.5, from 17 last October and a 2018 peak of 18.8 (Chart 5, bottom panel). If financial markets rally during the next few months, then it is quite possible that financial conditions will once again force the Fed’s hand. In essence, financial asset valuations appear somewhat reasonable and are not an immediate cause for concern. This means that the Fed can turn its attention toward trying to drive inflation expectations higher. However, if financial markets rally during the next few months, then it is quite possible that financial conditions will once again force the Fed’s hand. The Outlook For Financial Conditions & Global Growth The Fed’s dovish policy shift should support a rally in risk assets in the coming months, though such a rally may also require evidence of improvement in global growth. Right now that evidence is scant. March Flash PMIs for the U.S. and Eurozone both fell last week, while Japan’s stayed flat below the 50 boom/bust line. This means that the Global Manufacturing PMI’s downtrend will almost certainly continue when the final March data are released next week (Chart 6). Chart 6Global Growth Is Weak ... Global Growth Is Weak ... Global Growth Is Weak ... However, while the coincident PMI data continue to soften, we have recently noticed some green shoots in leading global growth indicators (Chart 7). Chart 7... But Leading Indicators Are Improving ... But Leading Indicators Are Improving ... But Leading Indicators Are Improving First, our Global Leading Economic Indicator (LEI) Diffusion Index has moved above 50%, meaning that a majority of countries are seeing improvement in their LEIs for the first time since early 2018 (Chart 7, top panel). Second, our China Investment Strategy service’s Li Keqiang Leading Indicator – a composite of six indicators of Chinese money and credit growth – has stabilized. While a 2016-style surge in credit growth is unlikely, even a stabilization in this leading indicator will help prop up global growth in 2019 (Chart 7, panel 2). We do not think that 3-month/10-year curve inversion will last very long.  Finally, the CRB Raw Industrials index has rebounded smartly during the past few weeks, and is now threatening to break above its 200-day moving average (Chart 7, bottom panel). Investment Implications The Fed is currently waging a war on two fronts. It wants to keep interest rates low enough to send inflation expectations higher, back to levels consistent with its 2% target. But it also wants to avoid excessively easy financial conditions that could threaten the sustainability of the economic recovery. Asset prices are not extended at the moment, so the Fed can maintain an accommodative policy focused on driving inflation expectations higher. However, at some point the combination of accommodative policy and improving global growth will cause the Fed’s attention to turn back toward financial conditions. That will put rate hikes back on the table and send Treasury yields higher. Timing when that shift will occur is difficult, which is why we recommend that investors enter positive carry yield curve trades to boost returns while we await a hawkish surprise from the Fed later this year (see next section). What The Yield Curve Is Telling Us The Fed’s dovish surprise sent Treasury yields lower last week and also led to significant changes in the shape of the yield curve. In particular, investors have focused on the fact that the 10-year yield is now below the 3-month T-bill rate. That focus is not surprising, given that curve inversion has been a reliable leading indicator of recession in past cycles. We use the 2-year/10-year and 3-year/10-year slopes in our research into the phases of the cycle (Chart 8), and while both of those slopes remain positive – consistent with a “Phase 2” environment – we will keep a close eye on the 3-month/10-year slope in the coming weeks.5 Historically, inversion of the different curve segments has occurred at around the same time. Chart 8Still In Phase 2 Still In Phase 2 Still In Phase 2 Given that the Fed has already signaled a much more dovish policy stance and that global growth is likely to improve later this year, we do not think that 3-month/10-year curve inversion will last very long. However, if we are wrong and the 2-year/10-year and 3-year/10-year slopes are eventually pulled down into negative territory, then we may have to re-visit some of our asset allocation positions. But for now, we find the 5-year and 7-year maturities to be the most interesting points on the yield curve (Chart 9). In fact, the 5-year and 7-year yields are so low that investors can earn more yield by entering duration-matched barbells consisting of the long and short ends of the curve. For example, the 5-year Treasury note offers a lower yield than a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year and 10-year notes. Similarly, the 7-year note offers less yield than a duration-matched barbell consisting of the 2-year note and 30-year bond (Chart 10). Chart 9 Chart 10Barbells Are Positive Carry Barbells Are Positive Carry Barbells Are Positive Carry Further, we have also observed that the 5-year and 7-year yields are most sensitive to changes in 12-month rate hike expectations. Chart 11 shows that when our 12-month discounter rises, the yield curve tends to steepen out to the 7-year maturity, and flatten thereafter. This means that the 5-year and 7-year yields have the most upside when rate hikes are eventually priced back into the curve. Chart 11Yield Curve Correlations Yield Curve Correlations Yield Curve Correlations Taken together, positive carry in the barbells and the sensitivity of 5-year and 7-year yields to 12-month rate expectations mean that investors should enter short positions in the 5-year or 7-year notes today, offset by long positions in duration-matched barbells (eg. the 2/10 or 2/30). These trades will earn significant capital gains when the Fed ultimately delivers a hawkish surprise, sending the 5-year and 7-year yields higher, and will also earn positive carry in the meantime, while we wait for financial conditions to ease enough to shift the Fed’s reaction function. We have also observed that the 5-year and 7-year yields are most sensitive to changes in 12-month rate hike expectations. These long barbell / short 5-year or 7-year bullet positions will only lose money if the market prices-in further rate cuts going forward. With the market already priced for 32 bps of cuts during the next 12 months, a further decline would be consistent with economic recession. This remains the least likely scenario. Bottom Line: Inversion of the 3-month/10-year Treasury slope is cause for concern, if it persists. But we expect it to reverse in the coming months as global growth recovers and the Fed remains accommodative. Eventually, after financial conditions have eased sufficiently, the Fed’s next move will be a hawkish surprise. Investors can profit from this move by entering positive carry yield curve trades: short the 5-year or 7-year bullet and go long a duration-matched barbell.   Ryan Swift,  U.S. Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see U.S. Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Running Room,” dated January 29, 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/brainard20181207a.htm 3  https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/powell20180620a.htm 4 The Gilchrist and Zakrajsek (GZ) Excess Bond Premium is a measure of the excess spread available in a sample of nonfinancial corporate bonds, after removing a bottom-up estimate of expected default losses for each security. Default losses are estimated based on the Merton Default model, using each firm’s market value of equity and face value of debt. https://www.federalreserve.gov/econresdata/notes/feds-notes/2016/files/… 5 Our research into the different phases of the cycle based on the slope of the yield curve can be found in U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “2019 Key Views: Implications For U.S. Fixed Income,” dated December 18, 2018, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Highlights Dovish Central Banks: Central bankers have successfully talked down bond yields, in an effort to prevent an even deeper pullback in global growth. Government bonds now look overvalued relative to likely outcomes on growth and inflation over the next year. A moderate below-benchmark medium-term duration exposure is warranted on a risk/reward basis, as the next large yield move from current levels is more likely up than down. U.S. Treasuries: The Fed is now signaling no more rate hikes for the rest of 2019, but this newly dovish language merely brings their own interest rate forecasts closer to current market pricing. Lower bond yields and easier financial conditions will help underwrite a recovery in U.S. growth, just as a stabilization of the global economy is starting to materialize. The current downturn in Treasury yields, which is looking technically stretched, should soon begin to bottom out. Feature Another Panic Hits Global Bond Markets The message from central banks to the financial markets is now very loud and clear – global monetary policy is firmly on hold for at least the rest of 2019. Fears over slowing global growth, persistent geopolitical uncertainty and underwhelming inflation have put policymakers on a more cautious footing. The messaging from central banks has become highly synchronized, with even the same buzz words (“patience”, “uncertainty”, “data dependent”) being bandied about in speeches and policy statements. Bond yields have responded to the dovish forward guidance in recent weeks from the Fed, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and others. Our “Major Countries” measure of 10-year government bond yields in the largest developed economies has fallen to 1.3%, the lowest level since May 2017. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield now sits at 2.40%, below the fed funds rate and triggering investor angst over the traditionally negative economic message of an inverted yield curve. Global equity markets, however, seem less concerned. The MSCI World Equity Index is only 5% from the 2018 highs after rallying 16% so far from the late 2018 low. This gap between robust equity prices and depressed bond yields is unusual, but not unprecedented. Similar divergences have occurred as recently as 2016 and 2017 (Chart of the Week). During those episodes, central banks responded to uncertainty (the July 2016 Brexit vote followed by currency volatility in China) or sluggish inflation readings (the unexpected 2017 dip in U.S. core inflation) by shifting to an easier monetary stance. This was largely done through delayed interest rate hikes or more dovish forward guidance, with the result being lower bond yields, diminished market volatility and easier financial conditions. Better global growth and more stable inflation expectations soon followed. Chart of the WeekWill Bonds Lose This Battle Once Again? Will Bonds Lose This Battle Once Again? Will Bonds Lose This Battle Once Again? With tentative signs emerging that global growth momentum is bottoming out, the next major move in global bond yields is likely up. Those prior gaps between low bond yields and high stock prices were eventually resolved through higher yields – an outcome that we think will be repeated in the current episode. Already, bond markets have aggressively repriced expectations of future monetary policy with even some rate cuts now discounted in the U.S., Canada and Australia. With tentative signs emerging that global growth momentum will soon bottom out and recover in the latter half of 2019 (Chart 2), the next major move in global bond yields is likely up, not down. Chart 2Global Bond Yields Are Too Pessimistically Priced Global Bond Yields Are Too Pessimistically Priced Global Bond Yields Are Too Pessimistically Priced The decline in yields over the past few months has obviously challenged our recommended strategic below-benchmark global duration stance. The two primary factors that drive our medium-term duration calls on any country can be summed up by the following questions: Do we expect greater or fewer rate hikes than are discounted in money market curves? Do we expect bond yields to rise above or below the current pricing in forward yield curves? In aggregate, we do not expect the major central banks to deliver more monetary easing than is currently priced according to our 12-month discounters, although we think that is most likely in the U.S. where the market is pricing in -21bps of cuts over the next year. Also, the 12-month-ahead forwards for 10-year bond yields in the U.S. (2.51%), Canada (1.69%), Germany (0.13%), Japan (0.02%), U.K. (1.16%) and Australia (1.82%) are not particularly high. Although, once again, we have the greatest confidence that those yield levels will be surpassed in the U.S. The timetable to generate a positive payoff by positioning for higher yields has been stretched out by the renewed dovishness of central banks. By switching their focus from tight labor markets and accelerating wage growth to slowing economies and softening inflation expectations, policymakers are creating a backdrop of lower volatility and more market-friendly stock/bond correlations (Chart 3). Chart 3Stock/Bond Yield Correlation Negative Once Again Stock/Bond Yield Correlation Negative Once Again Stock/Bond Yield Correlation Negative Once Again The goal is to underwrite additional rallies in risk assets to ease financial conditions and stimulate economic activity. This will eventually sow the seeds for a return to a more hawkish bias, but the timing of that switch is uncertain and will most likely coincide with some evidence of faster Chinese economic growth and an end to the downturn in global trade activity – an outcome that is unlikely to occur until the latter half of 2019. Bottom Line: Central bankers have successfully talked down bond yields, in an effort to prevent an even deeper pullback in global growth. Government bonds now look overvalued relative to likely outcomes on growth and inflation over the next year. A moderate below-benchmark medium-term duration exposure is warranted on a risk/reward basis, as the next large yield move from current levels is more likely up than down. The Fed’s more dovish forward guidance only brought the Fed’s rate forecasts down closer to current market pricing. U.S. Treasury Yields Should Soon Bottom Out U.S. Treasury yields moved sharply lower following last week’s Fed meeting, as the FOMC delivered a dovish surprise with its new set of interest rate projections. As of last December, 11 out of 17 Fed members expected to lift rates at least twice in 2019. Now, 11 out of 17 expect to keep rates flat. This was enough to lower the median “dot” by 50bps for 2019, essentially forecasting an unchanged funds rate this year with only one hike expected in 2020. While these are significant dovish changes to the Fed’s forward guidance, it only brought the Fed’s forecasts down to current market pricing on interest rate expectations (Chart 4). Yet bond yields fell sharply in response, tipping the Treasury curve into inversion. The cautious language from Fed Chairman Powell in the post-meeting press conference, which included a reference to Japan-style deflation risks as a threat if the Fed ignored the message from below-target U.S. inflation expectations, likely helped fuel the bullishness of Treasury market participants. Chart 4Fed Is Just Catching Up To Market Pricing Fed Is Just Catching Up To Market Pricing Fed Is Just Catching Up To Market Pricing It seems clear that the arguments of the more dovish members of the FOMC (John Williams, Richard Clarida, James Bullard, Neil Kashkari) have won over the more pragmatic members of the committee, including Jay Powell. Yet our own Fed Monitor is still not suggesting that rate cuts are necessary (Chart 5), although the growth component of the Monitor is tracking the last downturn seen in 2014/15. More importantly, the inflation elements of the Monitor are not pointing to a need for easier policy, while financial conditions are still in the “tighter money required” zone. Chart 5Markets Pricing In Fed Easing That Is Not Required Markets Pricing In Fed Easing That Is Not Required Markets Pricing In Fed Easing That Is Not Required The Fed is likely to ignore the risks to financial stability stemming from the new dovish slant to its monetary policy, as financial conditions have not yet fully unwound the tightening seen in the risk asset selloff in late 2018. Does that mean that the Fed wants to see U.S. equities hit new highs and U.S. corporate credit spreads return to previous lows? If that means a deeper U.S. economic slowdown can be avoided, the answer is most likely “yes”. They can always return to targeting overvalued asset markets if and when the U.S. and global economy is on more stable footing. In terms of the U.S. economic outlook, we think the current concerns over the recession risks stemming from an inverted Treasury curve are overstated. In a Special Report we published last July, we looked at the relationship between monetary policy, yield curves and economic growth and came to the following conclusions:1 Curve inversion, on a sustained basis, occurs when the Fed lifts the real (inflation-adjusted) funds rate above the neutral rate of interest, “r-star” (Chart 6); Chart 6Too Soon For Sustained U.S. Treasury Curve Inversion Too Soon For Sustained U.S. Treasury Curve Inversion Too Soon For Sustained U.S. Treasury Curve Inversion Once the Treasury yield curve does invert on a sustained basis, a recession starts seventeen months later, on average; Curve inversion, on a sustained basis, occurs when the Fed lifts the real funds rate above the neutral rate of interest, “r-star” At the moment, the Fed has paused its rate hiking cycle with a real funds rate that is just shy of the Williams-Laubach estimate of r-star, which is 0.5%. Considering that the “Williams” in “Williams-Laubach” is the current president of the New York Fed and Number Two on the FOMC, we should not be surprised that the Fed chose to pause now! The more important point is that it seems too early to look for a classic late-cycle Treasury curve inversion with the Fed on hold – unless, of course, U.S. inflation falls and pushes the real fed funds rate above r-star. That would require a much sharper slowing of U.S. growth to a below-potential pace that is not indicated by current data. Reliable cyclical indicators like the ISM Manufacturing index have fallen from the heady 2018 peaks, but remain at levels consistent at least trend U.S. economic growth (Chart 7). Additionally, the Conference Board’s leading economic indicator, as well as our own models for U.S. employment and capital spending growth, are suggesting that only some cooling of U.S. growth should be expected in the next few quarters (Chart 8), but not to a below-potential pace (i.e. significantly less than 2%). Chart 7UST Yields Should Soon Stabilize UST Yields Should Soon Stabilize UST Yields Should Soon Stabilize Chart 8A Big U.S. Slowdown In 2019 Is Unlikely A Big U.S. Slowdown In 2019 Is Unlikely A Big U.S. Slowdown In 2019 Is Unlikely So how much lower can Treasury yields go in this current rally? Looking at the individual valuation components of yields, the answer is “not much”. The real component of Treasury yields has already fallen sharply since the 2018 peak, and is now approaching 2017 resistance levels. At the same time, 10-year inflation expectations are drifting higher and are now around 25bps below the highs seen in 2018 (Chart 9). At best, we can see real yields and inflation expectations fully offsetting each other and keeping yields unchanged. The more likely outcome, however, is that inflation expectations continue to move higher while real yields stabilize as the U.S. economy moves away from the Q1 growth slowdown, meaning that we are close to the floor in yields now. Chart 9Inflation Expectations Will Lead UST Yields Higher Inflation Expectations Will Lead UST Yields Higher Inflation Expectations Will Lead UST Yields Higher How much lower can Treasury yields go in this current rally? Looking at the individual valuation components of yields, the answer is “not much”. The current downturn in Treasury yields is already looking stretched from a technical perspective (Chart 10). The 26-week total return of the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury index is now approaching the highs seen during all previous Treasury rallies since the Fed ended its QE program in 2014. The same signal comes from the size of the deviation of the 10-year Treasury yield below its 200-day moving average. Duration positioning is quite long, as well, according to the J.P. Morgan client survey. Chart 10UST Rally Looking Stretched In The Near-Term UST Rally Looking Stretched In The Near-Term UST Rally Looking Stretched In The Near-Term Not all the technical indicators are as stretched, as the Market Vane Treasury sentiment survey remains depressed and net speculative positioning on 10-year Treasury futures is only neutral (after a very large short position was covered). On balance, however, the indicators suggest that the current Treasury rally is looking over-extended. One other factor to consider is global growth. Much of the current decline in Treasury yields is a result of the prolonged weakness in non-U.S. growth that has pulled down all global bond yields. Yet according to the latest readings from cyclical indicators like the ZEW survey, expectations of future economic growth are now bottoming out, even as current growth continues to slow (Chart 11). This bodes well for a potential bottoming of global growth momentum that could put a floor underneath bond yields. Chart 11Early Signs Of Growth Stabilization? Early Signs Of Growth Stabilization? Early Signs Of Growth Stabilization? One final note – any signs of stabilization of European growth could also help global bond yields find a floor. Not only are the ZEW surveys in Europe starting to bottom out, the widely-followed German IFO survey is also starting to show modest improvement. If these trends continue, that would help end the drag on global yields from weakening European growth which has pulled German Bunds back to the 0% level (Chart 12). Chart 12Bunds & JGBs Have Been A Drag On Global Yields Bunds & JGBs Have Been A Drag On Global Yields Bunds & JGBs Have Been A Drag On Global Yields Any signs of stabilization in European growth could also help global bond yields find a floor. Bottom Line: The Fed is now signaling no more rate hikes for the rest of 2019, but this newly dovish language merely brings their own interest rate forecasts closer to current market pricing. Lower bond yields and easier financial conditions will help underwrite a recovery in U.S. growth, just as a stabilization of the global economy is starting to materialize. The current downturn in Treasury yields, which is looking technically stretched, should soon begin to bottom out. Robert Robis, CFA, Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Global Fixed Income Strategy/U.S. Bond Strategy Special Report, “Three Frequently Asked Questions About Global Yield Curves”, dated July 31st, 2018, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com and usbs.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index Forward Guidance On Steroids Forward Guidance On Steroids Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights The FOMC managed to surprise investors at its March meeting after all, … : Everyone knew the Fed wasn’t going to hike rates last Wednesday, but the scope of the downward revision in the median dots was unexpected. … as it turns out that the median FOMC participant sees the pause as a lengthy hiatus: Not only does the median voter expect no rate hikes this year, s/he only expects one more in the entire tightening cycle. Rate-hike expectations have dwindled from three to a lonely one. The motivation for the Fed’s pivot is hardly crystal clear, … : The Fed may have turned more dovish because it fears the U.S. is losing momentum or that key major economies may be on the verge of a recession, it succumbed to pressure from the White House or financial markets, and/or it fears being unable to counter the next downturn. … but it looks to us like it has simply decided it can no longer stomach too-low inflation expectations: The zero lower bound will likely come into play when the next recession arrives, and higher inflation expectations will increase the Fed’s maneuverability by giving it the scope to reduce real rates more easily. Feature Wednesday’s FOMC meeting formalized the Fed’s turn to “patient” monetary policy. The dots revealed that the median FOMC participant’s estimates of the appropriate fed funds rate at year-end 2019 and 2020 are now 50 basis points lower than they were at the December meeting. At that meeting, the median participant expected the fed funds rate would be 2⅞% at the end of 2019, and 3⅛% at the end of 2020; the median participant now sees 2⅜% at the end of this year, the midpoint of the current 2.25 – 2.5% range, with a final hike to 2⅝% sometime in 2020. Uber-dovish St. Louis Fed President Bullard crowed in early January that the committee was starting to see things his way, and it seems that he was right. While presumably only Minneapolis President Kashkari voted with Bullard for no 2019 hikes in December, nine more participants came over to his side in the ensuing three months. The shift on the FOMC can be boiled down as follows: in December, two voters called for no hikes in 2019, and eleven called for a minimum of two hikes; in March, eleven voters called for no hikes, and two called for just two (Chart 1). The migration of nine out of seventeen voters from two or three hikes to zero hikes lopped 50 basis points off the FOMC’s median year-end projections through 2021, and has pushed our equilibrium fed funds rate model even further away from the consensus. What happened, and what does it mean for our S&P 500, Treasury and spread-product views? Chart 1 What Made The Fed More Patient? Our real-time view of the Fed’s turn to patience in early January was that it was a logical response to the sharp, sudden tightening of financial conditions imposed by the fourth-quarter sell-off in stocks and corporate bonds (Chart 2). We didn’t create a regression model to try to put a precise number on what the tightening in financial conditions meant, but it seemed fair to assume that it equated to at least one 25-basis-point hike in the fed funds rate. If that was as conservative an estimate as we thought, the Fed’s only rational course was to step aside, given that the financial markets had already done a quarter or two of its work for it. Chart 2Markets Tightened For The Fed In 4Q Markets Tightened For The Fed In 4Q Markets Tightened For The Fed In 4Q Slowing momentum in the rest of the world offered another reason for backing off. Chinese deceleration that began with domestic policymakers’ deleveraging drive has been exacerbated by the ongoing trade spat with the U.S. (Chart 3). Chinese imports are the most direct channel by which China impacts the rest of the world, and global trade has slid as China has decelerated (Chart 4). The first contraction in global export volumes since the global manufacturing slump in early 2016 has dragged on Europe, which took its 2018 cue from a soft China, rather than a robust U.S. Chart 3Deleveraging Started China's Slump ... Deleveraging Started China's Slump ... Deleveraging Started China's Slump ... Chart 4... Which Was Felt Around The World ... Which Was Felt Around The World ... Which Was Felt Around The World Within the U.S., ongoing data releases have fostered the notion that the Fed can well afford to be patient. Despite booming payroll expansion in December and January, which created 538,000 net new jobs, the unemployment rate ticked up to 4% from 3.7%.1 The data raised the possibility that there may be more labor market slack than previously estimated. Headline inflation is hardly alarming, though core measures that back out oil’s drag are hanging around the Fed’s 2% target (Chart 5). Chart 5Core Inflation Is Near Target, But Oil Has Weighed On Headline Inflation Core Inflation Is Near Target, But Oil Has Weighed On Headline Inflation Core Inflation Is Near Target, But Oil Has Weighed On Headline Inflation Is The Phillips Curve Dead? Is it possible that the Fed could turn away from rate hikes when the unemployment rate is a tenth of a point above its lowest level since 1969? Does the Fed really think the Phillips Curve is so flat that even 50-year lows in unemployment aren’t going to boost wages? Has it abandoned the idea that inflation and the unemployment rate are inversely related once the economy reaches full employment? We don’t think so; as we argued in our recent Special Report on the Phillips Curve,2 we are convinced that the Fed’s belief in the relationship between unemployment and inflation remains intact. Every mainstream macroeconomic inflation model incorporates an inverse relationship with the unemployment rate. We fully accept that the Phillips Curve is kinked, and that the point where it inflects is dependent on estimates of the unobservable natural rate of unemployment (NAIRU), but the economics profession has no widely accepted model that does not take as given the notion that sub-NAIRU unemployment is inflationary. Until the profession develops an alternative framework that achieves wide acceptance, the Phillips Curve will continue to be a keystone element of central bank policy. The path from higher wages to higher consumer prices may be indirect and uncertain, but the link between the unemployment gap and annual wage gains is alive and well, even in the post-Volcker, low-inflation era (Chart 6). Chart 6Wages Rise When Workers Are Hard To Find Wages Rise When Workers Are Hard To Find Wages Rise When Workers Are Hard To Find What Might The Fed See That We Don’t? We have been, and remain, constructive on the U.S. economy. The delayed December retail sales release was lousy, and the uninspiring advance January figure led the Atlanta Fed to knock nearly 40 basis points off of its estimate of consumption’s contribution to first-quarter GDP, but it seems incompatible with a roaring job market, rising wages, and an elevated household savings rate. First-quarter growth projects to be sickly, but it has been for the last few years, and the Atlanta Fed’s GDP Now model projects that real final domestic demand grew by 1.3%, in spite of the government shutdown. The FOMC seemed to err on the side of caution in trimming its growth estimates by 20 and 10 basis points (“bps”) for 2019 and 2020, respectively, and revising its unemployment rate projections 20 bps higher for both years. The global economy has surely slowed; ex-the U.S., its biggest constituents decelerated for nearly all of 2018, as Chair Powell noted. He also noted, however, that Chinese policy makers have taken several steps to support activity. That will help the rest of the world, including Europe, as an accelerating fiscal and credit impulse boosts Chinese imports (Chart 7). Brexit remains a risk the Fed would be irresponsible not to plan for, but given that a do-over referendum would probably lead to the U.K. remaining in the E.U. (Chart 8), it is a risk that may well not come to pass. Chart 7Chinese Policymakers Want To Boost Growth Chinese Policymakers Want To Boost Growth Chinese Policymakers Want To Boost Growth Chart 8Let's Call The Whole Thing Off Let's Call The Whole Thing Off Let's Call The Whole Thing Off We do not think that the Fed changed course based on White House pressure. As we have noted before, White House-Fed conflict is nothing new, and while the Arthur Burns-led Fed knuckled under during Nixon’s re-election campaign, pressure from the Johnson, Reagan and G.H.W. Bush Administrations all came to naught. We also do not think that the Fed took its cue from investors, even if its 2019 policy rate outlook now closely resembles the money market’s (Chart 9). If it is wary of inverting the yield curve, however, it may want to see long yields rise before it hikes again.3 Chart 9Seeing It The Markets' Way (At Least For 2019) Seeing It The Markets' Way (At Least For 2019) Seeing It The Markets' Way (At Least For 2019) Don’t Fence Me In Q: [B]elow-target inflation is a … phenomenon … across advanced economies, and I’d … like to … hear your thoughts about what kind of challenges that poses to policy makers like yourself and the global economy in general. Chair Powell: It’s a major challenge. It’s one of the major challenges of our time, really, to have … downward pressure on inflation[.] It gives central banks less room … to respond to downturns[.] [I]f inflation expectations are below two percent, they’re always going to be pulling inflation down, and we’re going to be paddling upstream and trying to … keep inflation at two percent, which gives us some room to cut, … when it’s time to cut rates when the economy weakens. … It’s … one of the things we’re looking into as part of our strategic monetary policy review this year. The proximity to the zero lower bound calls for more creative thinking about ways we can … uphold the credibility of our inflation target, and … we’re open-minded about ways we can do that. Our best guess is that the Fed has become frustrated by moribund inflation expectations ten years into a recovery. Now that it sees the potential for a recession in the not-so-distant future, it would prefer not to have to confront it with the zero lower interest-rate bound tying one hand behind its back. It would be reasonable if it would also prefer not to have to rely too heavily on asset purchases, given all the headaches that even a modest shrinking of the balance sheet has occasioned. The Fed’s ongoing monetary policy review may therefore turn out to be more than an academic exercise. It might be awfully nice to have strategies aiming to reverse past misses of the inflation objective in place before the next recession arrives. Those strategies would provide the Fed with more flexibility to reduce real interest rates via moves in the fed funds rate. Powell discussed the potential appeal of these sorts of strategies at Stanford University just a week and a half before the FOMC meeting,4 and despite all the times they’ve been bandied about, they just might come to something this time around. Investment Implications The Fed has made a significant pivot since October’s “long way from neutral,” and December’s post-FOMC press conference, when the chair seemed to be disconnected from the markets’ agita. We don’t think a 2019 rate hike is completely out of the question, but there is no doubt that the Fed’s reaction function has changed. We don’t yet see a reason to revise our terminal rate estimate down from 3.25%-3.5%, even if it’s evident that it will take a good bit longer for the Fed to get there than we initially expected. It seems to be more willing to let inflation get ahead of it – it may end up actively encouraging inflation to do so – before it completes its meandering journey to the terminal rate. Allowing the economy to run a little hotter should be equity-friendly. It’s hard to get earnings contraction without a recession, and recessions don’t occur when monetary policy is accommodative. If the Fed requires more evidence of improvement before it resumes hiking rates, the economy and corporate earnings should be able to build up more momentum than they otherwise would. The Fed’s newfound patience should also be spread-product-friendly, as borrowers become better credits as an expansion rolls along. The Treasury outlook is more nuanced. Yields fell as the Fed committed to remaining on hold for longer, but the Fed now seems to have exhausted its capacity for dovish surprises. Short of a recession or near-recession, it’s hard to see how yields can go much lower. Given markets’ seeming conviction that inflation is as dead as a doornail, however, Treasury bond yields may do no more than drift higher at the margin until the Fed’s efforts to put a floor underneath inflation expectations begin to bear some fruit. We still think risk-friendly positioning makes sense, and we reiterate our equity and spread-product overweights, our Treasuries underweight, and our below-benchmark-duration recommendation. Doug Peta, CFA Chief U.S. Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com   Footnotes 1 At the other end of the spectrum, the unemployment rate fell two ticks in February, to 3.8%, despite a meager net increase of 20,000 jobs. Short-term disconnects can be explained by the fact that the unemployment rate (household) and net payrolls additions (business establishments) are calculated from separate surveys, but no one knows exactly how many people who aren’t working are available to work when they decide the time is ripe. 2 Please see the February 26, 2019 U.S. Investment Strategy Special Report, “The Phillips Curve: Science Or Superstition?” Available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 3 The Fed may not care a whit about the yield curve, but may simply want to hold its fire until it is convinced that the economy requires less accommodation so as not to overheat, which would get it to the same place: not hiking until long yields begin to price in the potential for overheating. 4 Please see the March 18, 2019 U.S. Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Kinder, Gentler Central Banking.” Available at usis.bcaresearch.com.
Highlights The correlation between oil and petrocurrencies has deeply weakened in recent years. One of the reasons has been the prominence of new, important producers, notably the U.S. Oil prices should trend towards $75/bbl by year-end. This will favor the NOK, but the CAD and AUD will be held hostage to domestic slowdowns. Sell the CAD/NOK at current levels. Meanwhile, aggressive investors could begin accumulating USD/NOK shorts, given the Fed’s complete volte-face. Both the SNB and the BoE have delivered dovish messages, joining the chorus echoed by other central banks. However, the BoE remains a sideshow until the final chapter of the Brexit imbroglio unfolds. Feature Oil price dynamics have tended to have a profound impact on the trend of petrocurrencies. In theory, rising oil prices allow for increased government spending in oil-producing countries, making room for the resident central bank to tighten monetary policy. This is usually bullish for the currency. An increase in oil prices also implies rising terms of trade, which further increases the fair value of the exchange rate. Balance-of-payments dynamics also tend to improve during oil bull markets. Altogether, these forces combine to be powerful undercurrents for petrocurrencies. In the case of Canada and Norway, petroleum represents around 20% and 60% of total exports. For Saudi Arabia, Iran or Venezuela, this number is much higher than in Norway. It is easy to see why a big fluctuation in the price of oil can have deep repercussions for their external balances. Getting the price of oil right is usually the first step in any petrocurrency forecast. The Outlook For Oil1 Our baseline calls for Brent prices to touch $75/bbl by year-end. Oil demand tends to follow the ebbs and flows of the business cycle, with demand having slowed sharply in the fourth quarter of 2018 (Chart I-1). With over 60% of global petroleum consumed fueling the transportation sector, the slowdown in global trade brought a lot of freighters, bulk ships, large crude carriers and heavy trucks to a halt. If, as we expect, the impact of easier global financial conditions begins to seep into the real economy, these trends should reverse in the second half of the year. BCA’s Commodity & Energy Strategy group estimates that this would translate into a 1.5% increase in oil demand this year. Chinese oil imports have already started accelerating, and should Indian consumption follow suit, this will put a floor under global demand growth (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Global Oil Demand Has Been Weak Global Oil Demand Has Been Weak Global Oil Demand Has Been Weak Chart I-2Oil Demand Green Shoots Oil Demand Green Shoots Oil Demand Green Shoots This increase in oil demand will materialize at a time when OPEC spare capacity is only at 2%. In its most recent meeting, OPEC decided not to extend the window for production cuts beyond May, waiting to see whether the U.S. eases sanctions on either Venezuela, Iran or both. At first blush, this appeared bearish for oil prices. However, the bottom line is that global spare capacity cannot handle the loss of both Venezuelan and Iranian exports. Unplanned outages wiped off about 1.5% of supply in 2018. Lost output from both countries will nudge the oil market dangerously close to a negative supply shock (Chart I-3). Chart I-3 Bottom Line: If Venezuelan sanctions continue, we expect the U.S. will likely extend the current waivers to Iranian exports further out into the future. Meanwhile, demonstrated flexibility by OPEC makes it increasingly the fulcrum of the oil market. That said, the balance of risks for oil prices remain to the upside since a miscalculation by both sides is a possibility. The Good Old Days Historically, the above analysis would have been largely sufficient to buy most petrocurrencies, especially given the gaping wedge that has opened vis-à-vis the price of oil (Chart I-4). But the reality is that the landscape for oil production is rapidly shifting, with the U.S. shale revolution grabbing market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC members. Chart I-4Opportunity Or Regime Shift? Opportunity Or Regime Shift? Opportunity Or Regime Shift? In 2010, only about 6% of global crude output came from the U.S. Collectively, Canada, Norway and Mexico shared about 10% of the oil market. Meanwhile, OPEC’s market share sat just north of 40%, having largely been stable among constituents like Saudi Arabia, Iran and even Venezuela. Fast forward to today and the U.S. produces almost 15% of global crude, having grabbed market share from both developed and politically-fragile economies (Chart I-5). Chart I-5A New Oil Baron A New Oil Baron A New Oil Baron At the same time, the positive correlation between petrocurrencies and oil has been gradually eroded as the U.S. economy has become less and less of an oil importer. Put another way, rising oil prices benefit the U.S. industrial base much more than in the past, while the benefits for countries like Canada and Norway are slowly fading. U.S. shale output in the Big 5 basins rose by about 1.5 million barrels in 2018, close to the equivalent of total Libyan production. Meanwhile, Norwegian production has been falling for a few years.  The reality is that the landscape for oil production is rapidly shifting, with the U.S. shale revolution grabbing market share from both OPEC and non-OPEC members. In statistical terms, petrocurrencies had a near-perfect positive correlation with oil around the time U.S. production was about to take off (Chart I-6). Since then, that correlation has fallen from around 0.8 to around 0.3. At the same time, the DXY dollar index is on its way to becoming positively correlated with oil as the U.S. becomes a net energy exporter. Chart I-6Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies Shifting Landscape For Petrocurrencies Bottom Line: Both the CAD and NOK remain positively correlated with oil. So do the Russian ruble, and the Colombian and Mexican pesos. That said, a loss of global market share has hurt the oil sensitivity of many petrocurrencies. Transportation bottlenecks for Canadian crude and falling production in Norway are also added negatives. The conclusion is that rising petrodollar reserves have historically been bullish for the currency (Chart I-7) but expect this correlation to be weaker than in the past.  Chart I-7Rising Petrodollar Reserves Will Be Bullish Rising Petrodollar Reserves Will Be Bullish Rising Petrodollar Reserves Will Be Bullish The Fed As A Catalyst The Federal Reserve recently completed the volte-face that it launched at its January FOMC meeting. The dots now forecast no rate hikes in 2019 and only one for 2020. Previously, three hikes were baked in over the forecast period. GDP growth has been downgraded slightly, and CPI forecasts have also been nudged down. Rising petrodollar reserves have historically been bullish for the currency but expect this correlation to be weaker than in the past. The reality is that U.S. growth momentum relative to the rest of the world started slowly rolling over at a time when external demand remained weak.2 Recent data confirm this trend persists: Industrial production peaked last year and continues to decelerate; the NAHB housing market index came in a nudge below expectations; and the U.S. economic surprise index is sitting close to its one-year low of -40. With bond yields having already made a downward adjustment by circa 100 basis points, the valve for financial conditions to get looser could easily be via the U.S. dollar (Chart I-8). We have been selectively playing USD shorts, mostly via the SEK and the euro, as per our March 8th report. Today, we add the Norwegian krone to the list. Chart I-8Bond Yields Down, Dollar Next? Bond Yields Down, Dollar Next? Bond Yields Down, Dollar Next? Sell CAD/NOK The Norges Bank hiked interest rates to 1% at yesterday’s meeting, which was widely expected, but the hawkish shift took the market by surprise. Governor Øystein Olsen signaled further rate increases later this year, at a time when global central banks are turning dovish. This lit a fire under the Norwegian krone. The 6.60 level for the CAD/NOK has proven to be a formidable resistance since 2015.   The Norwegian economy remains closely tied to oil, with the bottom in oil prices in 2016 having jumpstarted employment growth, business confidence and wage growth. With inflation slightly above the central bank’s target and our expectation for oil prices to grind higher, we agree with the central bank’s assessment that the future path of interest rates is likely higher (Chart I-9). Chart I-9The Norwegian Economy Is Faring Well The Norwegian Economy Is Faring Well The Norwegian Economy Is Faring Well Our recommendation is that NOK long positions should initially be played via selling the CAD, as an indirect way to express USD shorts (Chart I-10). The 6.60 level for the CAD/NOK has proven to be a formidable resistance since 2015, and our intermediate-term indicators suggest the next move is likely lower. Meanwhile, relative economic surprises are moving in favor of Norway, with export growth, retail sales and employment growth all outpacing Canadian data. The discount between Western Canadian Select crude oil and Brent has closed, but our contention is that the delay in Enbridge’s Line 3 replacement will likely push the discount back closer to $20/bbl. Chart I-10Sell USD Via CAD/NOK Sell USD Via CAD/NOK Sell USD Via CAD/NOK Over the longer term, both the Canadian and Norwegian housing markets are bubbly, but in the latter it has been concentrated in Oslo, with Bergen and Trondheim having had more muted increases. In Canada, the rise in house prices could rotate to smaller cities, as macro-prudential measures implemented in Toronto and Vancouver nudge investors away from those markets (Chart I-11).  Chart I-11Bubbly Housing In Norway And Canada Bubbly Housing In Norway And Canada Bubbly Housing In Norway And Canada The Canadian government has decided to provide residents with a potential line of credit in exchange for equity stakes of up to 10% in residential homes. The maximum home value that qualifies for this line of credit has been capped at C$480,000. While this does little to improve the affordability of houses in expensive cities, it almost guarantees that those in competitive markets will be bid up. This will encourage a continued buildup of household leverage. Historically, when the leverage ratio for Canada peaked vis-à-vis the U.S., it was a negative development for the Canadian dollar (Chart I-12).   Chart I-12The CAD Looks Vulnerable The CAD Looks Vulnerable The CAD Looks Vulnerable Bottom Line: Go short CAD/NOK for a trade, but more aggressive investors should begin accumulating short positions versus the U.S. dollar outright. Hold USD/SEK shorts established a fortnight ago, currently 3% in the money. Housekeeping We are taking profits on our short AUD/CAD position this week, with a 1.4% profit. As highlighted in our March 8th report, the Australian dollar has been severely knocked down, and is becoming more and more immune to bad news. Despite home prices falling by more than 5% year-on-year, worse than during the financial crises, the Aussie was actually up on the week. Meanwhile, Australian exports will be at the top of the list to benefit from China’s reflationary efforts.   Chester Ntonifor,  Foreign Exchange Strategist chestern@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see Commodity & Energy Strategy Weekly Report, titled “OPEC 2.0: Oil’s Price Fulcrum,” dated March 21, 2019, available at ces.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Foreign Exchange Strategy Special Report, titled “Into A Transition Phase,” dated March 8, 2019, available at fes.bcaresearch.com Currencies U.S. Dollar Chart II-1USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 USD Technicals 1 Chart II-2USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 USD Technicals 2 The recent data in the U.S. have shown more signs of a slowdown: February industrial production growth missed expectations, coming in at 0.1% month-on-month. Michigan consumer sentiment in March came in higher than expected at 97.8. NAHB housing market index in March came in at 62, below consensus. January factory orders slowed to 0.1% month-on-month.  Philadelphia Fed business outlook came in at 13.7, surprising to the upside. Initial jobless claims in March were 221k, also outperforming analysts’ forecast. The DXY index slumped by 0.8% post-FOMC, and is now slowly recovering on the strong data from the Philly Fed business outlook and initial jobless claims. The Fed left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, while further signaling that no rate hike is likely through 2019. Moreover, 2019 GDP forecast was downgraded to 2%. The dovish turn by the Fed could weigh on the dollar in the coming weeks. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 The Euro Chart II-3EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 EUR Technicals 1 Chart II-4EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 EUR Technicals 2 The recent data in the euro zone have been mostly positive: February consumer price index came in line at 1.5% year-on-year; core consumer price index also stayed at 1% year-on-year. The seasonally-adjusted trade balance in January improved to 17 billion euros. Q4 labor cost fell to 2.3%. ZEW economic sentiment survey came in at -2.5 in March, outperforming the consensus of -18.7. EUR/USD increased by 0.5% this week. The FOMC-led sharp rebound sent EUR/USD to a new week-high of 1.145 on Wednesday. We expect more positive data coming from the euro zone, which will further lift the euro. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 A Contrarian Bet On The Euro - March 1, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 The Yen Chart II-5JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 JPY Technicals 1 Chart II-6JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 JPY Technicals 2 Recent data in Japan have continued to soften: The merchandise trade balance came in at 339 billion yen in February. Total imports contracted by 6.7% year-on-year, while total exports fell by 1.2% year-on-year. Industrial production increased by 0.3% year-on-year in January. Capacity utilization in January fell by 4.7% month-on-month, missing expectations. The leading economic index in January fell to 95.9 from a previous reading of 97.2. USD/JPY slumped by 0.9% this week. Last Friday, the Bank of Japan left its key interest rate unchanged at -0.1%, as wildly expected. The 10-year government bond yield target also stayed unchanged at around 0%. Like many global central banks, the BoJ has been blindsided by the deep external slowdown that is beginning to seep into the domestic economy. Report Links: A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 British Pound Chart II-7GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 GBP Technicals 1 Chart II-8GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 GBP Technicals 2 Recent data in the U.K. have been mostly positive: Average earnings excluding bonuses in January grew in line by 3.4%. ILO unemployment rate in January fell to 3.9%. The retail price index in February stayed in line at 2.5% year-on-year. The February consumer price index increased to 1.9% year-on-year. Retail sales growth in February increased to 4% year-on-year, outperforming expectations.  GBP/USD fell by 1.1% this week, erasing the gains triggered by dollar weakness earlier on Wednesday. The BoE left its interest rate unchanged at 0.75%, and the sterling continues to show more volatility with a delayed Brexit. Report Links: A Trader’s Guide To The Yen - March 15, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Australian Dollar Chart II-9AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 AUD Technicals 1 Chart II-10AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 AUD Technicals 2 Recent data in Australia have shown the housing market is toppling over: The housing price index in Q4 fell sharply by 5.1% year-on-year. New jobs created in February were 4,600, missing the expectations by 9,400. Moreover, 7,300 full-time employment jobs were lost, while 11,900 positions were created for part-time employment. The unemployment rate in February fell to 4.9%, while the participation rate decreased to 65.6%. AUD/USD appreciated by 0.6% this week. It pulled back a little after reaching a 0.7168 high on Wednesday following the dovish Fed decision. During a speech this week, RBA highlighted the concerns over the ability of households to service their debt. Both external and internal constraints remain headwinds for the Australian dollar. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 New Zealand Dollar Chart II-11NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 NZD Technicals 1 Chart II-12NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 NZD Technicals 2 Recent data in New Zealand have been weak: Credit card spending growth in February slowed to 6.4% year-on-year. Q4 GDP growth came in at 2.3% year-on-year, underperforming consensus of 2.5%. The current account deficit widened to 3.7% of GDP in Q4. NZD/USD appreciated by 0.5% this week. The Q4 GDP breakdown showed that growth was mainly driven by the rise in service industries. Primary industries, however, fell by 0.8%. Agriculture was down 1.3%, mining was down 1.7%, forestry and logging fell 1.6%, and lastly, the fishing activity was down 0.9% quarter-on-quarter. The Kiwi will benefit from any dollar weakness, but is not our preferred currency. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Updating Our Intermediate Timing Models - November 2, 2018 Canadian Dollar Chart II-13CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 CAD Technicals 1 Chart II-14CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 CAD Technicals 2 Recent data in Canada continue to paint a mixed picture: January manufacturing shipments increased to 1% month-on-month. Foreign portfolio investment in Canadian securities saw an increase of C$49 billion in January, while Canadian portfolio investment in foreign securities decreased by C$8.4 billion. January wholesale sales growth increased to 0.6% month on month. USD/CAD rebounded overnight after falling sharply on a dovish Fed. CAD finally ended the week flat. On Tuesday, Bill Morneau, the Finance Minister of Canada, unveiled the new federal budget for 2019. It showed several new measures aiming to assist young and senior Canadian citizens, including first-time home buyers. While these measures might appease Canadian millennial voters, they will also result in significant deficits. The deficit projection for the year 2019-2020 widened to $19.8 billion, which could crowd out private spending. Report Links: Into A Transition Phase - March 8, 2019 Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Swiss Franc Chart II-15CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 CHF Technicals 1 Chart II-16CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 CHF Technicals 2 The trade balance in February came above expectations at 3,125 million CHF. Exports came in at 19,815 million CHF, while imports came in at 16,689 million CHF, respectively. USD/CHF depreciated by 1% this week. The Swiss National Bank left the benchmark sight deposit rate unchanged at -0.75%, as wildly expected. We struggle to see any upside potential for the franc, amid a dovish central bank, an expensive currency and muted inflation. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Waiting For A Real Deal - December 7, 2018 Norwegian Krone Chart II-17NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 NOK Technicals 1 Chart II-18NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 NOK Technicals 2 Recent data in Norway has been positive. The trade balance in February fell to 15.8 billion NOK, from a previous reading of 28.8 billion NOK. USD/NOK fell by 1.3% this week. The Norges Bank raised rates by 25 bps to 1%, in line with expectations, while signaling further rate hikes in the second half of this year. The Norges Bank once again demonstrated to be the most hawkish among G10 members. The bank reiterated that the economy is running at a solid pace and capacity utilization is above normal levels, while inflation keeps navigating above the bank’s target. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Swedish Krona Chart II-19SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 SEK Technicals 1 Chart II-20SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 SEK Technicals 2 There has been no major data release from Sweden this week. USD/SEK fell by 1.5% this week. Our short USD/SEK position is now 3% in the money since we initiated it 2 weeks ago. As we see more signs of recovery in the euro zone, we expect the exports of Sweden to pick up, which is a tailwind for the Swedish krona. Report Links: Balance Of Payments Across The G10 - February 15, 2019 A Simple Attractiveness Ranking For Currencies - February 8, 2019 Global Liquidity Trends Support The Dollar, But... - January 25, 2019 Trades & Forecasts Forecast Summary Core Portfolio Tactical Trades Closed Trades
Dear Client, I had the pleasure of visiting clients in Seattle, Anchorage, and Juneau last week. In this week’s report, I address some of the questions that routinely came up during our meetings. Among other things, the topics discussed include our optimistic global growth outlook, waning dollar bullishness, implications of a more dovish Fed on the business cycle, and where we think equities are headed. Next week we will be publishing our Quarterly Strategy Outlook, which will provide a detailed discussion of our key global macro and investment views. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Feature Q: You have predicted that global growth will stabilize in the second quarter and then accelerate in the second half of the year. Are you seeing much evidence in support of this view? A: We are seeing signs of green shoots, but they are still fairly tentative. Current activity indicators appear to have stabilized (Chart 1). The global manufacturing PMI edged lower in February, but the services component increased. Consumer confidence has risen, although that may simply reflect the rebound in global equities. Chart 1Global Growth Appears To Have Stabilized Global Growth Appears To Have Stabilized Global Growth Appears To Have Stabilized The data on international trade has been quite soft. That said, the weekly Harpex shipping index, which measures global container shipping activity, has improved. The Baltic Dry Index has also shown some signs of bottoming (Chart 2). Chart 2Shipping Data Pointing To A Recent Pickup In Global Trade Shipping Data Pointing To A Recent Pickup In Global Trade Shipping Data Pointing To A Recent Pickup In Global Trade The diffusion index of our global leading economic indicator, which tracks the share of countries with rising LEIs, has also moved higher (Chart 3). It generally leads the global LEI. The fact that global financial conditions have eased significantly since the start of the year is also an encouraging sign. Chart 3The Uptick In The LEI Diffusion Index Suggests Global Growth Will Firm Up The Uptick In The LEI Diffusion Index Suggests Global Growth Will Firm Up The Uptick In The LEI Diffusion Index Suggests Global Growth Will Firm Up Q: What’s your take on the most recent Chinese economic data? A: It has been generally soft, but not abysmal. Manufacturing output continues to decelerate. Retail sales remain lackluster, with auto sales showing little evidence of improvement. Property prices are still rising, but floor space sold has begun to contract. Fixed-asset investment has held up so far this year. However, this is mainly due to a pickup in spending among state-owned companies. Both exports and imports contracted in February. In a rather unusual step, the government announced last week that exports increased by nearly 40% in the first nine days of March compared with the same period last year.1 Electricity production has also apparently rebounded. We would not place a huge weight on these statements, as the data probably has been skewed by the timing of the lunar new year, but it does seem that economic momentum may be starting to turn the corner. We are seeing signs of green shoots, but they are still fairly tentative. There is little doubt that the government is trying to jumpstart growth. Household and business taxes have been cut. The PBOC has reduced reserve requirements by 350 bps over the past year. Interbank rates have dropped. Despite the fact that the February credit data fell short of expectations, the six-month credit impulse has turned decisively higher. The Chinese credit impulse leads imports by about six-to-nine months (Chart 4). This bodes well for global trade in the second half of the year. Chart 4Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse Global Trade Will Benefit From A Chinese Reflationary Impulse Q: Given that Chinese debt levels are already quite high, by how much more can they realistically increase? A: We do not expect credit growth to rise by as much as it did in 2009 or 2016. However, this is because the economy is in better shape, not because there is some intrinsic constraint to increasing debt from current levels. China’s elevated savings rate has kept interest rates well below trend nominal GDP growth, which is the key determinant of debt sustainability (Chart 5).2 As long as the government maintains an implicit guarantee on most local and corporate debt, as it is currently doing, default risk will remain minimal. Chart 5China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth China's High Savings Rate Has Kept Interest Rates Well Below Trend Nominal GDP Growth In any case, given that debt now stands at 240% of GDP, a mere one percentage-point increase in credit growth would still produce a hefty 2.4% of GDP in credit stimulus. In this sense, China may be better off with a higher debt-to-GDP ratio since in steady state this will allow for a larger flow of credit-financed stimulus into the economy. Q: A revival in Chinese growth would presumably help Europe? A: Yes. Our conversations with clients revealed an ongoing negative bias towards Europe among investors (Chart 6). This is echoed in the latest BofA Merrill Lynch Global Fund Manager Survey which, for the first time in history, identified “short European equities” as the most crowded trade. Chart 6European Equities: Unloved And Unwanted European Equities: Unloved And Unwanted European Equities: Unloved And Unwanted We think that such deep pessimism about Europe is largely unwarranted. Faster global growth will help the European export sector later this year, while domestic demand will benefit from more accommodative fiscal policy and lower bond yields, especially in Italy. The ECB will not raise rates this year even if growth speeds up, but the market will probably price in a few more rate hikes in 2020 and beyond. This will allow for a modest re-steepening in the yield curves in core European bond markets, which should be positive for long-suffering bank profits. Political risk remains a concern. The Brexit saga has reached the farcical stage where: 1) The U.K. has voted to leave the EU; but 2) Parliament has voted to stay in the EU unless it reaches a satisfactory deal with Brussels; while 3) rejecting the only deal with Brussels that was on offer. Given that most British voters no longer want Brexit (Chart 7), we think that the government will kick the proverbial can down the road until a second referendum is announced or a “soft Brexit” deal is formulated. Either outcome would be welcomed by markets. Chart 7U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win U.K.: In The Case Of A Do-Over, The Remain Side Would Likely Win Q: You seem less bullish on the U.S. dollar than you were last year? A: That is correct. As we discussed last week, the dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of global growth (Chart 8). If global growth strengthens later this year, the trade-weighted dollar will probably weaken. Chart 8The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency The Dollar Is A Countercyclical Currency Moreover, as this week’s FOMC meeting highlighted, the Fed’s reaction function has shifted in a more dovish direction. The median Fed dot now foresees no rate hikes this year and only one rate hike in 2020. In contrast, the December Summary of Economic Projections envisioned two rate hikes this year and one next year. The dollar is a countercyclical currency, meaning that it tends to move in the opposite direction of global growth. In a far cry from his October “rates are far from neutral” comment, Jay Powell stressed during this week's post-FOMC meeting press conference that the fed funds rate is currently in the “broad range of estimates of neutral.” While we would not rule out the possibility that the FOMC will raise rates at some point later this year, we now expect a more gradual pace of rate tightening than we had earlier envisioned. Q: Does a more dovish Fed imply that the economic expansion has even further to run? A: Yes. Expansions tend to end when monetary policy turns restrictive. We had previously thought that this point could be reached in late-2020, but it is now starting to look as though it will occur later than that. Broadly speaking, we see the Fed tightening cycle unfolding in two stages. In the first stage, which is the one we are in today, the Fed will raise rates in baby steps in response to better-than-expected growth and falling unemployment. In the second stage, the Fed will hike rates more aggressively as inflation starts to accelerate. Risk assets will be able to digest the first stage, but not the second. The good news is that most of our favorite indicators are not yet pointing to a major inflationary upswing (Chart 9): Despite higher tariffs, consumer import price inflation has slowed; core intermediate producer price inflation has decelerated; the prices paid components of the ISM and regional Fed surveys have plunged; inflation surprise indices have rolled over; and both survey and market-based measures of inflation expectations remain below where they were last summer. In keeping with these developments, BCA’s propriety Inflation Pipeline Indicator has fallen to a two-and-a-half-year low. Chart 9No Signs Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... No Signs Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... No Signs Of An Imminent Major Inflationary Upswing In The U.S. ... Wage growth has accelerated, but productivity growth has increased by even more. Unit labor cost inflation has actually been coming down since the middle of last year. Unit labor costs lead core CPI inflation by about 12 months (Chart 10). This implies that consumer price inflation is unlikely to reach uncomfortably high levels at least until the second half of next year. Chart 10... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being ... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being ... And Decelerating Unit Labor Costs Will Dampen Inflationary Pressures For The Time Being Beyond then, the risks are high that inflation will move up as the economy continues to overheat. This could force the Fed to start raising rates aggressively late next year, a course of action that will push up the dollar and cause equities and spread product to sell off. The resulting tightening in financial conditions will probably plunge the U.S. and the rest of the world into recession in 2021. Q: So stay overweight stocks for now, but consider selling at some point next year? A: Correct. The MSCI All-Country World Index (ACWI) has risen by over 14% since we upgraded it in December after having moved to the sidelines six months earlier. Given this run-up, we are not as bullish now as we were at the start of the year. Most of our favorite indicators are not yet pointing to a major inflationary upswing. Nevertheless, the path of least resistance for equities remains to the upside. While the forward P/E ratio for the MSCI ACWI has returned to where it was last September, analyst earnings expectations are currently much more conservative: Bottom-up estimates foresee EPS rising by 4.1% in the U.S. and 5.3% in the rest of the world in 2019 (Chart 11). The combination of faster growth, easier financial conditions, and ongoing corporate buybacks implies some upside to those estimates. Chart 11Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted Analyst Expectations Are Quite Muted Moreover, real yields have fallen over the past five months – the 10-year U.S. TIPS yield is 48 basis points below its Q4 average, for example. A simple dividend discount model would suggest that global equities are about 10%-to-15% cheaper than they were prior to last year’s autumn selloff. The path of least resistance for equities remains to the upside. Q: Aren’t you worried that rising labor costs will push down profit margins even if GDP growth accelerates? A: Not really. As noted above, productivity growth has picked up. Whether this is the start of a new trend remains to be seen, but at least for now, it is dampening unit labor costs. Historically, real unit labor costs – nominal unit labor costs divided by the corporate price deflator – have tracked economy-wide profit margins very closely (Chart 12). Chart 12Real U.S. Unit Labor Costs Historically Have Tracked Economy-Wide Profit Margins Very Closely Real U.S. Unit Labor Costs Historically Have Tracked Economy-Wide Profit Margins Very Closely Real U.S. Unit Labor Costs Historically Have Tracked Economy-Wide Profit Margins Very Closely In practice, it is very rare for earnings to contract outside of recessions (Chart 13). This is why recessions and equity bear markets generally overlap (Chart 14). With the next recession still two years away, it is too early to turn defensive. Indeed, as Table 1 shows, the second-to-last year of business-cycle expansions is often the most lucrative for stock market investors. Chart 13Earnings Rarely Contract Outside Of Recessions Earnings Rarely Contract Outside Of Recessions Earnings Rarely Contract Outside Of Recessions Chart 14Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Recessions And Bear Markets Usually Overlap Table 1Too Soon To Get Out Questions From The Road Questions From The Road Q: What do you recommend in terms of regional equity allocation? A: If global growth accelerates later this year and the dollar weakens, this will create an excellent environment for international stocks – EM and Europe in particular. Investors should prepare to overweight those regions at the expense of the United States (currency unhedged). Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Global Investment Strategy peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1      Elaine Chan, “China spreading ‘positive news’ of strong export rebound in early March after February plunge,” South China Morning Post, March 11, 2019. 2      Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Is There Really Too Much Government Debt In The World?” dated February 22, 2019.   Strategy & Market Trends MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores Chart 15 Tactical Trades Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades