Recession-Hard/Soft Landing
Highlights Financial markets are now fully priced for an economic downturn lasting one quarter… …but they are not fully priced for a recession. To go tactically long equities versus bonds requires a high conviction that the coronavirus induced downturn will last no longer than one quarter. The big risk is that the coronavirus incubation period might be very long, rendering containment strategies ineffective. Hence, a better investment play is to go long positive yielding US T-bonds and/or UK gilts versus negative yielding Swiss bonds and/or German bunds… …or go long negative yielding currencies versus positive yielding currencies. Our favoured expression is long CHF/USD. Fractal trade: overweight Poland versus Portugal. Feature Chart I-1AFinancial Markets Are Priced For A One-Quarter Downturn...
Financial Markets Are Priced For A One-Quarter Downturn...
Financial Markets Are Priced For A One-Quarter Downturn...
Chart I-1B...But Not For A ##br##Recession
...But Not For A Recession
...But Not For A Recession
They say that when China sneezes, the rest of the world catches a cold. But the saying was meant as an economic metaphor, not as a literal medical truth.1 The current coronavirus crisis has two potential happy endings: ‘containment’, in which its worldwide contagion is halted; or ‘normalisation’, in which it becomes accepted as just another type of winter flu. The virus crisis also has a potential unhappy ending in which neither containment nor normalisation can happen. Containing Contagion To determine whether the virus crisis has a happy or unhappy ending, we must answer three crucial questions: 1. Does the virus thrive only in cold weather? If yes, then the onset of spring and summer should naturally contain the contagion (in the northern hemisphere). We are not experts in epidemiology or immunology, but we understand that the Covid-19 virus surface is a lipid (fat) which could become fragile at higher temperatures. Albeit this might just be a temporary containment until temperatures drop again. 2. Does the virus have a short incubation period before symptoms arise? If yes, then quarantining and containment will be effective because infected people are quickly identified. But if, after infection, there is a long asymptomatic period, then containment would be impossible – because for an extended period the virus would be ‘under cover’. In this regard, the dispersion of infections is as important as the number of infections. A thousand cases across a hundred countries is much more worrying than a thousand cases concentrated in two or three countries (Chart I-2). Chart I-2Covid-19 Has Spread To 80 Countries
Covid-19 Has Spread To 80 Countries
Covid-19 Has Spread To 80 Countries
3. Are most infections going undetected because the symptoms are very mild? If yes, then the true mortality rate of the Covid-19 virus is much lower than we think, and perhaps not that different to the mortality rate of winter flu, at around 1 in a 1000. In which case, the new virus could become ‘normalised’ as a variant of the flu. But if the current mortality rate, at ten times deadlier than the flu, is accurate, then it would be difficult to normalise (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Covid-19 Mortality Rate Is Ten Times Deadlier Than The Flu. Or Is It?
The Covid-19 Mortality Rate Is Ten Times Deadlier Than The Flu. Or Is It?
The Covid-19 Mortality Rate Is Ten Times Deadlier Than The Flu. Or Is It?
An unhappy ending to the crisis will happen if the answer to all three questions is ‘no’. The main risk is that the asymptomatic incubation period appears to be quite long, rendering containment strategies ineffective. Still, even if the happy ending happens, there are two further questions. How much disruption will the economy suffer before the happy ending? And what have the financial markets priced? The Economic Disruption The disruption to the economy comes from both the supply side and the demand side: the supply side because containment strategies such as quarantining entire towns, shuttering factories, and cancelling major sports and social events hurt output; the demand side because a fearful public’s reluctance to use public transport, visit crowded places such as shopping malls, or travel abroad hurt spending. In this way, both production and consumption will suffer a large hit in the first quarter, at the very least. However, when normal activity eventually resumes, production and consumption will bounce back to pre-crisis levels, and in some cases overshoot pre-crisis levels. For example, if the crisis lasts for a quarter, movie-goers will return to the cinemas as usual in the second quarter, albeit they will not compensate for the visit they missed in the first quarter; but for manufacturers, the backlog of components that were not made during the first quarter will mean that twice as many will be made in the second quarter. For the financial markets, it is not the depth of the V that is important so much as its length. Therefore, economic output will experience a ‘V’ (Chart I-4): a lurch down followed by a symmetrical, or potentially even larger, snapback. However, for the financial markets, it is not the depth of the V that is important so much as its length. Chart I-4Economic Output Will Experience A 'V'
Economic Output Will Experience A 'V'
Economic Output Will Experience A 'V'
The Financial Market Disruption Anticipating the economy to experience a V, investors respond to the crisis according to the expected length of the V versus the different lengths of their investment horizons. By length of investment horizon, we mean the minimum timeframe over which the investor cares about a price move, or ‘marks to market’. Say the market expects the downturn to last three months, followed by a full recovery. A three-month investor, caring about the price in three months, will capitulate. He will sell all his equities and buy bonds. Whereas a six-month investor, caring about the price only in six months, will not capitulate because he will factor in both the down-leg and subsequent up-leg of the V. Meanwhile, a twelve-month investor will be completely unfazed by the short-lived downturn. Therefore, if the downturn lasts one quarter only, the market will bottom when all the three-month investors have capitulated, which is to say become indistinguishable in their behaviour from a 1-day trader. In technical terms, the tell-tale sign for this capitulation is that three-month (65-day) fractal structure of the market totally collapses. Last Friday, the financial markets reached this point, meaning that financial markets are now fully priced for an economic downturn lasting one quarter (Chart I-5). Chart I-5When 3-Month Investors Capitulate It Usually Signals A Trend-Reversal...
When 3-Month Investors Capitulate It Usually Signals A Trend-Reversal...
When 3-Month Investors Capitulate It Usually Signals A Trend-Reversal...
However, six-month and longer horizon investors are still a long way from capitulation. Meaning that the markets are not yet priced for a recession – defined as a contraction in activity lasting two or more straight quarters. It follows that if the down-leg of the V lasts significantly longer than a quarter then equities and other risk-assets have further downside versus high-quality bonds (Chart of the Week). During the global financial crisis, three-month investors had fully capitulated by September 3 2008 when equities had underperformed bonds by a seemingly huge 20 percent. However, equities went on to underperform bonds by a further 50 percent and only found a bottom when eighteen-month investors had fully capitulated in early 2009 (Chart I-6). This makes perfect sense, because profits contracted for a full eighteen months (Chart I-7). Chart I-6...But In The Global Financial Crisis The Market Turned Only When 18-Month Investors Had Capitulated...
...But In The Global Financial Crisis The Market Turned Only When 18-Month Investors Had Capitulated...
...But In The Global Financial Crisis The Market Turned Only When 18-Month Investors Had Capitulated...
Chart I-7...Because In The Global Financial Crisis, Profits Contracted For 18 Months
...Because In The Global Financial Crisis, Profits Contracted For 18 Months
...Because In The Global Financial Crisis, Profits Contracted For 18 Months
All of which brings us to a very powerful investment identity: Financial markets have fully priced a downturn when the time horizon of investors that have fully capitulated = the length of the downturn. The message right today is to go tactically long equities versus bonds if you have high conviction that the coronavirus induced downturn will last no longer than one quarter. Given that the coronavirus incubation period appears to be quite long, rendering containment strategies ineffective, we do not have such a high conviction on this tactical trade. Central banks that are already at the limits of monetary policy easing cannot ease much more. Instead, we have much higher conviction that those central banks that are already at the limits of monetary policy easing cannot ease much relative to those that have the scope to ease. The conclusion is: go long positive yielding US T-bonds and/or UK gilts versus negative yielding Swiss bonds and/or German bunds. Conversely, go long negative yielding currencies versus positive yielding currencies. Our favoured expression is long CHF/USD (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Overweight Positive-Yielding Bonds, And Overweight Negative-Yielding Currencies
Overweight Positive-Yielding Bonds, And Overweight Negative-Yielding Currencies
Overweight Positive-Yielding Bonds, And Overweight Negative-Yielding Currencies
Fractal Trading System* This week’s recommended trade is to overweight Poland versus Portugal. Set the profit target at 3.5 percent with a symmetrical stop-loss. In other trades, long EUR/GBP achieved its 2 percent profit target at which it was closed. And short palladium has quickly gone into profit, given that the palladium price is down 10 percent in the last week. The rolling 1-year win ratio now stands at 62 percent. Chart I-9Poland Vs. Portugal
Poland Vs. Portugal
Poland Vs. Portugal
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. * 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. Dhaval Joshi Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 The original version of the metaphor is attributed to the nineteenth century Austrian diplomat Klemens Metternich who said: “When France sneezes all of Europe catches a cold”. Subsequently, the Metternich metaphor has been adapted for any economy with outsized influence on the rest of the world. Fractal Trading Model
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
Is The Contagion Containable?
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
Feature “Bayesian: …statistical methods that assign probabilities or distributions to events…based on experience or best guesses before experimentation and data collection and that apply Bayes' theorem to revise the probabilities and distributions after obtaining experimental data.” — Merriam-Webster Dictionary Markets have reacted pretty rationally to the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus. Equities initially rebounded a few days ahead of the peak of new cases in China (Chart 1). But then, once the number of cases in the rest of the world started to accelerate, stock markets sold off again sharply. The MSCI All Country World Index is now down 13% from its peak on February 12. Recommended Allocation
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 1Markets Have Reacted In Line With New COVID-19 Cases
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
No one knows whether this episode will turn into an unprecedented pandemic, which will kill millions worldwide, last for months, and trigger a global recession. So it is the sort of environment in which Bayesian analysis becomes useful. Our “prior” for the probability of a full pandemic would be around 10-20%. If it doesn’t happen, an attractive buying opportunity for risk assets should present itself soon. But there could be further downside first, especially if the number of cases in major countries such as the US, Germany, and the UK were to accelerate significantly. There are some sign that Chinese activity is beginning to recover. There are some signs that Chinese activity is beginning to recover, as new cases of COVID-19 slow, thanks to the draconian measures taken by the authorities. Big Data can help analyze this. For example, live traffic statistics from TomTom show that by February 28, weekday road congestion in Shanghai was back to 50% of its normal level, compared to 19% on February 14 (Chart 2). The Chinese authorities have relaunched fiscal and monetary stimulus, causing short-term rates to fall to their lowest level since 2010 (Chart 3). Monetary policy has been upgraded from “prudent” to “flexible and moderate.” BCA Research’s China strategists believe there is even an increasing possibility of a stimulus overshoot in the next 6-12 months, as the authorities plan for the worst-case scenario but the economy rebounds.1 Chart 2Chinese People Getting Back On The Roads
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 3Chinese Stimulus Pushing Down Rates
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
In the short-term, it is clear that global growth will weaken, though quantifying this is hard. A 1% quarter-on-quarter decline in Chinese GDP in Q1 would bring growth down to 3.5% year-over-year. Our colleagues in BCA’s Global Investment Strategy estimate this would cause global growth to fall 0.8% below trend in Q1, mainly from a contraction in tourism, but that this would be largely made up in Q2, assuming that the epidemic is over by then (Chart 4).2 Could even a limited epidemic tip the world into recession? We doubt it. Consumer confidence remains strong in developed economies (Chart 5) and the virus is not yet serious enough to stop most consumers going out to spend. The global economy was in the process of bottoming out before COVID-19 hit (Chart 6) and there is little reason to think that we will not return to the status quo ante. Chart 4Global Growth To Slow In Q1, But Rebound In Q2
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 5Consumers Remain Confident
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 6Before COVID-19, Growth Was Bottoming Out
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
We see the two biggest risks being: 1) a rise in defaults in China, especially among smaller companies, that the government is unable or unwilling to prevent (Chart 7); and 2) a deterioration in the jobs market in the US, as companies start to postpone hiring, or lay off staff (Chart 8). We will watch these carefully over coming weeks. Chart 7Are Chinese Companies Vulnerable?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 8Is The US Job Market Starting To Wobble?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 9Markets Believe Trump Would Beat Sanders
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
There is one other risk that might give equity markets an excuse for a further sell-off: November’s US presidential election. The probability that Bernie Sanders wins the Democratic nomination has risen to 60% from 15% over the past two months. The consensus believes that Trump can easily defeat Sanders, which is why the President’s probability of being reelected has risen in tandem (Chart 9). But, if the economy starts to weaken and Trump’s approval rating slips, investors could become nervous about the likelihood of a market-unfriendly Sanders administration. We would not recommend long-term investors sell out of risk assets at this point. There could be an attractive buying opportunity over the next few weeks, and investors who have derisked should be looking for a reentry point. With US 10-year bonds yields at 1.2% and German yields at -60 basis points, it is hard to see much further upside for risk-free bonds. Equities should be able to outperform over the next 12 months, as growth rebounds following the COVID-19 episode. We have been recommending overweights in cash and gold, as hedges, since December, and these still make sense. However, if events over the coming weeks point to the risk of global pandemic being higher than we currently think, then investors should Bayesianally adjust and move more risk-off. Otherwise, a peak in COVID-19 cases ex-China should be a strong signal to buy risk assets again. Chart 10Why Should Long-Run Inflation Expectations Fall?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Fixed Income: US Treasurys have become investors’ safe haven of choice over the past few weeks. A marked drop in long-run inflation expectations (Chart 10), in particular, has pushed the 10-year yield to a record low. This seems somewhat illogical, since the Fed will announce this summer the results of its review of monetary policy, which is likely to lead to a more dovish long-term inflation target (perhaps a commitment to achieve 2% on average over the cycle). The market has also priced in at least three Fed rate cuts by year-end (Chart 11). The Fed will certainly cut rates if US growth falters as a result of COVID-19, but this is by no means a certainty. History shows that Treasury yields jumped sharply once previous viral outbreaks ended (Chart 12). We expect yields to be significantly higher in 12 months, and so are underweight duration and prefer TIPS over nominal bonds. Credit will continue to underperform in the risk-off phase, but some interesting opportunities should arise soon, especially among the lowest-rated credits and in the Energy sector. Chart 11Will The Fed Really Be This Accommodating?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 12After Previous Virus Outbreaks, Rates Leapt
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Equities: The sell-off has already put on fire sale some stocks most affected by the epidemic. For example, cruise lines are down by 40% over the past month or so, European oil stocks 25%, some luxury goods makers 30%, and airlines 30%. Opportunistic investors might want to buy a basket of the most oversold quality names. Our overweight on euro area stocks has not worked in the sell-off. But, as a cyclical, export-oriented market, we continue to expect Europe to outperform when global growth rebounds. Euro area banks, in particular, represent the best call option on a rise in bond yields, since their performance is highly correlated to the shape of the yield curve. We continue to have a somewhat cyclical tilt among our sector weightings (with overweights on, for example, Energy and Industrials), but may adjust this in our Quarterly Portfolio Outlook in early April if we decide to reduce risk. The sell-off has already put on fire sale some stocks most affected by the epidemic. Currencies: The dollar is a safe-haven currency and so, unsurprisingly, has benefitted from the rush to safety in recent weeks. However, it remains overvalued (Chart 13), and interest rate differentials would move further against it if the Fed does cut rates, since other major developed central banks have much less room to move (Chart 14). This suggests that it will probably resume the weakness it experienced from August to December last year as soon as global growth rebounds. Chart 13Dollar Is Overvalued...
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 14...And Interest Differentials Have Moved Against It
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 15Metals Prices Stabilized In Recent Weeks
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Commodities: Industrial metals fell sharply on the outbreak of COVID-19 in China, but have bottomed in line with the stabilization of the situation in that country (Chart 15). Gold has worked predictably as the best hedge in the sell-off. While it is starting to look technically overbought and would be hurt by a rise in bond yields (Chart 16), for prudent investors it remains a useful hiding place amid heightened risk and ultra-low interest rates. Oil is the commodity that has fallen the most surprisingly, with Brent close to the low it reached during the sell-off in December 2018 (Chart 17). It is much less dependent on Chinese demand than metals are, and so is maybe pricing in a global recession – as well as questioning the commitment of OPEC to cut production further. This would suggest upside to the oil price if global growth turns out not to be so bad, oil demand continues to pick up, and supply remains constrained. Chart 16How Much Could Gold Overshoot?
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Chart 17Oil Discounting A Global Recession
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Monthly Portfolio Update: A Classic Bayesian Dynamic
Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “China: Back To Its Old Economic Playbook?” dated 26 February 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Market Too Complacent About The Coronavirus,” dated 21 February 2020, available at cis.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation
Highlights We spent last week meeting with clients in South Africa, who maintained their equanimity despite the spread of the coronavirus: Maybe it was because there were not yet any reported cases close to home, but investors discussed the global outbreak dispassionately. We repeated our view that a US recession is not imminent, ex-a significantly adverse exogenous event: Tight monetary policy is a necessary precondition of a recession, and there’s no reason to expect that the Fed will make any move to remove accommodation in 2020. Investors were open to our view that the US economy is subject to upward inflation pressures, even if the time is not yet ripe for them to manifest themselves: Excess global capacity is still thwarting goods inflation, but it appears to be on its way to being absorbed. In the meantime, the Fed is deliberately encouraging the economy to run hot. Inflation just might surprise investors who have been lulled to sleep by its post-crisis absence. The presidential election is a hot topic in South Africa, too: The Democratic nomination appears to be Bernie Sanders’ to lose, and he has more of a chance in the general election than investors might expect. Feature We spent last week meeting with clients in South Africa. They expressed considerably more optimism about financial markets and the global economy than they did on our previous visit in January 2019, though we all conceded that the coronavirus outcome was unknowable. We discussed a wide range of topics, with COVID-19, recession prospects, the inflation outlook, and November’s election coming up in nearly every meeting. A summary of our discussions, organized by topic, follows below. Coronavirus Impressions We discussed the coronavirus at the beginning of every meeting, albeit after acknowledging that no one can know for sure how it will unfold. We discussed the virus’ potential outcomes, our base-case expectation, and the news and data we’re monitoring to track its course. Everyone is familiar by now with the best- and worst-case scenarios, and the continuum of possibilities in between, so we will not rehash them here. The main variables we have been watching – infection, mortality and recovery rates – are also surely familiar. From a review of those metrics within China – the daily rate of new incidences inside and outside of Hubei province (Chart 1), mortality (Chart 2) and recovery rates (Chart 3) within and without Hubei – there is good reason to conclude that China is gaining the upper hand, having sharply limited the virus’ spread beyond Hubei, and steadily slowing its spread in the epicenter. Chart 1Stringent Quarantine Measures Seem To Have Gotten Some Traction
Road Trip
Road Trip
Chart 2Mortality Rates Are Inconclusive, ...
Road Trip
Road Trip
Chart 3... But Recovery Rates Are Encouraging
Road Trip
Road Trip
Unfortunately, however, other countries cannot perfectly replicate China’s template for corralling the virus, as their governments have considerably less ability to limit their citizens’ movements. It is a lot easier to impose and enforce a quarantine or other emergency restrictions in China than it is in any other major country. It is important, then, to consider not just the number of countries to which the virus spreads, but the characteristics of the countries themselves. In this sense, Italy and Iran may offer some insight. The Italians reacted swiftly and decisively when the first cluster emerged in northern Italy. They drew a circle with a large radius around the cluster, restricted movement in and out of that circle, and sharply limited activities within it. Carnival celebrations in Venice were called off, and Sunday’s slate of matches in Italy’s Serie A professional soccer league were cancelled (subsequent matches are being played in empty stadiums). Although the number of reported infections in Italy has been rising, and infections have begun to pop up in western and central Europe, Italian officials appear to have both the ability and the will to contain it. The Iranian experience contrasts with Italy’s. In Iran, the mortality rate (deaths divided by confirmed cases) is roughly five times greater than it has been everywhere else the virus has erupted. That seems improbably high, and our best guess is that the infections denominator is being undercounted. A country that cannot provide a reliable count (or a reasonably accurate estimate) of infections presumably lacks the public health infrastructure to contain the virus. We conclude that it matters where the infections occur – the wealthy countries of western Europe, North America, Asia and Oceania likely have a better chance of bringing the virus to heel than developing countries. Our interactions in South Africa, among the wealthiest countries in the developing world, may further reinforce the point. In several meetings, clients asked what entering the country was like. I told them that when I arrived at the Johannesburg airport on the morning of Sunday the 23rd, all passengers from international destinations had to pass by a screener who pointed a clunky object shaped like a radar gun in the vicinity of their nose and forehead. Several planes had landed just before mine and the passport control line wound around three or four times, affording repeated opportunities to look over the radar-gun employee’s shoulder at the images on her screen. They appeared to be simple black-and-white video of the arriving passengers without any color imagery to indicate body temperature ranges. The clients uniformly laughed at that detail, exclaiming that of course the screening was ineffectual. They then soberly conceded that Africa is especially vulnerable to an outbreak. If the coronavirus or another severe adverse exogenous event doesn't do it, it will take restrictive monetary policy to induce a recession. Infections outside of China are rising with no end yet in sight (Chart 4), but the news isn’t all bad. There are some promising treatment developments that may yield effective therapies, either from the conventional drug that worked wonders on an infected patient in Washington State and is now being tested on infected groups in China, or from antibody-based therapies of the type that were successfully deployed against Ebola. Our own views are conditional upon COVID-19’s evolution, but our current base case is that it is more likely to produce a soft patch within the context of a global expansion, and a correction within the context of a continuing equity bull market, than it is to trigger a recession or a bear market. Chart 4Now It's The Rest Of The World's Turn
Road Trip
Road Trip
Recession Prospects Chart 5Necessary, If Not Sufficient
Necessary, If Not Sufficient
Necessary, If Not Sufficient
Nearly every client asked us about the prospects for a US recession. We discussed how the negative term premium had made the yield curve more prone to invert, thereby diluting its predictive value, and asserted our view that restrictive monetary conditions are a necessary precondition of recessions (Chart 5). We touched on the rest of the points covered in last week’s report, which argued that a strong near-term outlook for consumption, dependable government spending and a post-trade-tensions recovery in investment would keep the US out of recession over a 12-month horizon. But we spent the most time outlining what we see as the most likely route to the next recession. Expansions don’t die of old age, they die because the Fed murders them, and we told our clients that we expect that maxim will be especially apropos in this cycle. Investors should therefore focus on the factors that will prod the Fed to embark on a tightening cycle with the express intent of reining in an overheating economy. We see two main catalysts: concern that inflation may get away from the Fed on the upside (discussed in the following section), and/or concern that there are unsustainable excesses in either the economy or financial markets. Chart 6The Real Economy Isn't Close To Overheating
The Real Economy Isn't Close To Overheating
The Real Economy Isn't Close To Overheating
We contend that there are currently no signs of excesses in the real economy. Its most cyclical elements, which have driven overheating in the past, have not gotten back to their mean level, much less the red-line levels that have been associated with previous business cycle peaks (Chart 6, top panel). Proportional spending on consumer durables remains around the bottom of its 60-year range (Chart 6, second panel), investment in non-residential structures is quite low relative to history and comfortably in the middle of its post-1990-91-recession range (Chart 6, fourth panel), and residential investment is sitting at the level that previously marked business-cycle troughs (Chart 6, bottom panel). The only cyclical activity that looks a little frisky is equipment and software spending (Chart 6, third panel), which has the best chance of enhancing productivity and thereby yielding ongoing dividends. Financial market excesses are in the eye of the beholder, and reasonable people can disagree about their existence. The promiscuous application of the word “bubble” to anything and everything market related, however, has become as familiar and tiresome as rappers’ boasts of their prowess. The S&P 500’s steady climb higher doesn’t begin to approach the manic paths of prior decades’ hot assets (Chart 7). The key takeaway is that the economic or financial overheating likely to trigger the expansion’s ultimate denouement is yet to arrive. Until it does, the Fed will have no reason to intervene to stop it. Chart 7Which One Of These Is Not Like The Others?
Which One Of These Is Not Like The Others?
Which One Of These Is Not Like The Others?
Inflation Prospects Many clients asked about inflation prospects before we could bring up the subject, a notable turnabout from our last visit thirteen months ago, when our arguments for accelerating wage gains met mostly with indifference. We were happy to oblige, as inflation occupies an essential place in our base-case cyclical scenario. Tight monetary policy is a necessary precondition for an endogenously occurring recession. Ex-a severe exogenous shock, like a global pandemic, the expansion cannot end without tight monetary conditions, and the Fed won’t knowingly impose them unless it is concerned that inflation is getting away from it on the upside. Q: Why has there been no whiff of US inflation in the last eleven years? A: Because the negative US output gap rendered it impossible until 2018. We are not daunted by inflation’s post-crisis hibernation. Meaningful price increases at the level of the entire economy cannot occur when an economy has a negative output gap (aggregate demand persistently falls short of economic capacity) unless its currency is sliding and it imports a lot of goods and services. From that perspective, inflation has only been possible in the US since 2018, because it didn’t close its output gap until 2017, according to estimates from both the IMF and the CBO. 2018 was the year that the US embarked on an unprecedented macroeconomic experiment (Chart 8), injecting fiscal stimulus amounting to one half of the economy’s long-run capacity (about 100 basis points) at a time when it was already operating at full capacity (2-2.25%). If corporations and other businesses viewed the surge in aggregate demand as a one-off event that couldn’t be replicated in the future, they would likely choose not to invest in additional capacity to meet it. The net result was demand in excess of supply in 2018 and in 2019, when an additional 50 basis points of stimulus was deployed. Inflation did not break out in either year, but negative output gaps in the rest of the developed world provided the US with the convenient out of importing other countries’ excess capacity. Chart 82018's Unprecedented Macroeconomic Experiment May Yet Produce Inflation
2018's Unprecedented Macroeconomic Experiment May Yet Produce Inflation
2018's Unprecedented Macroeconomic Experiment May Yet Produce Inflation
The Bank of Canada estimated that Canada closed its output gap in 2018, and the IMF estimates that Europe’s output gap has now closed (Chart 9, top panel), and while even Japan has made a lot of progress on narrowing its output gap (Chart 9, bottom panel). Goods inflation is largely globally determined, and with excess capacity being absorbed around the world, it’s possible that the conditions that would allow for higher goods prices could soon lock into place. Services inflation, a predominantly domestic phenomenon, is poised to rise thanks to the tight-as-a-drum labor market. Just when inflation will rear its ugly head is uncertain, however, as it is a lagging indicator that often doesn’t peak, until a recession has nearly ended, or trough for nearly three years after a recession begins (Chart 10). Chart 9The Slack Is Being Absorbed
The Slack Is Being Absorbed
The Slack Is Being Absorbed
Chart 10It May Take A Long Time For 2018's Seeds To Germinate
Road Trip
Road Trip
We find supply and demand arguments compelling, and the excess-supply constraint on global goods inflation has quietly been easing. The bottom line is that we think the US economy harbors upward inflation pressures, though it is highly unlikely that they will manifest themselves this year. That will give the Fed free rein to allow the economy to run hot across all of 2020, in service of its primary goal of pushing inflation expectations higher, and the labor market as well, in service of its secondary goal of spreading the benefits of easy policy more evenly across the economy. The upshot is that the longer inflation remains outwardly dormant, the harder it will be to root it out once it eventually does begin to bloom. The World Is Watching American Voters As an indication of the anticipation surrounding November’s election, South African investors, who recognized Bernie Sanders’ name, asked about it in every meeting. We laid out our geopolitical strategists’ views, augmented in places by our own, on the key issues as follows: Presidential elections are referendums on the incumbent party. An incumbent president running for re-election has a sizable built-in advantage. In the postwar era, only major economic, social or international shifts have been sufficient to erode that advantage. Incumbents lose when a recession occurs near an election, but the president has to be considered a favorite if the expansion continues. The president may be an especially poor front-runner. Donald Trump personifies variability. That’s a great trait to have as an underdog, because a wide dispersion of individual outcomes broadens the range of possible competitive outcomes, but it’s a vulnerability for a favorite. It is nearly impossible for a golfer with a two-stroke lead ahead of the final par-four eighteenth hole to lose if s/he conservatively plays for par. It seems to us that the president is not wired to play conservatively, and our geopolitical strategists currently give him just a 55% chance of re-election. Bernie Sanders is not unelectable. Our geopolitical strategists note that the median voter is moving to the left, and that Sanders is many Biden supporters’ second choice. He may not be anathema to the broader public in the general election, and his leveling platform may play well in the Rust Belt states that are poised to decide the election once again. A Sanders administration would not transform America into France, but it would chip away at corporate profits. Our personal view is that a President Sanders would not mark the end of the US as a beacon of free enterprise. The Constitution was designed to obstruct dramatic changes, and his ability to pass major legislative initiatives is likely exaggerated. We think he could make his influence felt much more directly in the bureaucratic and regulatory spheres, where a president can act virtually unimpeded. A Sanders administration would be a devoted and presumably activist friend of labor, and a tenacious foe of corporate concentration. An administration that energetically champions organized labor and vigorously enforces anti-trust statutes would exert downward pressure on corporate profit margins. Bullish Or Bearish Borrowing a line from longtime Street economist and strategist Ed Yardeni, our mandate is bullish or bearish, not good or bad. We are charged with making objective decisions about what is most likely to occur in markets, not to daydream about what we would most like to happen. Our base-case scenario turns on our expectation that accommodative monetary policy will remain in place until well into 2021, and will continue to be effective in forestalling defaults and inflating asset valuations. It may not be the most comforting basis for being long risk assets, and we make no implied endorsement of its quality, but if we think it’s going to continue to work beyond the edge of the visible horizon, then we have to reiterate our recommendation that investors should remain at least equal weight equities in multi-asset portfolios, and at least equal weight credit in fixed income portfolios. Austrian adherents and self-styled monetary policy experts can howl about moral hazard and manipulation all they want, but we have to invest in the backdrop that we have, not the backdrop that we want. We do not yet see the approach of a catalyst that will prevent life insurers, pension funds, endowments and other investors who need yield from continuing to go further out the risk curve in search of it. And we don’t yet see the approach of a catalyst that will prevent equity investors from continuing to bid multiples higher. We remain constructive over the cyclical twelve-month timeframe. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com
Dear Client, I participated in a webinar earlier this week with my fellow BCA Research strategists to discuss the coronavirus outbreak and other timely issues. A replay can be accessed from this link. In lieu of our regular report next week, we will be sending you a Special Report from Matt Gertken, BCA’s Research Chief Geopolitical Strategist. Matt will discuss the state of the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination process in the wake of “Super Tuesday” and address the market implications. Best regards, Peter Berezin, Chief Global Strategist Highlights The decline in the number of new infections in China suggests that the coronavirus can be contained, provided that governments are both able and willing to impose severe quarantine measures on their own citizens. It is far from clear whether all countries can introduce such measures. And even among those who can, the economic damage from prolonged work stoppages could end up being too much to bear. The spike in supplier delivery times in various purchasing manager indices suggests that the global supply chain is already showing signs of strain. If the outbreak morphs into a global pandemic, a recession on the scale of the 2008/09 downturn would likely ensue. The only economic consolation from such an outcome is that once everyone is in the same boat, the need for mass quarantines and business shutdowns will diminish. While stock valuations have improved markedly over the past week, we would still recommend that investors refrain from significantly adding to equity positions at the moment. Once COVID-19 cases start popping up all over the US, stocks could come under further pressure. That said, we would only become more constructive on the near-term outlook for global equities if prices were to fall another 5%-to-8% from current levels or if the risks of a pandemic recede. The Power Of Exponential Change Humans tend to think in linear rather than exponential terms. Thus, it is easy to forget that when dealing with exponential growth, what appears exceedingly slow at first can become exceedingly fast later on. Take the example of the COVID-19 outbreak. Suppose that R0 is 2, meaning that someone who contracts the virus will spread it to two other people on average. Also suppose that it takes one week to pass it on to someone else. In week 1, one person is infected; in week 2, two new people are infected; in week 3, four new people; in week 4, eight new people, and so on. If only a small percentage of people who are infected get sick enough to have to go to the hospital, it might not be until after the end of week 8, when 128 new people have been infected, that the authorities become aware of the epidemic. Once we reach this stage, the only two options left are to impose extreme quarantine measures in an effort to drive Ro below 1, or stand back and let the outbreak run its natural course. Not surprisingly, most governments have chosen the first approach in the hopes of limiting the outbreak to a few regional clusters. A vigilant approach also buys some time to develop a vaccine. Time will tell if this strategy succeeds. On the positive side, the number of new infections in China continues to trend lower. Outside of Hubei, only 66 new cases have been reported since February 22nd. This has allowed an increasing number of Chinese companies to resume operations. It is also encouraging that a few countries such as Japan, Singapore, and Thailand, which at one point seemed on track to experience major epidemics, have gotten the problem under some degree of control. Chart 1The Number Of New Cases Has Declined In China, But Has Jumped In South Korea, Italy, And Iran
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
On the negative side, the number of cases in South Korea, Iran, and Italy has surged (Chart 1). In South Korea, there are now 1261 confirmed cases, up from 31 early last week. South Korea’s population is less than 4% of China’s. If the current trend continues, the infection rate in Korea could surpass that of China over the next two weeks. The situation in Iran appears to be out of control. Two people from Iran have already tested positive in Canada. Bahrain has recorded 33 cases linked to Iran. In perhaps one of the most surreal moments of the crisis, Iranian deputy health minister Iraj Harirchi, who had been charged with leading the nation’s efforts to stem the epidemic, was filmed wiping his brow one day before it was confirmed he had contracted the virus. None of this prevented President Rouhani from declaring that Iran must “not allow enemies to convert the coronavirus into a weapon in their hand in order to disrupt work and production in Iran”. He went on to denounce the US for failing to “pay attention to the 16,000 American victims who died after having the influenza virus.” Worse Than The Swine Flu? Looking at the global data in aggregate, the number of confirmed cases is increasing in a manner more similar to the swine flu (H1N1) outbreak in 2009/10 than the SARS outbreak in 2003 (Chart 2). The H1N1 virus ended up infecting 61 million people in the US and between 700 million-to-1.4 billion globally. Chart 2COVID-19: More Like Swine Flu Than SARS?
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
Unlike SARS, the COVID-19 coronavirus appears to be extremely contagious and can be spread by people who show few or no symptoms. SARS was generally spread only by people who were already visibly ill. In terms of fatality rates, COVID-19 is not as lethal as SARS, but appears to be at least ten times as fatal as H1N1. At present, there are no effective vaccines for coronaviruses. While concerted efforts are underway to develop a vaccine for COVID-19, most medical professionals agree that it will take at least a year before one is widely available. Unfortunately, given the exponential dynamic described above, most of the people on the planet could be infected by then. Pandemic Risk No one knows what the probability of a pandemic is, but it is clearly not zero. As workers return to their jobs in China, the outbreak may flare up again, leading to a new wave of business closures. Countries that do not have the will or the means to quarantine their citizens on a massive scale may find themselves unable to keep the virus at bay. Investors are finally waking up to this reality. As we discussed in last week’s report entitled “Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus,” even in a best-case scenario where the virus is successfully corralled over the next month or so, sequential global growth will still fall to zero in the first quarter. If the outbreak is not contained and a full-fledged pandemic ensues, the world is likely to experience a recession on the scale of the 2008/09 downturn. Table 1COVID-19 Fatality Rates By Age
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
The only economic consolation from such an outcome is that once everyone is in the same boat, the need for mass quarantines and business shutdowns will diminish. Table 1 shows preliminary age-specific estimates of the fatality rate from the COVID-19 virus, provided by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC).1 The results are based on 44,672 confirmed cases. Stocks Won’t Get Much Relief From Bonds Given that investors have known about the risks from the coronavirus for some time, why did it take so long for stocks to buckle? Part of the answer has to do with the sigh of relief investors breathed after the number of new COVID-19 cases peaked in China. As in the SARS episode, the peak in new cases marked a bottom in risk assets (Chart 3). Unfortunately, now that the number of cases has accelerated outside of China, this sanguine narrative has been dashed. Chart 3AJust As In The SARS Episode, Stocks Bottomed Around The Same Time The Number Of Infections Peaked...
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
Chart 3B… But The Number Of New Cases Outside China Has Surged
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
While the news flow about the coronavirus has been the dominant driver of stocks, there has also been another important factor at work. As Chart 4 shows, global bond yields have dropped sharply since the start of the year. Up until this week, equity investors clung to the hope that falling yields would cushion the blow to growth and earnings. They also figured that a decline in the discount rate applied to future cash flows would boost equity valuations. Not surprisingly, growth stocks, which are most sensitive to changes in the discount rate, led the charge higher (Chart 5). Chart 4Global Bond Yields Are Back Near Record Lows
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
Chart 5Growth Stocks Have Outperformed On Falling Yields
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
These rosy expectations could still be realized if the global outbreak is quickly contained. If it is not, there is not much more central banks can do. Easier monetary policy can help offset demand shocks. However, it cannot do much about supply shocks. Stocks sold off in late 2018 because investors concluded that the Fed had erred in raising interest rates four times over the course of nine months. As soon as the Fed pivoted in a more dovish direction, equities rallied. This time is different. The Fed is not responsible for the current sell-off; the virus is. Thus, while the Fed would almost certainly cut rates if the outbreak turns into a pandemic, this would have less of a soothing effect than it did in early 2019. Supply Chains At Risk The modern global economy is powered by an intricate division of labor. Widespread work stoppages across many countries would eviscerate the global supply chain. Ironically, investors were worried at the start of the year that manufacturing inventories were too high. As it turned out, excess inventories have proven to be a blessing rather than a curse because they have allowed companies to weather the supply shock longer than they could have otherwise. The grace period will expire soon. According to the latest PMI data, supplier delivery times have soared in the major economies. The latest Markit Flash Eurozone PMI noted “a marked lengthening of supplier delivery times, with delays for inputs the most widespread since December 2018, attributed in many cases to supply chain issues arising from the COVID-19 outbreak.” In the UK, Markit reported that UK manufacturers had disclosed the “the largest month-on-month slide in supply chain performance since the survey began in 1992, exceeding the previous record seen during the UK fuel protests in September 2000.” Monetary policy will come in handy only after the outbreak subsides. The dislocations caused by the virus could push many businesses towards the brink of bankruptcy. This could trigger a feedback loop of reduced spending, less hiring, and even lower spending. Timely stimulus would short-circuit this vicious cycle. That said, given that interest rates are already close to zero in most countries, much of the burden of preventing an extended downturn will have to fall on fiscal policy. It's Not Just About The Risk-Free Rate Chart 6Risk-Off Has Been On Fire
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
What about the valuation boost to stocks from falling bond yields? It is certainly true that, all things equal, lower bond yields are good for stocks. However, all things are rarely equal. We need to ask why yields have fallen. The value of the stock market does not just depend on the risk-free rate. It also depends on the additional return investors demand to hold stocks – the so-called equity risk premium – as well as expected earnings growth. If bond yields decline because skittish investors pile into safe-haven US Treasuries, while simultaneously cutting their earnings projections, this will almost certainly result in lower equity prices. What we have seen this past week is a classic risk-off event (Chart 6). Gold has surged to the highest level since 2013. Term premia in government bond markets have plunged. Tech stocks have underperformed other sectors despite the ostensible support from lower bond yields. The US dollar has rallied, even as interest rate differentials have moved against the greenback (Chart 7). Chart 7The Dollar Has Rallied, Even As Interest Rate Differentials Have Moved Against The Greenback
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
What are investors to do? While stock valuations have improved markedly over the past week, we would warn against deploying significant fresh capital to equities at the moment. Stocks were technically overbought going into this correction. Some degree of profit taking was likely no matter what transpired. Once COVID-19 cases start popping up all over the US, stocks could come under further pressure. Hence, we would only become more constructive on the near-term outlook for global equities if prices were to fall another 5%-to-8% from current levels or if the risks of a pandemic recede. Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1The Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia Emergency Response Epidemiology Team, "The Epidemiological Characteristics of an Outbreak of 2019 Novel Coronavirus Diseases (COVID-19) — China, 2020[J]," China CDC Weekly, 2020, 2(8): 113-122. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores
Health Versus Growth
Health Versus Growth
Strategic Recommendations
Highlights Global growth will quickly recover if the Covid-19 outbreak is soon controlled. If the virus's spread doesn't slow, a worldwide recession will take hold in 2020. BCA remains cyclically bullish, but tactical caution is warranted as long as uncertainty around Covid-19 remains high. A strong dollar is generally good for the US, except for exporters. The dollar possesses greater cyclical upside, a trend that will affect global asset allocation. The dollar will correct in 2020, which could allow cyclical stocks and value stocks to outperform growth equities in the short term. Foreign equities will also temporarily outperform US stocks this year. Feature 10-year Treasury yields hit an all-time low of 1.26% this morning, and the S&P 500 finally buckled under the pressure. Meanwhile, the US dollar seems unstoppable and commodity prices are still hobbling near recent lows. The economic and financial outlook for 2020 is unusually divided. On the positive front, economic momentum slowly turned the corner after a soft 2019. Liquidity aggregates have been improving, economic sentiment is bottoming and inventories are melting away. However, if Covid-19 morphs into a global pandemic, then these nascent positives will disappear. Faced with mounting uncertainty, the S&P 500 could still face additional tactical downward pressure. However, if Covid-19 does not turn into a global pandemic, then equities should recover in the second quarter. Additionally, the dollar’s strength remains a great concern, and for 2020, it too will depend on Covid-19's continued spread. While the next 12 months are likely to be painful for the dollar, its cyclical highs still lie ahead. The dollar’s trend will affect relative sector and regional performance. Covid-19 Under Control? The Covid-19 outbreak is key to the 2020 outlook. If Covid-19 is contained, then global growth can recover after a dismal first quarter. However, if the recent uptick in cases outside of China continues to increase beyond the coming two to three weeks, 2020 will witness a quick but painful recession as governments will impose quarantines and consumer confidence will collapse. If Covid-19 is contained, then global growth can recover after a dismal first quarter. Our colleagues from BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service estimate that Covid-19 could easily curtail global growth by more than 1% this quarter. China’s economy is experiencing a severe contraction, which should result in negative seasonally adjusted quarterly growth in Q1.1 Live indicators, such as the number of traffic jams in Shanghai streets or daily coal consumption are very weak, standing 20% and 32% below last year’s levels. Moreover, China accounts for 19.3% of global GDP, and its imports account for 12.5% of the rest of the world’s exports. China’s weak domestic activity has a ripple effect around the world. Making matters worse, the recent factory closings are scuttling global supply chains, which further lowers non-Chinese output. Finally, Chinese tourism accounts for 4.7% of global service exports, which will be deeply negatively impacted by the current immobility of Chinese citizens. As severe as the impact of Covid-19 will be in Q1, it will be fleeting. Epidemics and natural disasters may stop economic activity for a finite time, but they create pent-up demand that boosts economic growth in the following quarters. In the case of SARS, the lost output was recovered over the subsequent two quarters. Excess money is expanding at a brisk pace, which confirms that both the quantity and price of global output can rebound quickly (Chart I-1). The same is true of various liquidity measures, such as BCA Research’s US Financial Liquidity Index, which has an excellent record of forecasting the Global Leading Economic Indicator, the US ISM, and EM export prices. Most importantly, deleveraging is a tertiary concern for Chinese policymakers for the next two years. PMIs show that inventory levels are rapidly falling around the world. A purge in inventory allows pent-up demand to boost economic activity. Nowhere is this trend more powerful than in Sweden. Manufactured goods, especially intermediate and capital goods, represent a large percentage of Sweden’s output and exports. Thus, Sweden sits early in the global supply chains. Today, the decline in Swedish inventories is so deep that the country’s new orders-to-inventories ratio is surging, which historically indicates increases in our Global Industrial Activity Nowcast as well as US and global capital expenditures (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Ample Liquidity Will Cushion The Blow
Ample Liquidity Will Cushion The Blow
Ample Liquidity Will Cushion The Blow
Chart I-2Positive Signal From Inventories
Positive Signal From Inventories
Positive Signal From Inventories
Improving liquidity and purged inventory bode very well for global economic activity. Our Global Growth Indicator, a variable mainly based on commodity prices and the bond yields of cyclical economies, has already predicted an improvement in global industrial production (Chart I-3). Our models showed that even Germany’s economy, which is largely driven by global economic gyrations, will experience a turnaround despite abysmal industrial production readings (Chart I-4). Chart I-3The Global Growth Indicator Continues To Rebound
The Global Growth Indicator Continues To Rebound
The Global Growth Indicator Continues To Rebound
Chart I-4There's Hope Even For Germany
There's Hope Even For Germany
There's Hope Even For Germany
The Federal Reserve is prepared to nurture the recovery. Falling job ads in the US, along with the New York Fed Underlying Inflation Gauge and BCA Research’s Pipeline Inflation Indicator point to a slowdown in core CPI (Chart I-5). Additionally, the FOMC wants to see inflation expectations recover toward the 2.3% to 2.5% zone reached when economic agents believe in the Fed’s capacity to sustain core PCE near 2%. BCA Research’s US Bond Strategy service’s adaptive expectations models show that based on current realized inflation trends, it would take a substantially long time for inflation expectations to move back into that zone. Chart I-5Disinflationary Pressures In The US
Disinflationary Pressures In The US
Disinflationary Pressures In The US
The current health crisis is unleashing a wave of global stimulus. EM central banks, particularly in the Philippines and Indonesia, are cutting rates, thanks to low global and domestic inflation. Fiscal stimulus is expanding. Singapore has announced an SGD 800 million package aimed at fighting the impact of Covid-19; South Korea, Malaysia and Indonesia are also boosting spending. Even Germany is considering fiscal stimulus to support its economy. In China, the PBoC has injected RMB 2.3 trillion so far this year and cut rates. Most importantly, deleveraging is a tertiary concern for Chinese policymakers for the next two years. Factions opposed to President Xi will use his handling of the virus crisis to capitalize on discontent and gain more seats on the Politburo and Central Committee at the 2022 Communist Party Congress. To combat this opposition, President Xi is abandoning the deleveraging campaign and is generously stimulating the economy to generate greater income gains. The news is not all positive however, as the risk of a global pandemic remains elevated. There is no consensus in the medical community as to whether or not the pandemic is in remission. Chinese factories are re-opening and people are on the move, which is giving the virus an opportunity to spread again. Worryingly, new clusters of cases have popped up in South Korea, Iran, and Italy. In the US too, an individual without any links to previously known cases has fallen ill. These developments must be monitored closely. As BCA Research’s Global Investment Strategy service recently showed, the 2009/10 H1N1 outbreak (known as swine flu) affected between 700 million and 1 billion people worldwide.2 According to the Lancet, it resulted in 151,700 to 575,400 deaths or a fatality rate of 0.01% to 0.08%, well below current estimates of 2.3% for Covid-19. Thus, if Covid-19 spreads as much as H1N1, it could kill between 16 and 23 million people worldwide in a short amount of time. If such an outcome comes to pass, then we are looking at a global recession. Factory closures will grow in length and prevalence, which will paralyze global supply chains. International tourism will collapse and consumers around the world will shun crowded public places, which will hurt consumption substantially. Prudence forces us to not be cavalier and protect ourselves against what would be an extremely adverse outcome if Covid-19 were to spread much further. The uncertainty around such binary outcomes is hard to price for markets. As we argued last month, investors must input large risk premia in asset prices to compensate for this lack of visibility. When we last wrote, we saw no such margin of safety in the S&P 500, but its 11.5% collapse since February 19 has gone a long way in adjusting this mispricing. In fact, some bargains in the industrial, energy or transport sectors have emerged. Bottom Line: Investors should continue to hedge their exposure to risk assets until the situation becomes clearer. For now, our central scenario remains that new cases will soon peak and economic activity will recover. In this case, stocks and bond yields now have very limited downside, and they will recover later this year. Equities will ultimately reach new highs. However, prudence forces us to not be cavalier and protect ourselves against what would be an extremely adverse outcome if Covid-19 were to spread much further. The US Benefits From A Strong Dollar Looking beyond Covid-19, BCA Research expects the US dollar to correct in 2020. However, we increasingly view this downdraft as a temporary phenomenon. The dollar’s cyclical highs remain ahead in the next two to three years. Ultimately, the US is a consumer-driven economy and households benefit from a firm currency. A higher dollar also acts as a tax cut for consumers. Surprisingly, the dollar does not have a negative impact on employment. The unemployment rate and the dollar are negatively correlated (Chart I-6). The 27% dollar rally since 2011 is not antithetical with a US unemployment rate at a 51-year low of 3.6%. Less than 10% of US jobs are in the manufacturing sector, compared with 14.4% and 15.8% in Europe and Japan respectively (Chart I-7). Moreover, 93.6% of jobs created since the labor market troughed in 2010 have been in the service sector. Given that the service sector is domestically driven and is immune to the deflationary impact of a stronger dollar, the low share of manufacturing in the US’s GDP means that the labor market is resistant to a firm USD. Chart I-6The Labor Market Does Not Abhor A Strong Dollar...
The Labor Market Does Not Abhor A Strong Dollar...
The Labor Market Does Not Abhor A Strong Dollar...
Chart I-7...Because The US Is Manufacturing Light
...Because The US Is Manufacturing Light
...Because The US Is Manufacturing Light
A higher dollar also acts as a tax cut for consumers. A dollar rally leads to a rapid decline in the share of disposable income spent on food and energy (Chart I-8). As a result, households have more discretionary disposable income to spend on services that generate domestic jobs. A strong dollar makes job creation less inflationary and permits the Fed to keep monetary policy easier for longer. A strengthening dollar redistributes income to the middle class, which supports consumption. When the dollar rallies, the share of salaries in national income increases because the dollar creates a headwind for profit margins (Chart I-9). Rich households garner more than 50% of their income from profits and rents. Therefore, if a stronger dollar increases the share GDP accounted for by wages, then a rising greenback redistributes income to middle-class households away from the rich. This redistribution is positive for consumption because middle-class households have a marginal propensity to consume of 90%, compared with 60% for households in the top decile of the income distribution. Furthermore, the more consumption can grow as a share of GDP, the more the economy can withstand a rallying currency. Chart I-8A Firm Dollar Cut "Taxes"
A Firm Dollar Cut "Taxes"
A Firm Dollar Cut "Taxes"
Chart I-9The Dollar Is A Redistributor
The Dollar Is A Redistributor
The Dollar Is A Redistributor
Chart I-10A Strong Dollar Boosts Real Incomes
A Strong Dollar Boosts Real Incomes
A Strong Dollar Boosts Real Incomes
A strong dollar also weighs on inflation, which has positive ramifications for consumers and the economy. By mid-2015, the dollar had rallied by an impressive 13.8%. While nominal wages grew at 2.2%, well below today’s rate of 3.8%, real wages were expanding at their highest rate in this cycle, courtesy of low inflation. Real consumption was also enjoying its largest gain in this cycle, expanding at 4.6% per annum (Chart I-10). A firm dollar also dampens inflation expectations (Chart I-11), allowing a flattening of the Phillips Curve, which links inflation to the unemployment rate. In other words, a strong dollar makes job creation less inflationary and permits the Fed to keep monetary policy easier for longer, delaying the inevitable date when the Fed kills the business cycle. Moreover, the disinflationary impact of a rising dollar puts downward pressure on interest rates (Chart I-12). In turn, lower rates keep financial conditions easier than would have otherwise been the case, which supports growth. Chart I-11A Hard Currency Dampens Inflation Expectations
A Hard Currency Dampens Inflation Expectations
A Hard Currency Dampens Inflation Expectations
Chart I-12A Strong Dollar Depresses Interest Rates
A Strong Dollar Depresses Interest Rates
A Strong Dollar Depresses Interest Rates
A counterargument to the view that a strong US dollar is good for the business cycle is that it will hurt capex. While true, it is easy to overestimate this impact on growth. Not only does capex represent a much lower share of GDP than consumption, it most often contributes less to changes in GDP than consumer spending (Chart I-13). Moreover, lower interest rates triggered by a firm dollar support residential activity, which in turn mitigates some of the drag created by lower corporate capex. Finally, as Chart I-14 illustrates, 74.7% of the US’s capex emanates from sectors that are minimally affected by the dollar, creating greater resilience to a stronger currency than many realize. Chart I-13Consumption Dominates Capex
Consumption Dominates Capex
Consumption Dominates Capex
Chart I-14Even Within Capex, The Dollar Is Not As Dominant As Believed
Even Within Capex, The Dollar Is Not As Dominant As Believed
Even Within Capex, The Dollar Is Not As Dominant As Believed
Chart I-15Symptoms Of US Resilience
Symptoms Of US Resilience
Symptoms Of US Resilience
The US economy is indeed robust in the face of the strong dollar. If the dollar was hurting the US, then Germany should benefit from a falling euro. However, German net exports are weakening. Moreover, US profits are not lagging European ones as US firms continue to benefit from stronger global pricing power than their European counterparts. Finally, capex intentions in the US are surprisingly resilient (Chart I-15). Three forces increase the US’s economic capacity to withstand a strong dollar this cycle. First, the structural improvement in the US’s energy trade balance allows the US current account to remain stable at -2.5% of GDP despite a widening non-oil trade deficit. Secondly, the Trump Administration’s profligate spending boosts demand and insulates the economy from a rising dollar. BCA Research’s Geopolitical Strategy service expects President Trump to win the election, albeit with a conservative probability of 55%, but also believes a Democratic victory would lead to larger spending increases than tax hikes. The current expansive fiscal policy set up will thus remain in place going forward. Finally, the Sino-US Phase One deal will provide a welcome relief valve for US manufacturers, who are victims of the stronger dollar. While economic reality probably will not allow the deal to boost China’s purchases of US goods by $200 billion vis-à-vis the higher water mark of $186 billion of 2017 (Chart I-16), nonetheless it will force China to substitute goods purchases away from Europe and Japan in favor of the US. A hard dollar can feed on itself by widening the gap between US and foreign growth, a trend currently underway. Our favorite structural valuation measure also does not suggest that the dollar is currently a major hurdle for the US economy. BCA Research's Foreign Exchange Strategy service’s Long-Term Fair Value models, which account for differences in the productivity and neutral rate of interest of the US and its trading partners, show that the dollar is still roughly fairly valued and that its equilibrium is trending up (Chart I-17). Chart I-16The Phase One Deal Is Ambitious
March 2020
March 2020
Chart I-17The Dollar Is Not Expensive Enough To Cause Pain
The Dollar Is Not Expensive Enough To Cause Pain
The Dollar Is Not Expensive Enough To Cause Pain
In this context, the US dollar has further cyclical upside. A strong dollar may not be as negative to the US economy as investors believe, but it hurts emerging economies. According to the Bank for International Settlements, there is more than US$12 trillion of USD-denominated foreign currency debt in the world. Therefore, a firm dollar tightens financial conditions outside the US. A hard dollar can feed on itself by widening the gap between US and foreign growth, a trend currently underway. Investment Implications For The Remainder Of The Cycle… Chart I-18The S&P 500 Likes A Firm Dollar
The S&P 500 Likes A Firm Dollar
The S&P 500 Likes A Firm Dollar
The dollar’s additional cyclical upside is good news for US capital markets over the next few years. The S&P 500 performs better when the dollar is firm (Chart I-18). US stocks generated average annual returns of 12% during the 53% dollar rally of 1978 to 1985, 12% during the 33% dollar rally of 1995 to 2002, and 11% as the USD appreciated 27% during the past nine years. This compares well to an annualized return of 4% when the dollar suffers cyclical bear markets. The following observations explain why the US stock market performs better when the dollar appreciates: A strong dollar allows interest rates to remain lower than would have been the case otherwise, which also allows stock multiples to remain elevated. A strong dollar elongates the US business cycle by delaying the Fed’s tightening of monetary conditions. A longer business cycle dampens volatility and invites investors to bid down the equity risk premium. A strong dollar supports the US corporate bond market. A robust dollar may negatively impact bonds issued by energy or natural resources companies, but it also keeps the Fed at bay, which prevents a generalized increase in volatility and spreads. Lower rates allow for easy financial conditions and plentiful buybacks, a helpful combination for equities. Chart I-19The Dollar Holds The Key To Growth Vs Value
The Dollar Holds The Key To Growth Vs Value
The Dollar Holds The Key To Growth Vs Value
A hard dollar is fundamental to the outperformance of US equities relative to global stocks. Global investors usually not do not hedge the currency component of equity returns. A firm USD automatically creates a powerful advantage for US stocks that invites greater inflows. In addition, a climbing dollar hurts value stocks (Chart I-19). Value stocks overweight cyclical sectors such as financials, industrials, materials and energy, sectors which depend on higher inflation, expanding EM economies and higher yields to outperform, three variables that suffer from an appreciating USD. An underperformance of value stocks also causes a poor outcome for foreign markets, which heavily overweight value over growth (Table I-1). Table I-1Key Overweights By Market
March 2020
March 2020
Chart I-20A Strong Dollar Fuels Tech Multiples
A Strong Dollar Fuels Tech Multiples
A Strong Dollar Fuels Tech Multiples
The tech sector also benefits from a firm dollar. Tech stocks generate long-term earnings growth and they are generally not as sensitive to the global business cycle as traditional cyclical equities are. When the global business cycle weakens, yields decline and the dollar appreciates, then earnings growth becomes scarce. In this environment, investors willingly bid up assets that can generate a structural earning expansion. Tech multiples become the prime beneficiary of that phenomenon (Chart I-20), which allows US stocks to meaningfully outperform the rest of the world when the dollar hardens. Bottom Line: A firm dollar will allow the business cycle to expand for longer, which suggests that the dollar will make greater highs over the coming two to three years. Within this time frame, US stocks will likely continue to outperform their global counterparts, despite their valuations disadvantage. … And For 2020 In 2020, the dominant driver for the US dollar will be global growth. The pickup in BCA’s Global Growth Indicator and the elevated chance of a rising Chinese combined credit and fiscal impulse will lift global activity and thus, force down the USD (Chart I-21). Additionally, existing trends in global money supply growth reinforce the near-term downside risk to the dollar, assuming Covid-19 does not become a global pandemic (Chart I-22). Chart I-21China Stimulus Will Lift Growth
chart 21
China Stimulus Will Lift Growth
China Stimulus Will Lift Growth
Chart I-22Bearish Monetary Dynamics For The Dollar In 2020
Bearish Monetary Dynamics For The Dollar In 2020
Bearish Monetary Dynamics For The Dollar In 2020
Chart I-23The Euro Is Not The Best Anti-Dollar Bet For 2020
The Euro Is Not The Best Anti-Dollar Bet For 2020
The Euro Is Not The Best Anti-Dollar Bet For 2020
The euro is unlikely to be the main beneficiary from a dollar correction. EUR/USD does not yet trade at a discount to our fair value estimates consistent with an intermediate-term bottom (Chart I-23). Moreover, the euro lags pro-cyclical currencies such as the AUD, CAD, NZD, or SEK, when global growth starts to recover but inflation remains weak. Finally, the Phase One Sino-US trade deal will create a drag on the positive impact of a Chinese recovery on European exports for machinery.3 Bottom Line: A dollar correction in 2020 is congruent with a period of underperformance for tech stocks relative to industrials, financials, materials and energy stocks. The correction also supports value relative to growth equities this year, as well as foreign bourses relative to the S&P 500. Investors who elect to bet against the dollar in 2020 should only do so with great caution as they will be betting against the broader cyclical trend. A correction in the dollar, by definition, is transitory. Thus, the aforementioned equity implications will also likely be temporary. Ultimately, the US economy remains the global growth leader in the post-2008 environment. Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst February 27, 2020 Next Report: March 26, 2020 II. Labor Strikes Back The balance of power in US labor negotiations has shifted infrequently in the industrial age. Successful strikes beget strikes. Key factors that have bolstered management for decades are poised to reverse. Public opinion has a significant impact on labor-management outcomes. Elections have consequences. Organized labor isn’t dead. Where will inflation come from, and when will it arrive? An investor who answers these questions will have advance notice of the end of the expansion and the bull markets in equities and credit. Per our base-case scenario, the expansion won’t end until monetary policy settings become restrictive, and the Fed won’t pursue restrictive policy unless inflation pressures force its hand. The fur flies when each party thinks the other should make the bulk of the concessions: labor negotiations over the next couple of years could be interesting. Inured by a decade of specious warnings that “money printing” would let the inflation genie out of the bottle, investors are skeptical that inflation will ever re-emerge. The inflation backdrop has become much more supportive in the last few years, however, upon the closing of the output gap, and the stimulus-driven jolt in aggregate demand. Output gaps in other major economies will have to narrow further (Chart II-1) for global goods inflation to gain traction, and mild inflation elsewhere in the G7 (Chart II-2) suggests that goods prices are not about to surge. Chart II-1There's Still Enough Spare Capacity ...
March 2020
March 2020
Chart II-2... To Restrain Global Goods Inflation
... To Restrain Global Goods Inflation
... To Restrain Global Goods Inflation
Services are not so easily imported, though, and services inflation is a more fully domestic phenomenon. Rising wages could be the spur for services inflation, and the labor market is tight on several counts: the unemployment rate is at a 50-year low; the broader definition of unemployment, also encompassing discouraged workers and the underemployed, reached a new all-time (25-year) low in December; the JOLTS job openings and quits rates at or near their all-time (19-year) highs; and the NFIB survey and a profusion of anecdotal reports suggest that employers are having a hard time finding quality candidates. With labor demand exceeding supply, wages for nonsupervisory workers have duly risen (Chart II-3). Gains in other compensation series have been muted, however, and investors have come to yawn and roll their eyes at any mention of the Phillips Curve. Chart II-3Wage Growth Is Solid, But It's Lost A Good Bit Of Momentum
Wage Growth Is Solid, But It's Lost A Good Bit Of Momentum
Wage Growth Is Solid, But It's Lost A Good Bit Of Momentum
Perhaps it’s not the Phillips Curve that’s broken, but workers’ spirits. A supine organized labor movement could explain why the Phillips Curve itself is so flat. As the old saying goes, if you don’t ask, you know what you’re going to get, and beleaguered unions and their memberships, cowed by two decades of woe coinciding with China’s entry into the WTO (Chart II-4), have been afraid to ask. Strikes are the most potent weapon in labor’s arsenal; if it can’t credibly wield them, it is sure to be steamrolled. Chart II-4Globalization Has Been Unkind To Labor
Globalization Has Been Unkind To Labor
Globalization Has Been Unkind To Labor
Two years of high-profile strike victories by public- and private-sector employees may suggest that the sands have begun to shift, however, and inspired our examination of labor’s muscle. An Investor’s Guide To US Labor History Let's begin our exercise with a review of US labor relations. The Colosseum Era (1800-1933) We view US industrial labor history as having three distinct phases. We label the first, which lasted until the New Dealers took over Washington, the Colosseum era (Figure II-1), because labor and management were about as evenly matched as the Christians and the lions in ancient Rome. Uprisings in textile mills, steel factories, and mines were swiftly squelched, often violently. Management was able to draw on public resources like the police and state National Guard units to put down strikes, or was able to unleash its own security or ad hoc militia forces on strikers or union organizers without state interference. The public, staunchly opposed to anarchists and Communists, generally sided with employers. Figure II-1Significant Events In The Colosseum Era
March 2020
March 2020
Unions won some small-bore victories during the period, but they nearly all proved fleeting as companies regularly took back concessions and public officials and courts failed to enforce the loose patchwork of laws aimed at ameliorating industrial workers’ plight. Labor inevitably suffered the brunt of the casualties when conflicts turned violent. Workers were hardly choir boys, and seem to have initiated violence as often as employers’ proxies, but they were inevitably outgunned, especially when police, guardsmen or soldiers were marshaled against them. Societal norms have changed dramatically since the Colosseum era, but the lore of past “battles” encourages an us-versus-them union mentality that occasionally colors negotiations. Employees and employers need each other, and their tether can only be stretched so far before it starts pulling them back together. The UAW Era (1933-1981) Established presumptions about the employer-employee relationship were upended when FDR entered the White House. Viewing labor organization as a way to ease national suffering, New Dealers passed the Wagner Act to grant private-sector workers unionization and collective bargaining rights, and created the National Labor Relations Board to ensure that employers respected them. The Wagner Act greatly aided labor organization, enabling unions to build up the heft to engage with employers on an equal footing. Unionized workers still fought an uphill battle in the wake of the Depression, but tactics like the sit-down strike (Box II-1) produced some early labor victories that paved the way for more. BOX II-1 David Topples Goliath: The Flint Sit-Down Strike The broad mass of factory workers had not been organized to any meaningful degree before the New Deal, and the United Auto Workers (UAW) was not formed until 1935. Despite federal protections, the fledgling UAW had to conduct its operations covertly, lest its members face employer reprisals. At the end of 1936, when it took on GM, only one in seven GM employees was a dues-paying member. The strike began the night of December 30th when workers in two of GM’s Flint auto body plants sat down at their posts, ignoring orders to return to work. The sit-down action was more effective than a conventional strike because it prevented GM from simply replacing the workers with strikebreakers. It also made GM think twice about attempting to remove them by force, lest valuable equipment be damaged. GM was unsure how to dislodge the workers after a court injunction it obtained on January 2nd went nowhere once the UAW publicized that the presiding judge held today’s equivalent of $4 million in GM shares. It turned off the heat in one of the plants on January 11th, before police armed with tear gas and riot guns stormed it. The police were rebuffed by strikers who threw bottles, rocks, and car parts from the plant’s upper windows while spraying torrents of water from its fire hoses. No one died in the melee, but the strike was already front-page news across the country, and the attack helped the strikers win public sympathy. Michigan’s governor responded by calling out the National Guard to prevent a rematch, shielding the strikers from any further violence. The strike was finally settled on February 11th when GM accepted the UAW as the workers’ exclusive bargaining agent and agreed not to hinder its attempts to organize its work force. The UAW signed a similar accord with Chrysler immediately after the Flint sit-down strike, and the CIO (the UAW’s parent union) swiftly reached an agreement with US Steel that significantly improved steelworkers’ pay and hours. Labor unions’ path wasn’t always smooth – Ford fiercely resisted unionization until 1941, and ten protesters were killed, and dozens injured, by Chicago police at a peaceful Memorial Day demonstration in support of strikers against the regional steelmakers that did not follow US Steel’s conciliatory lead – but it generally trended upward after the New Deal (Figure II-2). From the 1950 signing of the Treaty of Detroit, a remarkably generous five-year agreement between the UAW and the Big Three automakers, the UAW ran roughshod over the US auto industry for three-plus decades. The New Deal’s encouragement of unionization had given labor a fighting chance, and was the foundation on which all of its subsequent gains were built. Figure II-2Significant Events In The UAW Era
March 2020
March 2020
The Reagan-Thatcher Era (1981 - ??) The disastrous strike by the air traffic controllers’ union (PATCO) is the watershed event that heralded the end of unions’ golden age. Strikes by federal employees were illegal, so PATCO broke the law when it went on strike in April 1981, spurning the generous contract terms its leaders had negotiated with the Reagan administration. PATCO had periodically held the flow of air traffic hostage throughout the seventies to extract concessions from its employer, earning the lasting enmity of airlines, government officials and the public. Other unions were aghast at PATCO’s openly contemptuous attitude, and declined to support it with sympathy strikes, while conservatives blasted the new administration behind closed doors for the profligacy of its initial PATCO offer. President Reagan therefore had an unfettered opportunity to make an example out of the controllers, and he seized it, firing those who failed to return to work within 48 hours and banning them from ever returning to government employment. A fed-up public supported the president’s hard line, and employers and unions got the message that a new sheriff was in town. His deputies were not inclined to enforce labor-friendly statues, or investigate labor grievances, with much vigor, and they would not necessarily look the other way when public sector unions illegally struck. Management has been in the driver's seat, but the factors that have kept it there have a high risk of reversing. Unions also found themselves on the wrong side of the growing disaffection with bureaucracy that was bound up with the push for deregulation. The globalization wave further eroded labor’s power. Unskilled workers in the developed world would be hammered by the flat world that allowed people, capital and information to hopscotch around the globe. Eight years of a Democratic presidency brought no relief, as the “Third Way” Clinton administration embraced the free-market tide (Chart II-5), and the unionized share of employees has receded all the way back to mid-thirties levels (Chart II-6). Chart II-5Inequality Took Off ...
Inequality Took Off ...
Inequality Took Off ...
Chart II-6... As Unions Lost Their Way
... As Unions Lost Their Way
... As Unions Lost Their Way
A Fourth Phase? A handful of data points do not make a trend, especially in a series that stands out for its persistence, but the bargaining power pendulum could be shifting. Public school teachers won improbable statewide victories with illegal strikes in three highly conservative states in the first half of 2018 (Table II-1); a canny hotel workers union steered its members to big gains in their contract negotiations with Marriott in the second half of 2018; and the UAW bested General Motors and the rest of the Big Three automakers last fall. Unions may have more bargaining power than markets and employers realize, and they could be on the cusp of becoming more aggressive in flexing it. Table II-1Teachers' Unions Conquer The Red States
March 2020
March 2020
Takeaways (I) There are two key takeaways from our historical review: 1. US industrial history makes it clear that employees are unlikely to gain ground if government sides with employers. Employees no longer have to fear that the state will look the other way while strikers are beaten, or fail to prosecute those responsible for loss of life, but they face especially long odds when the government is inclined to favor employers. Its thumb weighs heavily on the scale when it drags its feet on enforcement; cuts funding to agencies policing workplace standards; and appoints agency or department heads that are conditioned to see things solely from employers’ perspective, shaped by long careers in management. 2. Successful strikes beget strikes, and the converse is also true. Withholding their labor is employees’ most powerful weapon, and when employers can’t replace them cheaply and easily, strikes often succeed. Striking is frightening for an individual, however, because it cuts off his or her income (or sharply reduces it, if the striker’s union has a strike fund) until the strike is over. If the strike fails, the employee may find him/herself blacklisted, impairing his/her long-term income prospects on top of his/her short-term losses. Prudent workers should therefore strike sparingly, with the due consideration that a prudent poker player exercises before going all-in. Companies will do whatever they perceive to be socially acceptable in conflicts with employees, but no more. When other unions facing comparable conditions pull off successful strikes, it makes it much easier for another union to take the leap, in addition to making success more likely, provided conditions truly are comparable. “Before they occur, successful strikes appear impossible. Afterward, they seem almost inevitable .”4 The retrospective inevitability stiffens the spine of potential strikers who observe successful outcomes, and raises the bar for action among potential strikers who observe failures. “Just as defeats in struggle lead to demoralization and resignation, victories tend to beget more victories .”5 Public opinion matters just as surely as momentum, and it proved decisive in the Flint sit-down strike and in the air traffic controllers’ showdown with President Reagan. According to Gallup’s annual poll, Americans now regard unions as favorably as they did before Thatcher and Reagan came to power (Chart II-7). Chart II-7Could Unions Make A Comeback?
Could Unions Make A Comeback?
Could Unions Make A Comeback?
Where Strikes Come From And Who Wins Them Since strikes are such an important determinant of the support for labor, what drives successful labor actions? The Origin Of Strikes Strikes (and lockouts) occur when labor and management cannot reach a mutually acceptable settlement, often because at least one side overestimates its bargaining power. It is easy to agree when labor and management hold similar views about each side’s relative power, as when both perceive that one of them is considerably stronger. In that case, a settlement favoring the stronger side can be reached fairly quickly, especially if the stronger side exercises some restraint and does not seek to impose terms that the weaker side can scarcely abide. Restraint is rational in repeated games like employer-employee bargaining, and when both parties recognize that relative bargaining positions are fluid, they are likely to exercise it. It's no surprise that unions have started to look pretty good to workers after a decade of sluggish growth and widening inequality. History shows that the pendulum between labor and management swings, albeit slowly, as societal views evolve6 and the business cycle fluctuates. As a general rule, management will have the upper hand during recessions, when the supply of workers exceeds demand, and labor will have the advantage when expansions are well advanced, and capacity tightens. A high unemployment rate broadly favors employers, and a low unemployment rate favors employees. Neither the number of work stoppages (Chart II-8, top panel), nor the number of workers involved (Chart II-8, middle panel) correlates very well with the unemployment gap (Chart II-8, bottom panel), in the Reagan-Thatcher era, however, as work stoppages have dwindled almost to zero. Chart II-8Swamped By The Legal And Regulatory Tide
Swamped By The Legal And Regulatory Tide
Swamped By The Legal And Regulatory Tide
Game theory is better equipped than simple regression models to offer insight into the origin of strikes. We posit a simple framework in which each side can hold any of five perceptions of its own bargaining power, resulting in a total of 25 possible joint perceptions. Management (M) can believe it is way stronger than Labor (L), M >> L; stronger than Labor, M > L; roughly equal, M ≈ L; weaker than Labor, L > M; or way weaker than Labor, L >> M. Labor also holds one of these five perceptions, and the interaction of the two sides’ perceptions establishes the path negotiations will follow. Limiting our focus to today’s prevailing conditions, Figure II-3 displays only the outcomes consistent with management’s belief that it has the upper hand. For completeness, the exhibit lists all of labor’s potential perceptions, but we deem the two in which labor is feeling its oats (circled) to be most likely, given the success of recent high-profile strikes.7 Management’s confidence follows logically from four decades of victories, but may prove to be unfounded if its power has already peaked. Figure II-3The Eye Of The Beholder
March 2020
March 2020
Strike outcomes turn on which side has overestimated its leverage. The broad factors we use to assess leverage are overall labor market slack; economic concentration; regulatory and legal trends; and the sustainability of either side’s accumulated advantage, which we describe as the labor-management rubber band. Other factors that matter on a case-by-case basis, but are beyond the scope of our analysis, include industry-level slack, a labor input’s susceptibility to automation, and the degree of labor specialization/skill involved in that input. For these micro-level factors, a given group of workers’ leverage is inversely related to the availability of substitutes for their input. Labor Market Slack Despite muted wage growth, the labor market is demonstrably tight. The unemployment rate is at a 50-year low, the broader definition of unemployment is at the lowest level in its 26-year history, and the prime-age employment-to-population ratio is back to its 2001 levels, having surpassed the previous cycle’s peak (Chart II-9). The job openings rate is high, indicating that demand for workers is robust, and so is the quits rate, indicating that employers are competing vigorously to meet it. The NFIB survey’s job openings and hiring plans series (Chart II-10) echo the JOLTS findings. Chart II-9Prime-Age Employment Is At An 18-Year High ...
Prime-Age Employment Is At An 18-Year High ...
Prime-Age Employment Is At An 18-Year High ...
Chart II-10... But There Are Still Lots Of Help Wanted Signs
... But There Are Still Lots Of Help Wanted Signs
... But There Are Still Lots Of Help Wanted Signs
The lack of labor market slack decisively favors workers’ negotiating position. It is a sellers’ market when demand outstrips supply, and labor victories tend to be self-reinforcing. Successful strikes beget strikes, and management volunteers concessions as labor peace becomes a competitive advantage during strike waves. Given that the crisis-driven damage to the labor force participation rate has healed as the gap between the actual part rate (Chart II-11, solid line) and its demographically-determined structural proxy has closed (Chart II-11, dashed line), the burden of proof rests squarely with those who argue that there is an ample supply of workers waiting to come off the sidelines. Chart II-11The Labor Force Participation Gap Has Closed
The Labor Force Participation Gap Has Closed
The Labor Force Participation Gap Has Closed
Economic Concentration The trend toward economic concentration (Chart II-12) has endowed the largest companies with greater market power, as evidenced by surging corporate profit margins. The greater the concentration of employment opportunities in local labor markets, the more closely they resemble monopsonies.8 Unfortunately for labor, monopsonies restrain prices just as monopolies inflate them. As we have shown,9 there is a robust inverse relationship between employment concentration and real wages (Chart II-13). Chart II-12Less Competition = More Power
March 2020
March 2020
Chart II-13One Huge Buyer + Plus Multiple Small Sellers = Low Prices
March 2020
March 2020
Economic concentration has been a major driver of management’s Reagan-Thatcher era dominance. Sleepy to indifferent antitrust enforcement has helped businesses capture market power, and it will continue to prevail through 2024 unless the Democrats take the White House in November. The silver lining for workers is that concentration could have the effect of promoting labor organization in services, where unions have heretofore made limited progress. The only way for employees to combat employers’ monopsony power is to organize their way to becoming a monopoly supplier of labor. Regulatory And Legal Trends Over the last four decades, unions have endured a near-constant drubbing from state capitols, federal agencies and the courts, as union and labor protections have been under siege from all sides. Since the air traffic controllers’ disastrous strike, labor’s regulatory and legal fortunes have most closely resembled the competitive fortunes of the Harlem Globetrotters’ beleaguered opposition. But the regulatory and legal tide has been such a huge benefit for management since the beginning of the Reagan administration that it cannot continue to maintain its pace. If the electorate has had enough of Reagan-Thatcher policies, elected officials will stop implementing them. Investors seem to assume that it will, however, to the extent that they think about it at all. It stands to reason that employers may be similarly complacent. We will look more closely at the presidential election and its potential consequences in Part 3, but labor concerns and inequality are capturing more attention, even among Republicans. With Republicans’ inclination to side with business only able to go in one direction, the chances are good that it has peaked. The Labor-Management Rubber Band For all of the romantic allure of labor’s battles with management in the Colosseum era, employees and employers have a deeply symbiotic relationship. One can’t exist without the other, and pursuing total victory in negotiations is folly. Even too many incremental wins can prove ruinous, as the UAW discovered to its chagrin in 2008. A half-century of generous compensation and stultifying work rules saddled Detroit automakers with a burden that would have put them out of business had the federal government not intervened. Table II-2Average Salaries Of Public School Teachers By State
March 2020
March 2020
We think of labor and management as being linked by a tether with a finite range. Since neither side can thrive for long if the other side is suffering, the tether pulls the two sides closer together when the gap between them threatens to become too wide. When labor does too well for too long at management’s expense, profit margins shrink and the company’s viability as a going concern is threatened. When management does too well, deteriorating living standards drive the best employees away, undermining productivity and profitability. Before the low-paying entity’s work force becomes a listless dumping ground for other firms’ castoffs, it may rise up and strike out of desperation. Teachers’ unions might have appeared to be setting themselves up for a fall in 2018 by illegally striking in staunchly conservative West Virginia, Oklahoma and Arizona, but desperate times call for desperate measures. Per the National Education Association’s data for the 2017-18 academic year, average public school teacher pay in West Virginia ranked 50th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia, Oklahoma ranked 49th and Arizona ranked 45th (Table II-2). Adjusting the nominal salaries for cost disparities across states, West Virginia placed 41st, Oklahoma 44th and Arizona 48th. Given that real teacher salaries had declined by 8% and 9% since 2009-10 in West Virginia and Arizona, respectively, the labor-management rubber band had stretched nearly to the breaking point. Consolidating The Macro Message Parties to negotiations derive leverage from the availability of substitutes. When alternative employment opportunities are prevalent, workers have a lot of leverage, because they can credibly threaten to avail themselves of them. Teaching is a skill that transfers easily, and every state has a public school system, so teachers in low-salary states have a wealth of ready alternatives. The converse is true for low-salary states; despite much warmer temperatures, it is unlikely that teachers from top-quintile states will be willing to take a 25-33% cost-of-living-adjusted pay cut to decamp to Arizona (Table II-3). Table II-3Cost Of Living-Adjusted Public School Teacher Salaries By State
March 2020
March 2020
It is easy to see from Figure II-4 why management has had the upper hand. Economic concentration and the legal and regulatory climate have increasingly favored it for decades. The immediate future seems poised to favor labor, however, as the legal and regulatory climate cannot get materially better for employers, and the labor-management rubber band has become so stretched that some sort of mean reversion is inevitable. We have high conviction that labor’s one current advantage, a tight labor market, will remain in its column over the next year or two. On a forward-looking basis, the macro factors as a whole are poised to support labor. Figure II-4Macro Drivers Of Negotiating Leverage
March 2020
March 2020
Takeaways (II) We think it is more likely than not that the labor movement in the United States will remain weak relative to its 1950s to 1970s heyday. We do think, however, that the probability that unions could rise up to exert the leverage that accrues to workers in a tight labor market is considerably larger than the great majority of investors perceive. Alpha – market-beating return – arises from surprises. An investor captures excess returns when s/he successfully anticipates something that the consensus does not. If the disparity involves a trivial outcome, then any excess return is likely to be trivial, but if the outcome is significant, the investor who zigged when the rest of the market zagged stands to separate him/herself from the pack. We think the outcome of a shift in leverage from employers to employees would be very large indeed. We would expect that aggregate wage gains of 4% or higher would quickly drive the Fed to impose restrictive monetary policy settings, eventually inducing the next recession and the end of the bull markets in equities, credit and property. A union revival may be a low-probability event, but it would have considerable impact on markets and the economy. Given our conviction that the probability, albeit low, is much greater than investors expect, we think the subject is well worth sustained attention. The Public-Approval Contest The last question to approach is how does labor or management win in the court of public opinion? Capturing Hearts And Minds Public opinion has shaped the outcomes of labor-management contests throughout US labor relations history. Labor was continually outgunned before the New Deal, coming up against private security forces, local police and/or the National Guard when they struck. Employers were able to turn to hired muscle, or request the deployment of public resources on their behalf, because the public had few qualms about using force to break strikes. College athletes were even pressed into service as strikebreakers after the turn of the century for what was viewed at the time as good, clean fun.10 Public opinion is not immutable, however, and by the time of the Flint sit-down strike, it had begun to shift in the direction of labor. The widespread misery of the Depression went a long way to overcoming Americans’ deep-seated suspicion of the labor movement and the fringe elements associated with it. Some employers were slow to pick up on the change in the public mood, however, and Ford’s security force thuggishly beat Walter Reuther and other UAW organizers while they oversaw the distribution of union leaflets outside a massive Ford plant just three months after Flint. Ford won the Battle of the Overpass, but its heavy-handed, retrograde tactics helped cost it the war. Reuther, who later led the UAW in its ‘50s and ‘60s golden age, was a master strategist with a knack for public relations. Writing the playbook later used to great effect by civil rights leaders, Reuther invited clergymen, Senate staffers and the press to accompany the largely female team of leafleteers. When the Ford heavies commenced beating the men, and roughly scattering the women, photographers were on hand to document it all.11 The photos helped unions capture public sympathy, just as televised images of dogs and fire hoses would later help secure passage of landmark civil rights legislation. Unions’ Fall From Grace Figure II-5Unions' 1980s Public Opinion Vortex
March 2020
March 2020
Labor unions enjoyed their greatest public support in the mid-fifties, and largely maintained it well into the sixties, until rampant corruption and ties to organized crime undermined their public appeal. The shoddy quality of American autos further turned opinion against the UAW, the nation’s most prominent union, and a college football star named Brian Bosworth caused a mid-eighties furor by claiming that he had deliberately sought to prank new car buyers during his summer job on a Chevrolet assembly line. Bosworth later retracted the claim that GM workers had shown him how to insert stray bolts in inaccessible parts of car bodies to create a maddening mystery rattling, but the fact that so many Sports Illustrated readers found it credible eloquently testified to the UAW’s image problem. President Reagan accelerated the trend when he successfully stood up to the striking air traffic controllers, but his administration could not have taken such a hard line if unions hadn’t already been weakened by declining public support. Together, the public’s waning support for unions and the Reagan administration’s antipathy for them were powerfully self-reinforcing, and they fueled a vicious circle that powered four decades of union reversals (Figure II-5). As a prescient November 1981 Fortune report put it, “‘Managers are discovering that strikes can be broken, … and that strike-breaking (assuming it to be legal and nonviolent) doesn’t have to be a dirty word. In the long run, this new perception by business could turn out to be big news.’”12 Emboldened by the federal government’s replacement of the controllers, and the growing public perception that unions had devolved into an insular interest group driving the cost of living higher for everyone else, businesses began turning to permanent replacement workers to counter strikes.13 As an attorney that represented management in labor disputes told The New York Times in 1986, “If the President of the United States can replace [strikers], this must be socially acceptable, politically acceptable, and we can do it, also.”14 Labor’s New Face … Polling data indicate that unions have been recovering in the court of public opinion since the crisis, when the public presumably soured on them over the perception that the UAW was selfishly impeding the auto industry bailout. Their image got a boost in 2018 (Chart II-14), as striking red-state teachers embodied the shift from unions’ factory past to their service-provider present. “The teachers, many of them women, are redefining attitudes about organized labor, replacing negative stereotypes of overpaid and underperforming blue-collar workers with a more sympathetic face: overworked and underappreciated nurturers who say they’re fighting for their students as much as they’re fighting for themselves.”15 Chart II-14Feeling The Bern?
Feeling The Bern?
Feeling The Bern?
Several commentators have heard organized labor’s death knell in US manufacturing’s irreversible decline. Unions gained critical mass on docks, factory floors, steel mills and coal mines, but few of today’s workers make their living there. Those who remain have little recourse other than to accept whatever terms management offers, as their jobs can easily be outsourced to lower-cost jurisdictions. The decline in private-sector union membership has traced the steady diminution of factory workers’ leverage (Chart II-15). Chart II-15Tracking Manufacturing's Slide
Tracking Manufacturing's Slide
Tracking Manufacturing's Slide
Service workers represent unions’ future, and they have two important advantages over their manufacturing counterparts: many of their functions cannot be offshored, and a great deal of them are customer-facing. When MGM’s chairman was ousted from his job after clashing with Las Vegas’ potent UNITE-HERE local over the new MGM Grand Hotel’s nonunion policy, his successor explained why he immediately came to terms with the union. “‘The last thing you want is for people who are coming to enjoy themselves to see pickets and unhappy workers blocking driveways. … When you’re in the service business, the first contact our guests have is with the guest-room attendants or the food and beverage servers, and if that person’s [sic] unhappy, that comes across to the guests very quickly.’”16 … Management’s New Leaf … The Business Roundtable’s latest statement on corporate governance principles laid out a new stakeholder vision, displacing the Milton Friedman view that corporations are solely responsible for maximizing shareholder wealth. The statement itself is pretty bland, but the preamble in the press release accompanying it sounds as if it had been developed with labor advocates’ help (Box II-2). It is a stretch to think that the ideals in the Roundtable’s communications will take precedence over investment returns, but they may signal that management fears the labor-management rubber band has been stretched too far.17 The Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) movement has the potential to improve rank-and-file workers’ wages and working conditions. ESG proponents have steadily groused about outsized executive pay packages, but if asset owners and institutional investors were to begin pushing for higher entry-level pay to narrow the income-inequality gap, unions could gain some powerful allies. BOX II-2 Farewell, Milton Friedman America’s economic model, which is based on freedom, liberty and other enduring principles of our democracy, has raised standards of living for generations, while promoting competition, consumer choice and innovation. America’s businesses have been a critical engine to its success. Yet we know that many Americans are struggling. Too often hard work is not rewarded, and not enough is being done for workers to adjust to the rapid pace of change in the economy. If companies fail to recognize that the success of our system is dependent on inclusive long-term growth, many will raise legitimate questions about the role of large employers in our society. With these concerns in mind, Business Roundtable is modernizing its principles on the role of a corporation. Since 1978, Business Roundtable has periodically issued Principles of Corporate Governance that include language on the purpose of a corporation. Each version of that document issued since 1997 has stated that corporations exist principally to serve their shareholders. It has become clear that this language on corporate purpose does not accurately describe the ways in which we and our fellow CEOs endeavor every day to create value for all our stakeholders, whose long-term interests are inseparable. We therefore provide the following Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation, which supersedes previous Business Roundtable statements and more accurately reflects our commitment to a free market economy that serves all Americans. This statement represents only one element of Business Roundtable’s work to ensure more inclusive prosperity, and we are continuing to challenge ourselves to do more. Just as we are committed to doing our part as corporate CEOs, we call on others to do their part as well. In particular, we urge leading investors to support companies that build long-term value by investing in their employees and communities. … And The Public’s Left Turn Chart II-16Help!
Help!
Help!
As our Geopolitical Strategy colleagues have argued since the 2016 primaries, the median voter in the US has been moving to the left as the financial crisis, the hollowing out of the middle class and the widening wealth gap have dimmed the luster of Reagan-Thatcher free-market policies.18 Globalization has squeezed unskilled labor everywhere in the developed world, and white-collar workers are starting to look over their shoulders at artificial intelligence programs that may render them obsolete as surely as voice mail and word processing decimated secretaries and typists. Banding together hasn’t sounded so good since the Depression, and nearly half of all workers polled in 2017 said they would join a union if they could (Chart II-16). Millennials are poised to become the single biggest voting bloc in the country. They were born between 1981 and 1996, and their lives have spanned two equity market crashes, the September 11th attacks, and the financial crisis, instilling them with a keen awareness of the way that remote events can upend the best-laid plans. Many of them emerged from college with sizable debt and dim earnings prospects. They would welcome more government involvement in the economy, and their enthusiastic embrace of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren (Chart II-17) indicates they’re on unions’ side. Chart II-17No 'Third Way' For Millennials
March 2020
March 2020
Elections Have (Considerable Regulatory) Consequences Electoral outcomes influence the division of the economic pie between employers and employees. Labor-friendly presidents, governors and legislatures are more likely to expand employee protections, while more vigilantly enforcing the employment laws and regulations that are already on the books. The White House appoints top leadership at the Labor Department, the National Labor Review Board (NLRB), and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), along with the attorney general, who dictates the effort devoted to anti-trust enforcement. The differences can be stark. Justice Scalia’s son would no more have led the Obama Department of Labor than Scott Pruitt (EPA), Wilbur Ross (Commerce) or Betsy Devos (Education) would have found employment anywhere in the Obama administration. McDonald’s has good reason to be happy with the outcome of the 2016 election; its business before the NLRB wound up being resolved much more favorably in 2019 than it would have been when it began in 2014 (Box II-3). At the state level, Wisconsin public employees suffered a previously unimaginable setback when Scott Walker won the 2010 gubernatorial election, along with sizable legislative majorities (Box II-4). BOX II-3 The Right Referee Makes All The Difference The Fight for $15 movement that began in 2012 aimed to nearly double the median fast-food worker’s wages. A raise of that magnitude would pose an existential threat to fast-food’s business model, and McDonald’s and its franchisees sought to stymie the movement’s momentum. The NLRB opened an investigation in 2014 following allegations that employees were fired for participating in organizing activities. McDonald’s vigorously contested the case in an effort to avoid the joint-employer designation that would open the door for franchise employees to bargain collectively with the parent company. (Absent a joint-employer ruling, a union would have to organize the McDonald’s work force one franchise at a time.) When the case was decided in McDonald’s favor in December, the headline and sub-header on the Bloomberg story reporting the outcome crystallized our elections-matter thesis: McDonald’s Gets Win Under Trump That Proved Elusive With Obama Board led by Trump appointees overrules judge in case that threatened business model BOX II-4 Wisconsin Guts Public-Sector Unions Soon after Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker took office in January 2011, backed by sizable Republican majorities in both houses of the legislature, he sent a bill to legislators that would cripple the state’s public-sector unions. Protestors swarmed Madison and filled the capitol building every day for a month to contest the bill, and Democratic legislators fled the state to forestall a vote, but it eventually passed nonetheless. The bill struck at a rare union success story; nearly one-third of public-sector employees are union members and that ratio has remained fairly steady over the last 40 years (Chart II-18). Wisconsin’s public-sector unions now do little more than advocate for their members in disciplinary and grievance proceedings, and overall union membership in the state has fallen by a whopping 43% since the end of 2009. Judicial appointments make a difference, too. The Supreme Court’s Janus decision in April 2018, banning any requirement that public employees pay dues to the unions that bargain for them on not-so-readily-apparent First Amendment grounds,19 was widely viewed as a body blow to public-sector unions. The 5-4 decision would certainly have gone the other way had President Obama’s nominee to succeed the late Justice Scalia been confirmed by the Senate. Chart II-18Public-Sector Union Membership Has Held Up Well
Public-Sector Union Membership Has Held Up Well
Public-Sector Union Membership Has Held Up Well
Final Takeaways We do not anticipate that organized labor will regain the position it enjoyed in the fifties and sixties, when global competition was weak and shareholders and consumers were anything but vigilant about corporate operations. Even a more modest flexing of labor muscle that pushes wages higher across the entire economy has a probability of less than one half. Investors seem to think the probability is negligible, though, and therein lies an opportunity. Elected officials deliver what their constituents want, as do the courts, albeit with a longer lag. Society’s view of striking/strikebreaking tactics heavily influences how they’re deployed and whether or not they’ll be successful. We believe that public opinion is beginning to coalesce on employees’ side as labor puts on a more appealing face; as businesses increasingly fret about inequality’s consequences; and as millennials swoon over progressives, undeterred by labels that would have left their Cold War ancestors reaching for weapons. The median voter theory has importance beyond predicting future outcomes; it directly influences them. As the center of the electorate leans to the left, elected officials will have to deliver more liberal outcomes if they want to keep their jobs. If the electorate has given up on Reagan-Thatcher principles, organized labor is bound to get a break from the four-decade onslaught that has left it shrunken and feeble. There is one overriding market takeaway from our view that a labor recovery is more likely than investors realize: long-run inflation expectations are way too low. Although we do not expect wage growth to rise enough this year to give rise to sustainable upward inflation pressures that force the Fed to come off of the sidelines, we do think investors are overly complacent about inflation. We continue to advocate for below-benchmark duration positioning over a cyclical timeframe and for owning TIPS in place of longer-maturity Treasury bonds over all timeframes. Watch the election, as it may reveal that labor’s demise has been greatly exaggerated. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist Bibliography Aamidor, Abe and Evanoff, Ted. At The Crossroads: Middle America and the Battle to Save the Car Industry. Toronto: ECW Press (2010). Allegretto, S.A.; Doussard, M.; Graham-Squire, D.; Jacobs, K.; Thompson, D.; and Thompson, J. Fast Food, Poverty Wages: The Public Cost of Low-Wage Jobs in the Fast-Food Industry. Berkeley, CA. UC-Berkeley Center for Labor Research and Education, October 2013. Bernstein, Irving. The Lean Years: A History of the American Worker, 1920-1933. Boston: Houghton Mifflin (1960). Blanc, Eric. Red State Revolt: The Teachers’ Strike Wave and Working-Class Politics. Brooklyn, NY: Verso (2019). Emma, Caitlin. “Teachers Are Going on Strike in Trump’s America.” Politico, April 12, 2018, accessed January 20, 2020. Finnegan, William. “Dignity: Fast-Food Workers and a New Form of Labor Activism.” The New Yorker, September 15, 2014 Greenhouse, Steven. Beaten Down, Worked Up: The Past, Present and Future of American Labor. New York: Alfred A. Knopf (2019). Greenhouse, Steven. “The Return of the Strike.” The American Prospect, Winter 2019 Ingrassia, Paul. Crash Course: The American Auto Industry’s Road from Glory to Disaster. New York: Random House (2010). King, Gilbert. “How the Ford Motor Company Won a Battle and Lost Ground.” smithsonianmag.com, April 30, 2013, accessed January 24, 2020. Loomis, Erik. A History of America in Ten Strikes. New York: The New Press (2018). Manchester, William. The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative History of America, 1932-1972. New York: Bantam (1974). Norwood, Stephen H. “The Student As Strikebreaker: College Youth and the Crisis of Masculinity in the Early Twentieth Century. Journal of Social History Winter 1994: pp. 331-49. Sears, Stephen W. “Shut the Goddam Plant!” American Heritage Volume 33, Issue 3 (April/May 1982) Serrin, William. “Industries, in Shift, Aren’t Letting Strikes Stop Them.” The New York Times, September 30, 1986 Wolff, Leon. “Battle at Homestead.” American Heritage Volume 16, Issue 3 (April 1965) *Current newspaper and Bloomberg articles omitted. III. Indicators And Reference Charts Last month, we warned that the S&P 500 rally looked increasingly vulnerable from a tactical perspective and that the spread of Covid-19 was likely to be the catalyst of a pullback that could cause the S&P 500 to retest its October 2019 breakout. Since then, the S&P 500 has corrected significantly. As long as new cases of Covid-19 continue to grow quickly outside of China, the S&P 500 can suffer additional downside. Limited inflationary pressures, accommodative global central banks, and the potential for a large policy easing in China suggest that stocks have significant upside once Covid-19 becomes better contained. Nonetheless, despite the positive signals from our Willingness-To-Pay measure or our Monetary and Composite Technical Indicators, we recommend a cautious tactical stance on equities. Our BCA Composite Valuation index is not depressed enough to warrant closing our eyes when the risk of a recession caused by a global pandemic remains as high as it is today. Either valuations will have to cheapen further or Covid-19 will have to be clearly contained before we buy stocks without strong fears. 10-year Treasurys yields remain extremely expensive. However, our Composite Technical Indicator suggests that in such an uncertain climate, yields can fall a little more. Nonetheless, Treasurys seem like an asset that has nearly fully priced in the full impact of Covid-19, and thus, any downside in yield will be very limited. The rising risk premia linked to the coronavirus is also helping the dollar right now, but as we have highlighted before, many signs show that global growth was in the process of bottoming before the outbreak took hold. As a result, we anticipate that the dollar could suffer plentiful downside if Covid-19 passes soon. Moreover, the rising probability that Senator Bernie Sanders wins the Democratic nomination could hurt the greenback over the remainder of the year. Finally, commodity prices have corrected meaningfully in response to the stronger dollar and the growth fears created by the spread of Covid-19. However, they have not pullback below the levels where they traded when they broke out in late 2019. Moreover, the advanced/decline line of the Continuous Commodity Index remains at an elevated level, indicating underlying strength in the commodity complex. Natural resources prices will likely become the key beneficiaries of both the eventual pullback in virus-related fears and the weaker dollar. EQUITIES: Chart III-1US Equity Indicators
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-2Willingness To Pay For Risk
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-3US Equity Sentiment Indicators
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-4Revealed Preference Indicator
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-5US Stock Market Valuation
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-6US Earnings
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-7Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-8Global Stock Market And Earnings: Relative Performance
March 2020
March 2020
FIXED INCOME: Chart III-9US Treasurys And Valuations
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-10Yield Curve Slopes
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-11Selected US Bond Yields
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-1210-Year Treasury Yield Components
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-13US Corporate Bonds And Health Monitor
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-14Global Bonds: Developed Markets
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-15Global Bonds: Emerging Markets
March 2020
March 2020
CURRENCIES: Chart III-16US Dollar And PPP
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-17US Dollar And Indicator
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-18US Dollar Fundamentals
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-19Japanese Yen Technicals
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-20Euro Technicals
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-21Euro/Yen Technicals
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-22Euro/Pound Technicals
March 2020
March 2020
COMMODITIES: Chart III-23Broad Commodity Indicators
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-24Commodity Prices
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-25Commodity Prices
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-26Commodity Sentiment
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-27Speculative Positioning
March 2020
March 2020
ECONOMY: Chart III-28US And Global Macro Backdrop
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-29US Macro Snapshot
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-30US Growth Outlook
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-31US Cyclical Spending
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-32US Labor Market
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-33US Consumption
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-34US Housing
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-35US Debt And Deleveraging
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-36US Financial Conditions
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-37Global Economic Snapshot: Europe
March 2020
March 2020
Chart III-38Global Economic Snapshot: China
March 2020
March 2020
Mathieu Savary Vice President The Bank Credit Analyst Footnotes 1 Non-seasonally adjusted growth is always negative in Q1, due to the impact of the Chinese Lunar New Year Celebration. This is why we emphasize the seasonal adjustment. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report "Markets Too Complacent About The Coronavirus," dated February 21, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com 3 Please see The Bank Credit Analyst "February 2020," dated January 30, 2020 available at bca.bcaresearch.com 4 Blanc, Eric. Red State Revolt: The Teachers’ Strike Wave and Working-Class Politics, Verso: New York (2019), p. 204. 5 Ibid, p. 209. 6 We will discuss public opinion, and its impact on elected officials and courts, in Part 3. 7 Please see the January 13, 2020 US Investment Strategy Special Report, “Labor Strikes Back, Part 1: An Investor’s Guide To US Labor History,” available at www.bcaresearch.com. 8 A monopsony is a market with a single buyer, akin to a monopoly, which is a market with only one seller. 9 Please see the July 2019 Bank Credit Analyst Special Report, “ The Productivity Puzzle: Competition Is The Missing Ingredient,” available at bcaresearch.com. 10 Students were excused from classes and exams and sometimes even received academic credit for their work. 11 King, Gilbert, “How The Ford Motor Company Won a Battle and Lost Ground,” Smithsonian.com, April 30, 2013. 12 Greenhouse, Steven, Beaten Down, Worked Up, Alfred A. Knopf: New York (2019), pp. 137-8. 13 High unemployment, in addition to declining respect for unions, helped erase the stigma of crossing picket lines. 14 Serrin, William, “Industries, in Shift, Aren’t Letting Strikes Stop Them,” New York Times, September 30, 1986, p. A18. 15 Emma, Caitlin, “Teachers Are Going on Strike in Trump’s America,” Politico, April 12, 2018. 16 Greenhouse, p. 44. 17 Please see the January 20, 2020 US Investment Strategy Special Report, “Labor Strikes Back, Part 2: Where Strikes Come From And Who Wins Them,” available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 18 Please see the June 8, 2016 Geopolitical Strategy Monthly Report, “Introducing The Median Voter Theory,” available at gps.bcaresearch.com. 19 The Court found for the plaintiff in Janus, who bridled at the closed-shop law that forced him to join the union that bargained on his and his colleagues’ behalf, because the union’s espousal of views with which he disagreed constituted a violation of his free-speech rights as guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Highlights The coronavirus is a wild card that may have a significant impact on the global economy, … : The COVID-19 outbreak is unfolding in real time, half a world away, and its ultimate course is uncertain. For now, our China strategists think the worst-case scenarios are unlikely, but we will not remain constructive if the virus outlook materially worsens. … but as long as there is not a significantly negative exogenous event, the US economy will be just fine, … : From a domestic perspective, the US expansion is in very good shape. Easy monetary conditions will support a range of activities, and a potent labor market will give increasing numbers of households the confidence and wherewithal to ramp up consumption. … and if there’s no recession, there will not be a bear market: Recessions and equity bear markets coincide, with stocks typically peaking six months ahead of the onset of a recession. If the next recession doesn’t come before late 2021/early 2022, the bull market should remain intact at least through the end of this year. What We Do US Investment Strategy’s stated mission is to analyze the US economy and its future direction for the purpose of helping clients make asset-allocation and portfolio-management decisions. As important as the economic backdrop is, however, we never forget that we are investment strategists, not economic forecasters. We don’t belabor the state of every facet of the economy because neither we nor our clients care about 10- to 20-basis-point wiggles in real GDP growth in themselves. They do want us to keep them apprised of the general trend, though, and we are always trying to assess it. Ultimately, macro analysis benefits investors by providing them with timely recognition of the approach or emergence of an inflection point in the cycles that matter most for financial assets. We view investment strategy as the practical application of the study of cycles, and we are continuously monitoring the business cycle, the credit cycle, the monetary policy cycle and the squishy and only sporadically relevant sentiment cycle. This week, we turn our attention to the business cycle, and the ongoing viability of the expansion, which is already the longest on record at 128 months and counting. If it remains intact, risk assets are likely to continue to generate returns in excess of returns on Treasuries and cash. The Message From Our Simple Recession Indicator We have previously described our simple recession indicator.1 It has just three components, and all three of them have to be sounding the alarm to conclude that a recession is imminent. Our first input is the slope of the yield curve, measured by the difference between the yield on the 10-year Treasury bond and the 3-month T-bill.2 The yield curve inverts when the 3-month bill yield exceeds the 10-year bond yield, and a recession has followed all but one yield curve inversion over the last 50 years (Chart 1). The yield curve inverted from May through September last year, and the coronavirus outbreak (COVID-19) has driven it to invert again, but the unprecedentedly negative term premium (Chart 2) has made the curve much more prone to set off a false alarm. Chart 1An Inverted Curve May Not Be What It Used To Be ...
An Inverted Curve May Not Be What It Used To Be ...
An Inverted Curve May Not Be What It Used To Be ...
Chart 2... When A Negative Term Premium Is Holding Down Long Yields
... When A Negative Term Premium Is Holding Down Long Yields
... When A Negative Term Premium Is Holding Down Long Yields
The indicator’s second input is the year-over-year change in the leading economic index (“LEI”). When the LEI contracts on a year-over-year basis, a recession typically ensues. As with the inverted yield curve, year-over-year contractions in the LEI have successfully called all of the recessions in the last 50 years with just one false positive (Chart 3). The LEI bounced off the zero line thanks to January’s strong reading, and the year-ago comparisons are much easier than they were last year, but we are mindful that it is flirting with sending a recession warning. Chart 3Leading Indicators Are Wobbly, ...
Leading Indicators Are Wobbly, ...
Leading Indicators Are Wobbly, ...
It takes more than tight monetary conditions to make a recession, but you can't have one without them. To confirm the signal from the yield curve and the LEI and make it more robust, we also consider the monetary policy backdrop. Over the nearly 60 years for which BCA’s model calculates an equilibrium rate, every recession has occurred when the fed funds rate has exceeded our estimate of equilibrium (Chart 4). Tight monetary policy isn’t a sufficient condition for a recession – expansions continued for six more years despite tight policy in the mid-‘80s and mid-'90s – but it is a necessary one. Our indicator will not definitively signal an approaching recession until monetary conditions turn restrictive. Chart 4... But The Fed Is Nowhere Near Inducing A Recession
... But The Fed Is Nowhere Near Inducing A Recession
... But The Fed Is Nowhere Near Inducing A Recession
Bottom Line: In our view, the yield curve and the LEI both represent yellow lights, though the LEI has a greater likelihood of turning red, especially in the wake of COVID-19. Monetary policy is unambiguously green, however, and we will not conclude that a recession is imminent until the Fed deliberately attempts to rein in the economy. Bolstering Theory With Observation A potential shortcoming of our recession indicator is its reliance on a theoretical concept. The equilibrium (or natural) rate of interest cannot be directly observed, so our judgment of whether monetary policy is easy or tight turns on an estimate. To bolster our assessment of whether or not the expansion can continue, we have been tracking the drivers of the main components of US output. Going back to the GDP equation from Introductory Macroeconomics, GDP = C + I + G + (X - M), we look at the forces supporting Consumption (C), Investment (I) and Government Spending (G). (Because the US is a comparatively closed economy in which trade plays a minor role, we ignore net exports (X-M).) Consumption is by far the largest component, accounting for two-thirds of overall output, while investment and government spending each contribute a sixth. As critical as consumption is for the US economy, it is not the whole story; smaller but considerably more volatile investment is capable of plunging the economy into a recession on its own. The Near-Term Outlook For Consumption Chart 5Labor Market Slack Has Been Absorbed
Labor Market Slack Has Been Absorbed
Labor Market Slack Has Been Absorbed
Consumption depends on household income, the condition of household balance sheets, and households’ willingness to spend. The labor market remains extremely tight, with the unemployment rate at a 50-year low, and “hidden” unemployment dwindling as the supply of discouraged (Chart 5, top panel) and involuntary part-time workers (Chart 5, bottom panel) has withered. The prime-age employment-to-population ratio trails only the peak reached during the dot-com era (Chart 6), which bodes well for household income. The historical correlation between the prime-age non-employment-to-population ratio and wage gains has been quite robust, and compensation growth has plenty of room to run before it catches up with the best-fit line (Chart 7). Chart 6Prime-Age Employment Has Surged, ...
Prime-Age Employment Has Surged, ...
Prime-Age Employment Has Surged, ...
Chart 7... And Wages Will Eventually Follow Suit
Back To Basics
Back To Basics
Chart 8No Pressing Need To Save, Or Pay Down Debt
No Pressing Need To Save, Or Pay Down Debt
No Pressing Need To Save, Or Pay Down Debt
Households can use additional income to increase savings or pay down debt instead of spending it, but it doesn’t look like they will. The savings rate is already quite elevated, having returned to its mid-‘90s levels (Chart 8, top panel); households have already run debt down to its post-dot-com bust levels (Chart 8, middle panel); and debt service is less demanding than it has been at any point in the last 40 years (Chart 8, bottom panel). The health of household balance sheets, and the recent pickup in the expectations component of the consumer confidence surveys, suggest that households have the ability and the willingness to keep consumption growing at or above trend. Household balance sheets are healthy enough to support spending income gains; there's even room to borrow to augment them. The Near-Term Outlook For Investment Table 1GDP Equation Recession Probabilities
Back To Basics
Back To Basics
Chart 9A Budding Turnaround
A Budding Turnaround
A Budding Turnaround
We previously identified investment as the individual component most likely to decline enough to zero out trend growth from the other two components (Table 1), and it was a drag in 2019, declining in each of the last three quarters to end the year more than 3% below its peak. We expect it will hold up better this year, however, as the capital spending intentions components of the NFIB survey of smaller businesses (Chart 9, top panel) and the regional Fed manufacturing surveys (Chart 9, bottom panel) have both pulled out of declines. The trade tensions with China weighed heavily on business confidence in 2019, but the signing of the Phase 1 trade agreement lifted that cloud, and we expect that capex will revive in line with confidence once COVID-19 has been subdued. Government Spending In An Election Year Chart 10State And Local Revenues Are Well Supported
State And Local Revenues Are Well Supported
State And Local Revenues Are Well Supported
Heading into the most hotly contested election in many years, we confidently assert that federal spending is not going to go away. Regardless of party affiliation, everyone in Congress sees the appeal of distributing pork to their constituents. Spending by state and local governments, which accounts for 60% of aggregate government spending, should also hold up well, as a robust labor market will support state income tax (Chart 10, top panel) and sales tax (Chart 10, middle panel) receipts. Healthy trailing home price gains will support property tax assessments, keeping municipal coffers full (Chart 10, bottom panel). Coronavirus Uncertainties The coronavirus epidemic (COVID-19) is unfolding in real time, generating daily updates on new infections, deaths and recoveries. Any opinion we offer on the economy’s future is conditioned on the virus' ongoing course. If it takes a sharp turn for the worse, with more severe consequences than we had previously expected, it is likely that we will downgrade our outlook. For now, we are operating under the projection that the virus will cause China’s first quarter output to contract sharply enough to zero out global growth in the first quarter. Our base-case scenario, following from the work of our China Investment Strategy service, is fairly benign from there. For now, we are expecting that the worst of the effects will be confined to the first quarter, and that the Chinese economy and the global economy will bounce back vigorously in the second quarter and beyond, powered by pent-up demand that will go unfilled until the outbreak begins to recede. Our China strategists continue to be heartened by Chinese officials' aggressive (albeit belated) measures to stem the outbreak, revealed in the apparent slowing of the rate of new infections in Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak (Chart 11, top panel), and in the rest of China (Chart 11, bottom panel). They also expect a determined policy response to offset the drag from the epidemic (Charts 12 and 13), as officials pursue the imperative of meeting their goal to double the size of the economy between 2010 and 2020. Chart 11Stringent Quarantine Measures May Be Gaining Traction
Back To Basics
Back To Basics
Chart 12The PBOC Is Doing Its Part, ...
The PBOC Is Doing Its Part, ...
The PBOC Is Doing Its Part, ...
Chart 13... By Easing Monetary Conditions
... By Easing Monetary Conditions
... By Easing Monetary Conditions
If the economy is expanding, investors' bar for de-risking should be high. Bottom Line: Our China strategists’ COVID-19 view remains fairly optimistic, though it is subject to unfolding developments. Our US view is contingent on BCA’s evolving COVID-19 views. Investment Implications As we noted at the outset, we are not interested in the economy for the economy’s sake; we are only interested in its impact on financial markets. The key business-cycle takeaway for markets is that bear markets and recessions typically coincide, as it is difficult to get a 20% decline at the index level without a meaningful decline in earnings, and earnings only decline meaningfully during recessions. No recession means no bear market, and it also means no meaningful pickup in loan delinquencies and defaults. The bottom line is that it is premature to de-risk while the expansion remains intact. We reiterate our recommendation that investors should remain at least equal weight equities in balanced portfolios, and at least equal weight spread product within fixed income allocations, though we may turn more cautious as we learn more about the progression of COVID-19. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the August 13, 2018 US Investment Strategy Special Report, "How Much Longer Can The Bull Market Last?" available at usis.bcaresearch.com. 2 We use the 3-month/10-year segment instead of the more common 2-year/10-year because the 3-month bill is a cleaner proxy for short rates than the 2-year note, which incorporates estimates of the Fed’s future actions.
Highlights Global Growth & Market Volatility: Fears over global growth have pushed government bond yields lower as markets discount dovish monetary policy responses to the China viral outbreak. That combination may, perversely, be helping keep risk assets stable, even as investors try to assess the potential hit to global growth from a sharp China demand shock, through lower interest rate and currency volatility. Tactical Trade Overlay: We are in the process of revamping our Tactical Trade Overlay framework, thus we are closing all our recommended current positions this week. We will begin unveiling the new trade selection process - with more specific rules on idea development, holding period, security selection and performance measurement - in the coming weeks. Feature Chart of the WeekLow Inflation Sustaining The Low Volatility Backdrop
Low Inflation Sustaining The Low Volatility Backdrop
Low Inflation Sustaining The Low Volatility Backdrop
The timing of the coronavirus outbreak in China has introduced uncertainty into what was looking like a true bottom in global growth after the 2019 slowdown. The epicenter of that improvement seen in measures like the global PMI was China, where not only was there a visible pickup in soft data like the manufacturing PMI about also hard data like import growth. The coronavirus outbreak - and the severe actions to contain its spread via widespread quarantines, factory shutdowns, supply chain disruptions and travel bans – has most likely triggered a “sudden stop” in Chinese economic growth in the first quarter of the year that will spill over beyond China’s borders. This could potentially snuff out the nascent 2020 global growth recovery if the virus is not soon contained. Global government bond markets, however, have already discounted a fairly sharp slowdown in global activity. 10-year US Treasury yields are back below 1.6%. Inflation expectations across the developed economies remain well below central bank targets and short-term interest markets are discounting additional rate cuts to varying degrees. This has created a backdrop of relative tranquility in interest rate and currency markets, with option implied volatilities for the latter back to post-crisis lows (Chart of the Week). Perversely, the shorter-term uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus outbreak may have created a backdrop for risk assets to stay resilient, by reducing the more longer-lasting uncertainty that comes from interest rate and currency market volatility. Perversely, the shorter-term uncertainty surrounding the coronavirus outbreak may have created a backdrop for risk assets to stay resilient, by reducing the more longer-lasting uncertainty that comes from interest rate and currency market volatility. If the virus is contained and the hit to the world economy limited to just the first quarter of the year, then our underlying thesis of faster growth underpinning another year of global corporate bond market outperformance versus government bonds will remain intact. Extending The “Sweet Spot” For Global Risk Assets Chart 2How Low Will These Go?
How Low Will These Go?
How Low Will These Go?
Investors are right to be worried about the potential hit to the global economy from China. Prior to the outbreak of the coronavirus, a modest improvement in Chinese import demand was underway that was finally starting to put a floor under global trade activity after the sharp 2019 downturn (Chart 2). Without that boost from Chinese demand, the world economy will be far less likely to recover in 2020. BCA Research’s Chief Investment Strategist, Peter Berezin, has attempted some back-of-the-envelope calculations to determine the potential hit to global growth from a “sudden stop” of China’s economy from the coronavirus.1 Assuming that real GDP growth will essentially be zero in the first quarter of 2020, Peter calculates that global growth will slow to 1.7% in Q1 – or one-half the IMF’s expected average growth rate for 2020 of 3.4%. The bulk of that effect comes from the direct impact of Chinese growth slowing from a trend pace of 5.5% in Q1, but that also includes spillover effects to the rest of the world from weaker Chinese spending on imported goods and tourism (Chart 3). Chart 3Chinese GDP Growth Will Plunge In Q1, But Should Recover In The Remainder Of 2020 - Provided The Coronavirus Outbreak Is Contained
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Importantly, Peter sees Chinese and global growth recovering during the rest of 2020, if the virus is contained by the end of March. The potential hit to overall global growth this year would only be 0.3 percentage points under that scenario. There is obviously a lot of uncertainty involved in making such estimates, from the timing of the spread of the virus to the potential monetary and fiscal policy responses from China (and other nations) to boost growth. Yet a total hit to global growth of only 0.3 percentage points would be fairly modest and may not end up derailing the signs of an economic rebound seen in indicators like the ZEW economic sentiment surveys. The individual country expectations component of the ZEW survey have shown solid improvements for the US, the UK, the euro area and even Japan over the past few months (Chart 4). Also, the current conditions component of the ZEW survey was just starting to bottom out in the most recent readings in the US, the UK and euro area. We have found that the spread between those two measures (ZEW current conditions minus expectations) is a reliable coincident indicator of year-over-year real GDP growth in the countries surveyed. Chart 4Will The Coronavirus Delay, Or Derail, The Recovery Process?
Will The Coronavirus Delay, Or Derail, The Recovery Process?
Will The Coronavirus Delay, Or Derail, The Recovery Process?
As of the latest read of the data from mid-January – importantly, before the start of the more widespread media coverage of the viral outbreak in China – the “current conditions minus expectations gap” from the ZEW survey was still trending downward (Chart 5). Chart 5The ZEW "Current Vs Expected" Gap Is Still Signaling Soft Global Growth
The ZEW "Current Vs Expected" Gap Is Still Signaling Soft Global Growth
The ZEW "Current Vs Expected" Gap Is Still Signaling Soft Global Growth
In other words, the boost in expectations had not yet translated into in a larger pickup in current economic activity. The risk now is that the turnaround in that gap, and in global GDP growth, will be delayed by a severe pullback in Chinese demand. The response of global business confidence to the virus is critical. According to the Duke University CFO Global Business Outlook survey taken at the end of 2019, more than half (52%) of US CFOs believe the US will be in an economic recession by the end of 2020, and 76% predict a recession by mid-2021. These numbers are similar to the 2018 survey, where 49% of CFOs thought a recession was likely by the end of 2019 and 82% predicted a recession by the end of 2020. The “CFO recession odds” are even larger outside the US, particularly in Asia and Latin America (Chart 6). Chart 6Duke/CFO Survey Respondents' 1-Year-Ahead Probability Of A Recession
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
The Duke CFO survey also asks a question on CFO optimism about the outlook for their own businesses. That data, measured on a scale of 0 to 100, shows that companies remain relatively optimistic about their own companies (Chart 7). The levels of optimism at the end of 2019 were roughly the same as at the end of 2018, except for the US where CFO optimism has soared above the highs seen prior to the 2008 financial crisis (Chart 8). Chart 7Duke/CFO Survey Respondents’ Own Company Optimism Level
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Chart 8US Companies Are Thinking Globally, But Acting Locally
US Companies Are Thinking Globally, But Acting Locally
US Companies Are Thinking Globally, But Acting Locally
The interesting implication of this data is that a considerable number of global companies has believed that recession was “only a year or two away” since the end of 2018, but have not expressed similar pessimism when it comes to their own businesses. The extreme financial market volatility at the end of 2018 likely explains why investors thought a recession was likely in 2019 or 2020, while the US-China trade war last year meant those recession fears were “extended” into 2020 and 2021. Yet one big variable changed over that period since the end of 2018 – global monetary policy was eased significantly and bond yields (i.e. borrowing costs) fell sharply for both governments and companies. Looking ahead, the likely policy response to the sharp fall in Chinese growth in Q1/2020 will be continued dovishness from global central bankers. With the US dollar now firming again, in what is shaping up to be a typical response of the greenback to slower global growth expectations, the reflation narrative that was brewing for 2020 has been postponed (Chart 9). With the US dollar now firming again, in what is shaping up to be a typical response of the greenback to slower global growth expectations, the reflation narrative that was brewing for 2020 has been postponed. A softer US dollar is a necessary ingredient for that reflation. Thus, a stable-to-firmer dollar will keep global inflation pressures muted, allowing central banks to maintain their current dovish policy biases. This will help keep market volatility for bonds, currencies and equities subdued – if the China demand shock to global growth is contained to the first quarter. From a fixed income investment perspective, an extended period of low rates/currency volatility, combined with very low government yields already reflecting a sharp global growth slowdown that is not yet assured, is an ideal “sweet spot” backdrop for corporate credit spreads to remain relatively stable. From a fixed income investment perspective, an extended period of low rates/currency volatility, combined with very low government yields already reflecting a sharp global growth slowdown that is not yet assured, is an ideal “sweet spot” backdrop for corporate credit spreads to remain relatively stable (Chart 10). Chart 9Renewed USD Strength Would Delay Global Reflation
Renewed USD Strength Would Delay Global Reflation
Renewed USD Strength Would Delay Global Reflation
We continue to recommend a strategic (6-12 months) overweight allocation to corporate credit versus government bonds for global fixed income investors, focused on high-yield credit in the US. Chart 10Still A Sweet Spot For Global Credit
Still A Sweet Spot For Global Credit
Still A Sweet Spot For Global Credit
Bottom Line: Fears over global growth have pushed government bond yields lower as markets discount dovish monetary policy responses to the China viral outbreak. That combination may, perversely, be helping keep risk assets stable, even as investors try to assess the potential hit to global growth from a sharp China demand shock, through lower interest rate and currency volatility. A Quick Note: Rebooting Our Tactical Trade Overlay Framework Back in 2016, we introduced a part of our service that was separate from our main framework which emphasized medium-term (6-12 month) investment recommendations.2 We called this piece our Tactical Trade Overlay and it was intended to focus on ideas with shorter-term horizons (less than 6-months) with specific “exit strategies”. The majority of past trades included in the Overlay did fit that description. The current list of open positions, however, has drifted away from the original mandate with recommendations now being held far longer than six months. We are in the process of developing a new framework for the Tactical Trade Overlay, with more specific rules on idea development, holding period, security selection and performance measurement. Thus, this week, we are closing out all the recommendations currently in the Overlay (see the table on page 12). The goal is to create a list of trade suggestions for our clients with the capability and/or mandate to seek out “quicker” ideas that can also be implemented in more liquid instruments whenever possible. The new Overlay will also include ideas from smaller fixed income markets not included in our Model Bond Portfolio (i.e. New Zealand or Sweden), but with the same focus on holding periods of six months or less. We will be introducing the new Tactical Overlay framework over the next few months. We plan on publishing separate reports covering the new process for selecting ideas for different types of fixed income trades, similar to the current groupings in the Overlay (rates trades, yield curve trades, relative value trades, inflation trades). The first such report, to be published by the end of February, will introduce a methodology for identifying yield curve trades in global government bond markets. Robert Robis, CFA Chief Fixed Income Strategist rrobis@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see BCA Research Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "From China To Iowa", dated February 7, 2020, available at gis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA Research Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, "GFIS Overlay Trades Review", dated October 4, 2016, available at gfis.bcaresearch.com. Recommendations The GFIS Recommended Portfolio Vs. The Custom Benchmark Index
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Slow & Steady Wins The Race
Duration Regional Allocation Spread Product Tactical Trades Yields & Returns Global Bond Yields Historical Returns
Highlights Global growth is poised to accelerate this year, although the spread of the coronavirus could dampen spending in the very short term. History suggests that the likelihood of a recession rises when unemployment falls to very low levels. Three channels have been proposed to explain why that is: 1) Low unemployment can prompt households and businesses to overextend themselves, making the economy more fragile; 2) Faster wage growth stemming from a tight labor market can compress profit margins, leading to less capital spending and hiring; 3) Shrinking spare capacity can fuel inflation, forcing central banks to raise rates. The first channel is highly relevant for some smaller, developed economies where housing bubbles have formed and household debt has reached very high levels. However, it is not an immediate concern in the US, Japan, and most of the euro area. We would downplay the importance of the second channel, as faster wage growth is also likely to raise aggregate demand and incentivize firms to increase capital spending on labor-saving technologies. The third channel poses the greatest long-term risk, but is unlikely to be market-relevant this year. Investors should remain bullish on global equities over the next 12-to-18 months. A more prudent stance will be warranted starting in the second half of 2021. Global Equities: Sticking With Bullish Global equities are vulnerable to a short-term correction after having gained 16% since their August lows. Nevertheless, we continue to maintain a positive outlook on stocks for the next 12 months due to our expectation that global growth will gather steam over the course of the year. The latest data on global manufacturing activity has generally been supportive of our constructive thesis. The New York Fed Manufacturing PMI beat expectations, while the Philly Fed PMI jumped nearly 15 points to the highest level in eight months. The business outlook (six months ahead) component of the Philly Fed index rose to its best level since May 2018. European manufacturing should also improve this year. Growth expectations for Germany in the ZEW index surged in January, rising to the highest level since July 2015 (Chart 1). The Sentix and IFO indices have also moved higher. Encouragingly, euro area car registrations rose by 22% year-over-year in December. In the UK, business confidence in the CBI survey of manufacturers surged from -44 in Q3 of 2019 to +23 in Q4, the largest increase in the 62-year history of the survey. Fiscal stimulus and diminished risk of a disorderly Brexit should also bolster growth this year. Chart 1Some Green Shoots Emerging In The Euro Area
Some Green Shoots Emerging In The Euro Area
Some Green Shoots Emerging In The Euro Area
Chart 2EM Asia Is Rebounding
EM Asia Is Rebounding
EM Asia Is Rebounding
The manufacturing and trade data in Asia have been improving. Following last week’s better Chinese trade data, Korean exports recovered on a rate-of-change basis for a fourth month in a row. Japanese exports to China increased for the first time since last February. In Taiwan, industrial production increased by more than expected in December, as did export orders. Our EM Asia Economic Diffusion Index has risen to the highest level since October 2018 (Chart 2). Coronavirus: Nothing To Sneeze At? The outbreak of the coronavirus represents a potential short-term threat to the budding global economic recovery. Conceptually, outbreaks can affect the economy in two ways. One, they can reduce demand by curtailing spending on travel, entertainment, restaurants, or anything that requires close proximity to others. Two, they can reduce supply by causing people to avoid going to work. In practice, the first effect usually dominates the second. As a result, such outbreaks tend to have a deflationary impact. The Brookings Institution estimates that the 2003 SARS epidemic shaved about one percentage point from Chinese growth that year.1 The fact that this outbreak is happening during the Chinese New Year celebrations, when over 400 million people will be on the move, has the potential to exacerbate the transmission of the virus, and in the process, amplify the economic damage. That said, while it is from the same class of zoonotic viruses, early indications suggest that this particular strain is less lethal than SARS. In addition, the Chinese authorities have moved faster to address the risks than they did during the SARS outbreak. The government has effectively quarantined Wuhan, a city of 11 million people, where the virus appears to have originated. They have also sequenced the virus and shared the information with the global medical community. This has allowed the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to develop a test for the virus, which is likely to become available over the coming weeks. The Dark Side Of Low Unemployment Provided the coronavirus outbreak is contained, stronger global growth should continue to soak up lingering labor market slack. This raises the question of whether, at some point, declining unemployment could become counterproductive. The outbreak of the coronavirus represents a potential short-term threat to the budding global economic recovery. The unemployment rate in the OECD currently stands at 5.1%, below the low of 5.5% set in 2007 (Chart 3). In the US, the unemployment rate has dropped to a 50-year low. Chart 3Unemployment Rates Are Below Their Pre-Crisis Lows In Most Economies
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
No one would deny that the decline in unemployment since the financial crisis has been a welcome development. However, it does carry one major risk: Historically, the likelihood of a recession has risen when unemployment has fallen to very low levels (Chart 4). Chart 4Recessions Become More Likely When The Labor Market Begins To Overheat
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Three channels have been proposed to explain this positive correlation: 1) Low unemployment can prompt households and businesses to overextend themselves, making the economy more fragile; 2) Faster wage growth stemming from a tight labor market can compress profit margins, leading to less capital spending and hiring; 3) Shrinking spare capacity can fuel inflation. This can force central banks to raise rates, choking off growth. Let’s examine each in turn. Unemployment And Irrational Exuberance Chart 5Growing Housing Imbalances In Some Economies
Growing Housing Imbalances In Some Economies
Growing Housing Imbalances In Some Economies
A strong economy promotes risk-taking. While some risk-taking is essential for capitalism, an excessive amount can lead to the buildup of imbalances, thereby setting the stage for an eventual downturn. In Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the Scandinavian economies, the combination of low interest rates and strong economic growth has stoked debt-fueled housing bubbles (Chart 5, panel 3). As we discussed last week, higher interest rates in those economies could sow the seeds for economic distress.2 In most other countries, financial imbalances are not severe enough to trigger recessions. Chart 6 shows that the private-sector financial balance – the difference between what the private sector earns and spends – still stands at a healthy surplus of 3.4% of GDP in advanced economies. In 2007, the private-sector financial balance fell to 0.4% in advanced economies, reaching a deficit of 2% in the US. The private-sector balance also deteriorated sharply in the lead-up to the 2001 recession (Chart 7). Chart 6The Private Sector Spends Less Than It Earns In Most Economies
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Chart 7The Private-Sector Surplus Is Larger Than It Was Before The End Of Previous Expansions
The Private-Sector Surplus Is Larger Than It Was Before The End Of Previous Expansions
The Private-Sector Surplus Is Larger Than It Was Before The End Of Previous Expansions
In the US, the personal savings rate has risen to nearly 8%, much higher than one would expect based on the level of household net worth (Chart 8). Despite growing at around 2.5% in 2018/19, real personal consumption has increased at a slower pace than predicted by the level of consumer confidence. This suggests that households have maintained a fairly prudent disposition. Consistent with this, the ratio of household debt-to-disposable income has declined by 32 percentage points since 2008. Chart 8Households Are Saving More Than One Would Expect
Households Are Saving More Than One Would Expect
Households Are Saving More Than One Would Expect
Granted, some credit categories have seen large increases (Chart 9). Student debt has risen to 9% of disposable income. Auto loans have moved back to their pre-recession highs. We would not worry too much about the former, as the vast majority of student debt is guaranteed by the government. Auto loans are more of a concern. However, it is important to keep in mind that the auto loan market is less than one-sixth as large as the mortgage market. Moreover, after loosening lending standards for vehicle loans between 2011 and 2016, banks have since tightened them. This adjustment appears to be largely complete. Lending standards did not tighten any further in the latest Senior Loan Officer Survey, while demand for auto loans rose at the fastest pace in two years. The share of auto loans falling into delinquency has been trending lower, which suggests that delinquency rates are peaking (Chart 10). Chart 9US Household Debt Levels Have Fallen, Despite Increases in Student And Auto Loans
US Household Debt Levels Have Fallen, Despite Increases in Student And Auto Loans
US Household Debt Levels Have Fallen, Despite Increases in Student And Auto Loans
Chart 10Auto Loans: Monitoring Trends In Credit Standards And Delinquency Rates
Auto Loans: Monitoring Trends In Credit Standards And Delinquency Rates
Auto Loans: Monitoring Trends In Credit Standards And Delinquency Rates
Lastly, we would point out that despite all the hoopla over the state of the auto market, auto loan asset-backed securities have performed well (Chart 11). While default rates have risen, lenders have generally set interest rates high enough to absorb incoming losses. Chart 11Securitized Auto Loans Have Performed Well
Securitized Auto Loans Have Performed Well
Securitized Auto Loans Have Performed Well
Will Falling Profit Margins Derail The Expansion? Profit margins usually peak a few years before the onset of a recessions (Chart 12, top panel). This has led some to speculate that falling margins could usher in a recession by curbing companies’ willingness to hire workers and invest in new capacity. Chart 12A Peak In Profit Margins: An Ominous Sign?
A Peak In Profit Margins: An Ominous Sign?
A Peak In Profit Margins: An Ominous Sign?
While it is an interesting theory, it does not stand up to closer scrutiny. Surveys of business sentiment clearly show that capital spending intentions are positively correlated with plans to raise wages (Chart 13, left panel). Far from cutting capital expenditures in response to rising wages, firms are more likely to boost capex if they are also planning to increase labor compensation. Chart 13AFaster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (I)
Faster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (I)
Faster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (I)
Chart 13BFaster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (II)
Faster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (II)
Faster Wage Growth, Increased Hiring, And More Capex Go Hand In Hand (II)
One reason for this is that rising wages make automation more attractive. By definition, automation requires more capital spending. However, that is not the entire story because firms also tend to hire more workers during periods when wage growth is rising (Chart 13, right panel). This implies that a third factor – strong economic growth – is responsible for both accelerating wages and rising hiring intentions. The fact that real business sales are strongly correlated with both employment growth and nonresidential investment is evidence for this claim (Chart 12, bottom panel). Falling Margins: A Symptom Of A Problem The discussion above suggests that faster wage growth is unlikely to dissuade firms from either hiring more workers or boosting capital spending. Indeed, the opposite is probably true: Since workers normally spend more of every dollar of income than firms do, an increase in the share of national income flowing to workers will lift aggregate demand. So why do profit margins usually peak before recessions? The answer is that declining labor market slack tends to push up unit labor costs, forcing central banks to hike interest rates in an effort to stave off rising inflation. Thus, falling margins are just a symptom of an underlying problem: economic overheating. Don’t blame lower margins for recessions. Blame central banks. Inflation Is Not A Threat... Yet For now, unit labor cost inflation remains reasonably well contained in the major economies (Chart 14). However, there is little evidence to suggest that the historic relationship between labor market slack and wage growth has broken down (Chart 15). Barring a major surge in productivity growth, inflation is likely to accelerate eventually as companies try to pass on higher labor costs to their customers. Chart 14AUnit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (I)
Unit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (I)
Unit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (I)
Chart 14BUnit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (II)
Unit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (II)
Unit Labor Costs Are Well Behaved For Now (II)
Chart 15Correlation Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Growth Remains Intact
Correlation Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Growth Remains Intact
Correlation Between Labor Market Slack And Wage Growth Remains Intact
We do not know exactly when such a price-wage spiral will emerge. Inflation is a notoriously lagging indicator (Chart 16). Our best guess is that inflation could become a serious risk for investors in late 2021 or 2022. Thus, investors should remain overweight global equities for the next 12-to-18 months, but be prepared to turn more cautious in the second half of 2021. Chart 16Inflation Is A Lagging Indicator
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Peter Berezin Chief Global Strategist peterb@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Jong-Wha Lee and Warwick J. McKibbin, “Globalization and Disease: The Case of SARS,” Brookings Institution, dated February 2004. 2 Please see Global Investment Strategy Weekly Report, “Bond Yields: How High Is Too High?” dated January 17, 2020. Global Investment Strategy View Matrix
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
MacroQuant Model And Current Subjective Scores
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Who’s Afraid Of Low Unemployment?
Strategic Recommendations Closed Trades
Highlights Our take on the key macro drivers of financial markets is quite similar to last year’s, … : Monetary policy is still accommodative; lenders are ready, willing and able; and the expansion remains intact. ... because the Fed and other central banks have reset the monetary policy clock, … : At this time last year, we projected that the Fed would be on the cusp of tightening monetary policy enough to induce a recession by the middle of 2020. Three rate cuts later, we now expect that policy won’t become restrictive until 2021. … pushing the inflection points investors care about further out into the future: The next recession won’t begin before monetary policy settings are tight, and stocks won’t peak until about six months before the recession starts. We are keeping close tabs on the trade negotiations and potential election outcomes, but we expect that 2020 will be another rewarding year for riskier assets: The equity bull market is likely to last for all of next year, and spread product will keep cranking out excess returns over Treasuries and cash for a while longer, too. Overweight equities and spread product. Feature Mr. and Ms. X made their annual visit to BCA last month, giving us an opportunity to gather our thoughts for 2020, while reviewing how our calls turned out in 2019. Both BCA and US Investment Strategy got the asset allocation conclusion right – overweight equities and spread product, while underweighting Treasuries – but the Fed did the opposite of what we expected heading into 2019, putting us on the wrong side of the Treasury duration call for most of the year. We still think investors are overly complacent about the potential for future inflation, but we concede that the future remains further off than we initially expected. Monetary policy settings got more accommodative nearly everywhere in the world in 2019, ... Our Outlook 2020 theme, as detailed in the year-end edition of The Bank Credit Analyst, is Heading into the End Game,1 and it is clear that the expansion is in its latter stages. We do not think that the end of the expansion, the equity bull market, or credit’s extended stretch of positive excess returns is at hand, however. The full-employment/low-inflation sweet spot is still in place, and the Fed has no plans to get in the expansion’s way, even if inflation begins to gain some traction. Its biggest policy priority is trying to get inflation expectations back to the 2.3 – 2.5% range consistent with its inflation target. Chart 1Globalization Hits A Wall
Globalization Hits A Wall
Globalization Hits A Wall
Central banks around the world followed the Fed’s lead this year, cutting their policy rates in an attempt to shield their economies from potentially worsening trade tensions. Though no central banker would say it out loud, joining the rate-cutting parade also helped to defend against currency appreciation, as no one wants a strong currency when growth is in such short supply. The upshot is that global central banks are deliberately promoting reflation. That’s a supportive policy backdrop for risk assets, and while it may well lead to a bigger hangover down the road, it will ramp up the party now. Exogenous challenges remain. Trade tensions are a thorn in businesses’, consumers’ and investors’ sides. Even if US-China tensions die down, a belligerent US administration appears bent on using tariffs and other trade barriers as a cudgel to force concessions from other nations. The trade tailwind that boosted economic growth and investment returns across the last two decades has been stilled (Chart 1). Saber rattling by the US, or mischief from the usual rogue-state and non-state suspects, could also keep markets on edge. The looming election could give investors heartburn, and clients around the world remain anxious about the prospects of a Warren administration. Exogenous risks abound, but it is not our base case that a critical mass will coalesce to disrupt our view that generous-to-indulgent monetary policy settings will delay the day of reckoning, and keep the bull market going all the way through the coming year. As The Cycles Turn From our perspective, the practice of investment strategy is properly founded on the study of cycles. The key cycles – the business cycle, the credit cycle, and the monetary policy cycle – determine how receptive the macroeconomic backdrop is for taking investment risk. Investments made when the backdrop supports risk taking have a much better likelihood of generating excess returns over Treasuries and cash than investments made against an unfriendly macro backdrop. We therefore start every investment decision with an assessment of the key cycles. Determining whether the economy is expanding or contracting may seem like an academic debate with little practical application when the official business cycle arbiters don’t even determine the beginning and ending dates of recessions until well after the fact.2 Equity bear markets reliably coincide with recessions, however, and over the last 50 years, they have begun an average of six months before their onset (Chart 2). An investor who recognizes that a recession is at hand has a good chance of outperforming his/her competitors as long as s/he aggressively adjusts portfolio allocations in line with that recognition. Chart 2Bear Markets Rarely Occur Outside Of Recessions, ...
Bear Markets Rarely Occur Outside Of Recessions, ...
Bear Markets Rarely Occur Outside Of Recessions, ...
Our key view, then, is that the start of the next recession is at least 18 to 24 months away. Tight monetary policy is a necessary, albeit not sufficient, condition for a recession (Chart 3), and we consider the Fed’s current monetary policy settings to be easy, especially after this year’s three rate cuts. A recession can’t begin until the Fed reverses those three cuts and, per our estimate of the equilibrium rate, tacks on at least three additional hikes. Tightening along those lines is decidedly not on the Fed’s 2020 agenda. Chart 3... And Recessions Only Occur When Monetary Conditions Are Tight
... And Recessions Only Occur When Monetary Conditions Are Tight
... And Recessions Only Occur When Monetary Conditions Are Tight
Our recession judgment compels us to be overweight equities. Even if the next recession begins exactly halfway through 2021, history suggests that 2020 returns will be robust. Over the last 50 years, the S&P 500 has peaked an average of six months before the start of a recession, and returns heading into the peak have been quite strong, especially in the last four expansions (Table 1). Those results are consistent with bull markets’ tendency to sprint to the finish line (Chart 4). Table 1Stocks Don't Quit Until A Recession Is Near
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
Chart 4Bull Markets End In Stampedes
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
The Fed Funds Rate Cycle We estimate that the equilibrium fed funds rate is currently around 3¼%, and project it will approach 3½% by the end of next year. If we are correct that the Fed’s main policy aim is to prod inflation expectations higher, it follows that it will remain on hold at 1.75% well into 2020. A desire to avoid even the appearance of meddling in the election may well keep the FOMC sidelined until its November and December meetings. The implication is that monetary policy will have no chance to cross into restrictive territory before the first half of 2021. The bottom line for investors is that the day when the economy and markets will have to confront tight monetary conditions has been indefinitely postponed. The Fed has effectively deferred the inflections in the business cycle and the equity market to some point beyond 2020. A longer stretch of accommodation would also continue to fuel the equity bull market, as Phases I and IV of the fed funds rate cycle, in which the fed funds rate is below our estimate of equilibrium (Chart 5), have been equities’ historical sweet spot. Over the last 60 years, the S&P 500 has accrued all of its real returns when policy was easy (Table 2), while Treasuries have shined when it’s tight (Table 3). Chart 5The Fed Funds Rate Cycle
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
Table 2Equities Love Easy Policy, …
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
Table 3… When They Leave Treasuries Far Behind
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
2020 Key Views: No Inflection Yet
The Credit Cycle Our 30,000-foot view of the credit cycle is based on the banking mantra that bad loans are made in good times. When an expansion has been going on for a while, loan officers focus more on maintaining market share than lending standards, while managers of credit funds attract more assets, pushing them to find a home for their new inflows. Banks and bond managers are thereby pro-cyclical at the margin, keeping the good times going by lending to increasingly marginal borrowers and/or relaxing the terms on which they will lend. (They’re conversely stingy when real-time conditions are bad.) Lenders’ lagging/coincident focus keeps lending standards and borrower performance closely aligned in real time (Chart 6). Chart 6Standards Are Coincident In Real Time, ...
Standards Are Coincident In Real Time, ...
Standards Are Coincident In Real Time, ...
Standards are a contrarian indicator over longer periods, though, because shoddily underwritten loans eventually show their true colors. We find a solid fit between corporate bond default rates and lending standards in the preceding 20 quarters (Chart 7). Lending standards tightened slightly in 2015, but were still quite easy in an absolute sense. A majority of banks tightened standards in 2016 amidst the oil rout, which could point to marginally better 2020-21 performance, but post-2010 standards have hardly been stringent. Chart 7... And Leading Over Five-Year Periods
... And Leading Over Five-Year Periods
... And Leading Over Five-Year Periods
The stock of outstanding loans and bonds is therefore vulnerable. The relaxation of corporate bond covenants so soon after the financial crisis has not escaped the notice of bearish investors and reporters. It is not enough for an investor to identify a vulnerability, however; s/he also has to identify the catalyst that is going to cause a rupture. The challenge is that ultra-accommodative monetary policy delays the formation of negative catalysts. To the utter torment of an observer with an attraction to the Austrian School of Economics’ survival-of-the-fittest ethic, it is not at all easy to default in a ZIRP/NIRP world. The stock of $12 trillion of bonds with negative nominal yields (down from August’s $17 trillion peak) has ginned up a fervent search for yield among large institutional investor constituencies that have to meet a fixed distribution schedule, like life insurers and pension funds. These income-starved investors help explain why nearly any borrower, no matter how sketchy, can draw a crowd of would-be lenders simply by offering an incremental 50 or 75 basis points of yield. Borrowers default when no one is willing to roll over their maturing obligations; they get even more leveraged when lenders are climbing over each other to lend to them. It is also hard to default when central banks are deliberately pursuing reflation. Inflation makes debt service easier, and central banks are all-in for reflation as a means to bolster inflation expectations, defend against further trade tensions, and to ensure currency strength doesn’t undermine exports. The credit cycle is well advanced, and the Austrians may be at least partially vindicated when the ensuing selloff is worse than it would otherwise have been for having been delayed, but it looks to us like it has more room to run. The rapture remains out of reach for Austrian School devotees, who slot between Tantalus and New York Knicks fans on the cosmic persecution scale. Bonds We remain bearish on Treasuries and reiterate our below-benchmark duration recommendation, though we recognize that the 10-year Treasury yield is unlikely to rise beyond the 2.25-2.5% range in the next year. There’s only one more rate cut to price out of the OIS curve, and neither inflation expectations nor the term premium will return to normal levels quickly. The intermediate- and long-term outlook for the Federal budget is grim, given the size of the deficit while unemployment is at a 50-year low (Chart 8), but Dick Cheney will maintain the upper hand over deficit hawks for 2020 and several years beyond. We do think investors are complacent about inflation’s eventual return, though, and continue to advocate for TIPS over nominal Treasuries. It is tough to default in a ZIRP/NIRP world, when several institutional investor constituencies have a voracious appetite for yield. Chart 8The Budget Outlook Is Grim
The Budget Outlook Is Grim
The Budget Outlook Is Grim
Chart 9IG Spreads Are Wafer Thin
IG Spreads Are Wafer Thin
IG Spreads Are Wafer Thin
Our benign near-term view of the credit cycle makes us comfortable continuing to overweight spread product, subject to our US Bond Strategy colleagues’ preferences. They are only neutral on investment-grade corporates, given their scant duration-adjusted spread over Treasuries (Chart 9). They recommend overweighting high-yield corporate bonds instead, given that high-yield spreads still offer ample positive carry. They also recommend agency mortgage-backed securities as a high-quality alternative to investment-grade corporates, noting that their low duration (three years versus nearly eight for corporates) offers better protection against rising rates. Equities With monetary policy still accommodative, and the expansion still intact, the cyclical backdrop is equity-friendly. If we’re correct that policy won’t turn restrictive until early to mid-2021 at the earliest, the bull market should be able to continue through all of 2020. We do not foresee a return to double-digit earnings growth, but the upward turn in leading indicators across a wide swath of countries outside of the US suggests that a revival in the rest of the world could help S&P 500 constituents grow earnings by mid-single digits, via a pickup in non-US demand and some softening in the dollar. Net share retirements could even nudge earnings growth into the high single digits. If earnings multiples hold up (they’ve expanded at a 5.5% annual rate in Phase IV of the fed funds rate cycle, and don’t typically contract until Phase II), S&P 500 total returns could reach the high single digits, easily putting them ahead of prospective Treasury returns. Multiple expansion isn’t required to support an overweight equities recommendation, but we would not be at all surprised if it occurred. Bull markets often get silly as they sprint to the finish line, and it would be unusual if some froth didn’t bubble up before this bull market, the longest of the postwar era, calls it quits. The Dollar We expect the dollar to weaken against other major currencies in 2020. As the rest of the world finds its footing and begins to accelerate, the growth differential between the US and other major economies will narrow. The dollar will attract less safe-haven flows as the rest of the world’s major economies escape stall speed. Though we expect the countercyclical dollar will rally again when the next recession hits, weakening in 2020 is consistent with our constructive global growth view. Putting It All Together We are sanguine about the US economy, which continued to trundle along at a trend pace in 2019 despite a series of headwinds. It withstood 4Q18’s sharp equity selloff and bond-spread blowout that tightened financial conditions and made corporate and investor confidence wobble. It withstood the 35-day federal government shutdown that lasted nearly all of January. It kept marching forward despite the trade war with China, and it overcame, at least for now, the angst over the inverted yield curve. If the economy continued to expand at roughly its trend pace despite those obstacles, it may not really have needed 25-basis-point rate cuts in July, September and October. The thread connecting our macro views and investment recommendations is the idea that monetary policy settings are highly accommodative and are likely to stay that way until the 2020 election. We expect that risk assets will outperform against an accommodating monetary backdrop. The naysayers are as likely to be confounded by central banks in 2020 as they have been throughout the entire ZIRP/NIRP era. The scolds scouring the data to try to find signs of excesses, and the Chicken Littles who have been frightened by clickbait headlines and strategists deliberately pursuing pessimistic outlier strategies, get one thing right. The market selloffs when the equity and credit bull markets end will be worse than they would have been if the Fed and other central banks were not deliberately attempting to reflate their economies. But their timing is likely to be as bad now as it has been all throughout 2019 (and for the entire post-crisis period for card-carrying, sandwich-board-wearing Austrians). You can’t fight the Fed, much less the ECB, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, the Swiss National Bank, the Reserve Banks of Australia and New Zealand, and a broad swath of all of the rest of the world’s central banks. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see the December 2019 Bank Credit Analyst, “Outlook 2020: Heading Into The End Game,” available at www.bcaresearch.com. 2 The NBER’s Business Cycle Dating Committee announced in December 2008 that the last recession began in December 2007. It announced in September 2010 that it had ended in June 2009.
Feature Recommended Allocation
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
In late November, BCA Research published its 2020 Outlook titled Heading Into The End Game, an annual discussion between BCA’s managing editors and the firm’s longstanding clients Mr. and Ms X.1 We recommend GAA clients read that document for a full analysis of the macro and investment environment we expect in 2020. In this Monthly Portfolio Outlook, we focus on portfolio construction: how we would recommend positioning a global multi-asset portfolio for the 12-month investment horizon in light of that analysis. First, a brief summary of the BCA macro outlook. We believe the global manufacturing cycle is starting to bottom out, partly because of its usual periodicity of 18 months from peak to trough, and also because of easier financial conditions, and some moderate fiscal and credit stimulus from China (Chart 1). Central banks will remain dovish next year despite accelerating growth. The Fed, in particular, worries that inflation expectations have become unanchored (Chart 2) and, moreover, will be reluctant to raise rates ahead of the US presidential election. This environment implies a moderate rise in long-term interest rates, with the US 10-year Treasury yield rising to 2.2-2.5%. Chart 1Reasons To Expect A Rebound
Reasons To Expect A Rebound
Reasons To Expect A Rebound
Chart 2Unanchored Inflation Expectations Worry The Fed
Unanchored Inflation Expectations Worry The Fed
Unanchored Inflation Expectations Worry The Fed
For an asset allocator, this combination of an improving manufacturing cycle and easy monetary policy looks like a very positive environment for risk assets (Chart 3). We, therefore, remain overweight equities and underweight fixed income. We have discussed over the past few months the timing to turn more risk-on and pro-cyclical in our recommendations.2 Since we are increasingly confident about the probability of the manufacturing cycle turning up, this is the time to make that change. Consequently, the shifts we are recommending in our global portfolio, shown in the Recommended Allocation table and discussed in detail below, add to its beta (Chart 4). Chart 3A Positive Environment For Risk Assets
A Positive Environment For Risk Assets
A Positive Environment For Risk Assets
Chart 4Raising The Beta Of Our Portfolio
Raising The Beta Of Our Portfolio
Raising The Beta Of Our Portfolio
Chart 5Some Signs Of Risk-On Still Missing
Some Signs Of Risk-On Still Missing
Some Signs Of Risk-On Still Missing
Nonetheless, we still have some concerns. China’s stimulus (particularly credit growth) remains half-hearted compared to previous cyclical rebounds in 2012 and 2016. We expect a “phase one” ceasefire in the trade war. But even that is not certain, and it would not anyway solve the long-term structural disputes. To turn fully risk-on, we would want to see signs of a clear rebound in commodity prices and a depreciation of the US dollar, which have not yet happened (Chart 5). The 2020 Outlook proposed some milestones to monitor whether our scenario is playing out and whether we should turn more or less risk-on. We summarize these milestones in Table 1. Given these uncertainties, to hedge our pro-cyclical positioning we continue to recommend an overweight in cash, and we are instituting an overweight position in gold. Table 1Milestones For 2020
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Chart 6Recessions Are Caused By Inflation Or Debt
Recessions Are Caused By Inflation Or Debt
Recessions Are Caused By Inflation Or Debt
How will this cycle end? All recessions in modern history have been caused either by a sharp rise in inflation, or by a debt-fueled asset bubble (Chart 6). The Fed will likely fall behind the curve at some point as, after further tightening in the labor market, inflation starts to pick up. How the Fed reacts to that will determine what triggers the recession. If – as is most likely – it lets inflation run, that could blow up an asset bubble (and it was the bursting of such bubbles which caused the 2000 and 2007 recessions); if it decides to tighten monetary policy to kill inflation, the recession would look more like those of the 1970s and 1980s. But it is hard to see either happening over the next 12-18 months. Equities: As part of our shift to a more pro-risk, pro-cyclical stance, we are cutting US equities to underweight, and raising the euro zone to overweight, and Emerging Markets and the UK to neutral. US equities have outperformed fairly consistently since the Global Financial Crisis (Chart 7) – except during the two periods of accelerating global growth, in 2012-13 (when Europe did better) and 2016-17 (when EM particularly outperformed). The US today is expensive, particularly in terms of price/sales, which looks more expensive than the P/E ratio because the profit margin is at a record high level (Chart 8). The upside for US stocks in 2020 is likely to be limited. In 2019 so far, US equities have risen by 29% despite earnings growth close to zero. Multiples expanded because the Fed turned dovish, but investors should not assume further multiple expansion in 2020. Our rough model for US EPS growth points to around 8% next year (sales in line with nominal GDP growth of 4%, margins expanding by a couple of points, plus 2% in share buybacks). Add a dividend yield of 2%, and US stocks might give a total return of 10% or so. Chart 7US Doesn't Always Outperform
US Doesn't Always Outperform
US Doesn't Always Outperform
Chart 8US Equities Are Expensive
US Equities Are Expensive
US Equities Are Expensive
To play the cyclical rebound, we prefer euro zone stocks over those in EM or Japan. Euro zone stocks have a higher weighting in sectors we like such as Financials and Industrials (Table 2). European banks, in particular, look attractively valued (Chart 9) and offer a dividend yield of 6%, something investors should find appealing in this low-yield world. EM is more closely linked to China and commodities prices, which are not yet sending strong positive signals. We worry about the excess of debt in EM (Chart 10), which remains a structural headwind: the IMF and World Bank put total external EM debt at $6.8 trillion (Chart 11). Table 2Equity Sector Composition
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Chart 9Euro Zone Banks Are Especially Cheap
Euro Zone Banks Are Especially Cheap
Euro Zone Banks Are Especially Cheap
Chart 10EM Debt Remains A Headwind
EM Debt Remains A Headwind
EM Debt Remains A Headwind
Japan is another likely beneficiary of a cyclical recovery. But, before we turn positive, we want to see (1) signs of a stabilization of consumption after the recent tax rise (retail sales fell by 7% year-on-year in October), and (2) clarification of a worrying new investment law (which will require any investor which intends to “influence management” to get prior government approval before buying as little as a 1% stake in many sectors). For an asset allocator this combination of an improving manufacturing cycle and easy monetary policy looks very positive for risk assets. We raise the UK to neutral. The market has been a serial underperformer over the past few years, but this has been due to the weak pound and derating, rather than poor earnings growth (Chart 12). It now looks very cheap and, with the risk of a no-deal Brexit off the table, sterling should rebound further. The UK is notably overweight the sectors we like (Table 2). However, political risk makes us limit our recommendation to neutral. Although the Conservatives look likely to win a majority in this month’s general election, which will allow them to push through the negotiated Brexit deal, subsequent arguments over the future trade relationship with the EU will be divisive. Chart 116.8 Trillion In EM External Debt
$6.8 Trillion In EM External Debt
$6.8 Trillion In EM External Debt
Chart 12The UK Has Been Derated Since 2016
The UK Has Been Derated Since 2016
The UK Has Been Derated Since 2016
Fixed Income: We remain underweight government bonds. Stronger economic growth is likely to push up long-term rates (Chart 13). Nonetheless, the rise in yields should be limited. The Fed looks to be on hold for the next 12 months, but the futures market is not far away from that view: it has priced in only a 60% probability of one rate cut over that time. The gap between market expectations and what the Fed actually does is what our bond strategists call the “golden rule of bond investing”. US inflation is also likely to soften over the next few months due to the lagged effect of this year’s weaker growth and appreciating dollar. We do not expect the 10-year US Treasury to rise above 2.5% – the current FOMC estimate of the long-run equilibrium level of short-term rates (Chart 14). Chart 13Growth Will Push Up Rates...
Growth Will Push Up Rates...
Growth Will Push Up Rates...
Chart 14...But Only As Far As 2.5%
...But Only As Far As 2.5%
...But Only As Far As 2.5%
Within the fixed-income universe, we remain positive on corporate credit. But US investment-grade bond spreads are no longer attractive and so we downgrade them to neutral (Chart 15). Investors looking for high-quality bond exposure should prefer Agency MBS, which trade on an attractive spread relative to Aa- and A-rated corporate bonds. European IG should do better since spreads are not so close to historical lows, risk-free rates should rise less than in the US, and because the ECB is increasing its purchases of corporate bonds. Chart 15US IG Spreads Are Close To Historical Lows
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Monthly Portfolio Update: How To Position For The End Game
Chart 16US Caa Bonds Have Some Catching Up To Do
The Puzzling Case Of Caa-Rated Junk Bonds US Caa Bonds Have Some Catching Up To Do
The Puzzling Case Of Caa-Rated Junk Bonds US Caa Bonds Have Some Catching Up To Do
We continue to like high-yield bonds, both in the US and Europe. But we would suggest moving down the credit curve and increasing the weight in Caa-rated bonds. These have underperformed this year (Chart 16), mainly because of technical factors such as their overweight in the energy sector and relatively smaller decline in duration.3 With a stronger economy and rising oil prices, they should catch up to their higher-rated HY peers in 2020. To play the cyclical rebound, we prefer euro zone stocks over those in EM or Japan. Currencies: Since the US dollar is a counter-cyclical currency (Chart 17), we would expect it to weaken against more cyclical currencies such as the euro, and commodity currencies such as the Australian dollar and Canadian dollar. But it should appreciate relative to the yen and Swiss franc, which are the most defensive major currencies. We expect EM currencies to continue to depreciate. Most emerging markets are experiencing disinflation (Chart 18), which will push central banks to cut rates and inject liquidity into the banking system. This will tend to weaken their currencies. Overall, we are neutral on the US dollar. Chart 17The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
The Dollar Is A Counter-Cyclical Currency
Chart 18Disinflation Will Push EM Currencies Down Further
Disinflation Will Push EM Currencies Down Further
Disinflation Will Push EM Currencies Down Further
Commodities: Industrials metals prices are closely linked to Chinese stimulus (Chart 19). A moderate recovery in Chinese growth should be a positive, and so we raise our recommendation to neutral. But with question-marks still lingering over the strength of the rebound in the Chinese economy, we would not be more positive than that. Oil prices should see moderate upside over the next 12 months, with supply tight and demand growth recovering in line with the global economy. Our energy strategists forecast Brent crude to average $67 a barrel in 2020 (compared to a little over $60 today). Chart 19Metals Prices Depend On China
Metals Prices Depend On China
Metals Prices Depend On China
Chart 20Gold: Short-Term Negatives, But Remains A Good Hedge
Gold: Short-Term Negatives, But Remains A Good Hedge
Gold: Short-Term Negatives, But Remains A Good Hedge
Gold looks a little overbought in the short term, and less monetary stimulus and a rise in rates next year would be negative factors (Chart 20). Nonetheless, we see it as a good hedge against our positive economic view going awry, and against geopolitical risks. If central banks do decide to let economies run hot next year and ignore rising inflation, gold could do particularly well. We, therefore, raise our recommendation to overweight on a 12-month horizon. Garry Evans, Senior Vice President Chief Global Asset Allocation Strategist garry@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see "Outlook 2020," dated November 22 2019, available at bcaresearch.com 2 Please see, for example, last month’s GAA Monthly Portfolio Update, “Looking For The Turning-Point,” dated November 1, 2019, available at gaa.bcaresearch.com 3 For a more detailed explanation, please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “Caa-Rated Bonds: Warning Signs Or Buying Opportunity,” dated 26 November 2019, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com GAA Asset Allocation