Sectors
Highlights Duration: Only 2 of the 5 items on our Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration have been checked. We will heed this message and stick with below-benchmark portfolio duration for the time being. We will have an opportunity to re-assess the items on our Checklist after the March FOMC meeting when the Fed’s interest rate forecasts will be updated. The Fed & Financial Conditions: The recent dip in the stock market is not the result of investors pricing-in worse economic outcomes. Rather, it is a sector rotation driven by extreme economic optimism. It is certainly not a concern for the Fed. The Fed & The Labor Market: We need to see monthly nonfarm payroll growth coming in consistently above 419 thousand before we can be confident that the Fed will hike rates by the end of 2022. Feature Chart 1Bearish Trend Intact The bond bear market rages on. The Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Index returned -1.8% in February, its worst monthly performance since 2016. The sell-off then continued through the first week of March, culminating with the 10-year Treasury yield touching 1.56% as of Friday’s close (Chart 1). The 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield ended the week at 2.41%, near the top-end of primary dealer estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate (Chart 1, bottom panel). We don’t want to catch a falling knife, but eventually, yields will look attractive enough for us to increase our recommended portfolio duration. To help us make that decision, we unveiled a Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration in our February Webcast (Table 1).1 Table 1Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration This week, we check-in with our Checklist, concluding that it is still too early to increase portfolio duration. Checking-In With Our Duration Checklist Chart 2Cyclical & Valuation Indicators The first item on our Checklist is the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield reaching levels consistent with survey estimates of the long-run neutral fed funds rate. As noted above, this condition has been met. Second, we would like to see survey-derived measures of the 10-year term premium reach extended levels. Specifically, we’d like to see them approach their 2018 peaks (Chart 2). Currently, our two measures are sending diverging signals. The term premium derived from the New York Fed’s Survey of Market Participants is 60 bps, only 15 bps off its 2018 peak. However, the term premium derived from the New York Fed’s Survey of Primary Dealers is only 22 bps, 53 bps off its 2018 peak. For now, our assessment is that this condition has not been met. It’s important to note that the surveys used to construct our two term premium measures and to obtain our fair value range for the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield have not been updated since January, and that they will be revised ahead of this month’s FOMC meeting. If primary dealers and market participants revise up their fed funds rate expectations, then our valuation measures will give the 10-year yield more room to rise. Third, we continue to track high-frequency cyclical economic indicators like the CRB/Gold ratio (Chart 2, panel 3) and the relative performance of cyclical versus defensive equity sectors (see section titled “The Fed’s Approach To Financial Conditions” below). These measures have yet to show any signs of deterioration, consistent with an environment where bond yields should be rising. Fourth, if current trends continue, we are concerned that US yields may rise too far compared to yields in the rest of the world. This could entice foreign inflows into the US bond market, sending yields back down. Historically, bullish sentiment toward the US dollar is a good indicator of when US yields have risen too far. At present, dollar sentiment remains extremely bearish (Chart 2, bottom panel). This suggests that we are not yet close to the point when foreign purchases will push US yields lower. Finally, we consider the market’s fed funds rate expectations relative to the Fed’s most recent forecast, as inferred from its quarterly “dot plot”. Currently, the market is priced for Fed liftoff to occur in January 2023, with a second rate hike delivered in May 2023 and a third in October 2023 (Chart 3). This is considerably more hawkish than the Fed’s median forecast from December, which called for no rate hikes until at least 2024! Chart 3Market Expects Liftoff In January 2023 We think it’s conceivable that economic conditions could warrant Fed liftoff in late-2022 (see section titled “Tracking Payrolls And The Countdown To Fed Liftoff” below), but the Fed will probably be more cautious about how quickly it brings its expected liftoff date forward. FOMC participants will have an opportunity to push back against the market when they update their funds rate forecasts at this month’s meeting. The Fed will likely bring forward its anticipated liftoff date, but probably not all the way to January 2023. This could halt the uptrend in bond yields, at least for a while. Bottom Line: Only 2 of the 5 items on our Checklist For Increasing Portfolio Duration have been checked. We will heed this message and stick with below-benchmark portfolio duration for the time being. We will have an opportunity to re-assess the items on our Checklist after the March FOMC meeting when the Fed’s interest rate forecasts will be updated. Other surveys used in the construction of our term premium estimates and 5-year/5-year yield targets will also be updated around this time. The Fed’s Approach To Financial Conditions Chart 4Financial Conditions Are Easy Remarks from Fed Chair Jay Powell were a catalyst for higher bond yields last week. Apparently, there had been some expectation in the market that Powell would use his platform to express concern about the recent increase in long-maturity bond yields. In fact, many expected him to foreshadow changes to the Fed’s balance sheet policy, either extending the maturity of its ongoing asset purchases or initiating an Operation Twist, where the Fed sells short-dated securities and buys long-dated ones.2 Powell didn’t announce any of these things. In fact, he didn’t even express concern about the recent rise in long-dated yields despite being given several opportunities to do so. To understand why, we need to understand how the Fed thinks about financial conditions. The Fed only cares about conditions in financial markets to the extent that they are expected to influence the real economy. This means that the Fed takes a broad view of financial conditions, including bond yields, credit spreads and equity prices. From this perspective, financial markets do not currently pose a risk to the economy (Chart 4). Yes, long-dated bond yields have risen, but short-dated yields remain low. Credit spreads also remain very tight and equity prices have only dipped modestly from high levels. The Chicago Fed’s broad index of financial conditions shows that they are extremely accommodative (Chart 4), and thus support continued economic recovery. This financial market back-drop is not one that will cause the Fed to take additional actions to ease policy. Even the recent drop in the stock market appears to be more a reflection of economic optimism than a cause for concern. Looking at the performance of different equity sectors, we find that the sectors that stand to benefit from the end of the pandemic and economic re-opening are surging. Meanwhile, the sectors that are performing poorly are simply giving back some of the huge gains that were realized when the pandemic was raging last year. For example, cyclical sectors (Industrials, Energy and Materials) are soaring while defensive sectors (Healthcare, Communications, Consumer Staples and Utilities) have hooked down (Chart 5A). The ratio between the two remains tightly correlated with the 10-year Treasury yield. Similarly, Bank stocks have exploded higher since bond yields troughed last fall while the Technology sector has had difficulty making further gains (Chart 5B). Last year, the Tech sector benefited from low bond yields and surging demand. This year, Banks stand to profit from higher yields and an improving labor market. Finally, our US Equity Strategy team put together a basket of “COVID-19 Winners” designed to profit from the pandemic and a basket of “Back To Work” stocks designed to benefit from economic re-opening. Not surprisingly, the former is dragging the S&P 500 lower while the latter is on a tear (Chart 5C). Chart 5ASector Rotation: Cyclicals Vs. Defensives Chart 5BSector Rotation: Banks Vs. Tech Chart 5CSector Rotation: COVID Winners Vs. Re-Open Winners The bottom line is that the recent dip in the stock market is not the result of investors pricing-in worse economic outcomes. Rather, it is a sector rotation driven by extreme economic optimism. It is certainly not a concern for the Fed. Other Reasons For The Fed To Change Its Balance Sheet Policy In addition to concerns about a drop in the stock market, several other reasons have been given for why the Fed might consider either increasing its asset purchases or shifting them toward the long end of the curve. 1) Treasury Market Liquidity Chart 6Treasury Market Liquidity First, there is an ongoing tension in the Treasury market between imposing stricter capital regulations on dealer banks and ensuring that they have enough balance sheet capacity to maintain Treasury market liquidity during periods of stress.3 This delicate equilibrium broke down last March when Treasury market liquidity evaporated at a time when both equities and bonds were crashing. The Fed was forced to step into the Treasury market to sustain market functioning. Last week’s Treasury sell-off had a whiff of illiquidity about it as well. One liquidity index that measures the average curve fitting error across all government bond yields increased slightly, but not nearly as much as it did last March (Chart 6). Treasury bid/ask spreads also widened a touch, but unlike last March, Treasury ETFs continued to trade close to their net asset values. A significant deterioration in Treasury liquidity would prompt a quick response from the Fed. That is, the Fed would quickly ramp up purchases to restore market functioning. However, last week’s blip was not nearly severe enough to raise alarm bells. Other periods of Treasury market stress that have prompted the Fed to step in have occurred during periods of extreme economic deterioration and market panic, such as in March 2020 and 2008. With economic growth accelerating rapidly, we place low odds on a major Treasury market liquidity event occurring this year. 2) Expiry Of The SLR Exemption Chart 7Reserve Supply Is Massive A second possible reason for the Fed to change its balance sheet policy is the upcoming expiry of the exemption to the Supplementary Leverage Ratio (SLR). The SLR is a regulation that requires large banks to hold common equity capital totaling at least 5% of assets. Assets are not risk-weighted for the purposes of the SLR. A problem arose with the SLR last March when the Fed bought massive amounts of bonds, flooding the banking system with reserves (Chart 7). The problem is that banks are forced to hold those reserves, and this makes it more difficult for them to meet their SLR requirement. To alleviate the problem, the Fed announced that reserves and Treasury securities would be exempted from the SLR calculation. Today, the issue is that this exemption is scheduled to expire at the end of March and the Fed has yet to announce whether it will be extended or allowed to lapse. Table 2US Bank Supplementary Leverage Ratios If the exemption lapses, then banks may try to unload Treasury securities to remain compliant with the SLR. In theory, this could lead to upward pressure on Treasury yields that the Fed could mitigate by ramping up its asset purchases. However, it’s unclear how much of an impact a lapsing of the SLR exemption would actually have on the Treasury market. Even adjusting for a lapsing of the exemption, all major US banks remain compliant with the 5% SLR (Table 2). Also, banks could always decide to increase their SLRs by reducing share buybacks rather than by shedding Treasuries. In any event, an increase in Fed asset purchases to lean against rising Treasury yields driven by bank selling would be counterproductive. It would only flood the banking system with more reserves, making the SLR even more difficult to meet. Our view is that a fair compromise would be for the Fed to continue the SLR exemption for bank reserves, but to allow the Treasury security exemption to lapse. But even if the SLR exemption is allowed to lapse completely, we doubt that it will lead to enough market turmoil to prompt a change in the Fed’s balance sheet strategy. 3) Supply/Demand Imbalance In Money Markets Finally, some have noted that the large and growing supply of bank reserves could lead to problems in money markets. Specifically, with the Treasury Department now in the process of paying down its cash account (Chart 7, bottom panel), there is a lot of cash flooding into money markets and coming up against limited T-bill supply. In theory, the Fed could try to mitigate this problem by engaging in an Operation Twist – selling some T-bills and buying some coupon bonds. But we doubt this will occur. The Fed already has tools in place to maintain control over short rates in such circumstances. For example, the same situation arose in 2013 when an over-supply of bank reserves pushed short rates down toward the bottom of the Fed’s target range (Chart 8A). The Fed’s response was to create the Overnight Reverse Repo Facility (ON RRP). This facility allows counterparties to park excess cash at the Fed in exchange for a security off the Fed’s balance sheet. This proved to be an effective floor on repo rates and the fed funds rate, and we expect it will be again (Chart 8B). Chart 8AFed Created ON RRP In 2013... Chart 8B... It Remains A Firm Floor On Rates T-bill yields remained below the ON RRP rate for some time in 2014 and 2015, and the same thing could happen again this year. But this will not be a major concern for the Fed as long as it maintains control over the fed funds rate and the overnight repo rate. Eventually, the Treasury Department can deal with the lack of bill supply by increasing the amount of T-bill issuance. Bottom Line: Treasury market liquidity remains an ongoing concern for the Fed, and the possible expiry of the SLR exemption and lack of T-bill supply present additional near-term technical challenges. We think it’s unlikely that any of these things will prompt the Fed to deviate from its current pace and composition of asset purchases in 2021. Tracking Payrolls And The Countdown To Fed Liftoff Chart 9The Fed's Maximum Employment Targets Employment growth surprised to the upside in February as 379 thousand jobs were added to nonfarm payrolls. This sent bond yields higher, but we caution that even stronger employment growth will be required to keep bond yields rising going forward. The Fed needs to see a return to “maximum employment” before it will lift rates off the zero bound. This means not only that the unemployment rate will have to fall to a range of 3.5% to 4.5%, but also that the labor force participation rate must make a full recovery to pre-pandemic levels (Chart 9). We calculate that average monthly employment growth of 419 thousand will be required to achieve this goal by the end of 2022 (Table 3). In other words, to justify the market’s January 2023 expected liftoff date, we will need to see average monthly payroll growth of at least 419 thousand going forward. Table 3Average Monthly Nonfarm Payroll Growth Required For The Unemployment Rate To Reach 4.5% By The Given Date This number seems high, but it may be attainable. With vaccine distribution kicking into high gear, many service sectors of the economy will soon be able to re-open. This already started to happen last month when the Leisure & Hospitality sector added 355 thousand jobs. Even after last month’s gains, Leisure & Hospitality still accounts for 36% of the net job loss since last February (Table 4). This means that there is scope for extremely large employment gains this year if the coronavirus can be contained. Table 4Employment By Industry Bottom Line: We need to see monthly nonfarm payroll growth coming in consistently above 419 thousand before we can be confident that the Fed will hike rates by the end of 2022. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.bcaresearch.com/webcasts/detail/387 2 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-03-01/treasury-curve-dysfunction-ignites-talk-of-federal-reserve-twist?sref=Ij5V3tFi 3 For more details please see US Investment Strategy / US Bond Strategy Special Report, “Alphabet Soup, Part 2: Shocked And Awed”, dated July 28, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
Underweight “COVID-19 Winners” hypermarket equities remain a solid underweight call. Worrisomely, relative share prices recently broke down and propelled relative returns for our portfolio into the double digits since the late-August inception. While there is a number of factors that weigh on this defensive industry, today we turn our attention to the US dollar. As the greenback depreciates, it reduces the purchasing power of US importers, including Big Box retailers that source most of their goods from abroad (bottom panel, import prices shown inverted). As a result, relative margins bear the brunt of the USD’s fall – especially given that these input cost increases are difficult to pass on to the consumer – profits slip and relative share prices find an equilibrium lower. True, the US dollar has retraced part of its losses recently, but given the lag between the currency debasing and its effects on import prices and margins, the FX related damage will likely have a lasting effect (see chart). Tack on the stealing of demand from the future that these defensive retail stores enjoyed all of last year, as WMT recently admitted on their earnings call, and the revenue and profit outlooks darken further for this safe haven industry. Bottom Line: Remain underweight the S&P hypermarkets index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HYPC – WMT, COST.
Recently we reopened our long “Back-To-Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade that we first instituted in the September 8th, 2020 Strategy Report, and subsequently closed earlier this year for a gain of 21.5%, since inception as our risk management rolling stop was hit. The selloff in the bond market last week served as a catalyst and turbocharged this pair trade that is highly levered to the economic reopening theme; already stellar gains have accrued for our portfolio to the tune of 20% since the early February second inception. Importantly, as the bottom panel of the chart on the right shows, the relative price ratio still has catch up potential to the parabolic move in yields. More recently, we took a deep dive into the economic reopening theme and created two baskets (laggards and overshooters) from the entire GICS4 universe we cover and recommended investors put an intra “Back-To-Work” trade on. Bottom Line: Stay with the long “Back-To-Work” / short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade. The ticker symbols in the “Back-To-Work” and “COVID-19 Winners” baskets are: LUV, DAL, MAR, HLT, CVX, EOG, SBUX, MCD, CAT, HON, AXP, COF, NUE, GM; and TDOC, FCN, ZM, CTXS, JNJ, AMGN, REGN, CLX, RBGLY, WMT, COST, KR, NFLX, AMZN, respectively.
Overweight In the coming months the market may sniff out the China driven slowdown we highlighted in recent research. This will likely present an opportunity to further augment machinery exposure as a number of macro forces are supporting this industrials sub-sector. First, the correlation between the greenback and global growth is as negative as ever. As long as the ongoing tactical USD appreciation is seen in the context of a secular bear market, machinery stocks will remain stellar cyclical outperformers (US dollar shown inverted, second panel). Second, the industry-level inventory cycle has not yet reached an apex. Given that the pandemic grounded machinery new orders to a halt, the economic reopening will pave the way for a significant rebound in machinery spending (third panel). Finally, our multi-factor macro sales (not shown) and earnings models, both argue that a sharp rebound in top and bottom line growth is in the cards (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We remain overweight the S&P machinery index, but are mindful of a potential transitory China-related headwind.
Underweight Last December when we penned the 2021 high-conviction calls Strategy Report, we put global gold miners in the “also rans” section as we did not have the courage to go underweight despite our view of an economic reopening. But it is better late than never, and in this Monday’s Strategy Report we pulled the trigger and downgraded this niche materials sub-sector to a below benchmark allocation. The economic reopening theme remains healthy and still dominates the market as is evident in 5-year/5-year forward real yields that have been soaring year-to-date signaling that investors should shy away from gold miners (Chart 1). Not only is the real economy standing on its own two feet, but the financial economy is also being propelled higher thanks to the Fed, ECB, BoJ, and a plethora of other central banks (CBs) including EM ones. CBs are still embarking on QE, effectively engineering a “risk on” asset price inflation phase that melts away the global equity risk premium and reduces the allure of the safe haven global gold mining industry (Chart 2). Chart 1Avoid Gold Miners Chart 2Avoid Gold Miners Bottom Line: Downgrade global gold miners to underweight. This move also pushes the S&P materials sector back to the neutral zone.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy The selloff in the long end of the Treasury bond market and related yield curve steepening, rising loan growth and a turnaround in bank net interest margins, all signal that a durable re-rating phase is in the offing in the beaten down financials sector. Soaring real and nominal yields on the back of a US economic reopening, sinking policy uncertainty, and the specter of a countertrend USD rally, all undermine global gold mining stocks. Downgrade to underweight. We deem there is an exploitable opportunity within the reopening theme and we reiterate our recent pair trade recommendation: long USES “Laggards” basket/short USES “Overshooters” basket (excluding the GICS1 sectors). Recent Changes Downgrade the global gold mining index to underweight, today. This move also pushes the S&P materials sector to a neutral allocation. Last week our rolling 2.5% stop was triggered and we booked gains of 17% in the deep cyclicals/defensives portfolio bent that is now on even keel. On February 10, we closed the S&P consumer staples and the S&P homebuilding high-conviction underweights for 8% and -11% returns, respectively, since the December 7 inception. On February 11, we rolled over the synthetic long SPY options structure from March expiry (long $390/$410 call spread/short $340 put) to June expiry (long $400/$420 call spread/short $340 put) netting gains of $5.41/contract or 676% since the January 12 inception. Feature While stocks swiftly gyrated last week and the selloff in Treasury bonds dominated the news flow, the corporate bond market remained as placid as ever. This eerie calmness is slightly unnerving as junk spreads, all the way out to the CCC poor-quality spectrum, have been steadily sinking. But, resurging commodities likely confirm that there is no real reason to panic as global growth remains on an upward trajectory courtesy of pent-up demand that will get unleashed in the back half of the year as the global economy reopens (Chart 1). We recently reinitiated the long “Back-To-Work” basket as the expense of our “COVID-19 Winners” basket and this trade is already up another 21.3% since the second inception on Feb 3, 2021. With regard to monetary policy that remains a key pillar of equity euphoria, the Fed has vociferously signaled that they will not be backing down from QE and their ZIRP policy. The FOMC is not even thinking about thinking about tapering asset purchases, despite a looming inflation spike in the coming months due to base effects and bottlenecks that they vehemently deem transitory. Chart 1Eerie Calm? Importantly, Charts 2 & 3 show that both the ISM’s manufacturing prices paid index and a sideways move in retail gasoline prices predict a surge in headline CPI in the April/May time frame as we first showed in a recent Special Report. Chart 2The Bond Market Is Already… Chart 3…Testing The Fed Tack on a plethora of anecdotes regarding shortages and price hikes in a slew of industries and an inflationary spurt is already here. In more detail, an inflationary impulse is not only evident in chip and car shortages and in container freight shipping rates, but also in dry bulk transport rates. Drilling beneath the surface of the Baltic Dry Index, and looking beyond Capesize carriers, reveals that Panamax and Handysize vessel freight rates are on a tear, probing 11-year highs and more than quadrupling since the March lows (Chart 4). These smaller ships are more nimble and rarely take voyage empty as recent container ships have been when returning to China to reload. Thus, the sizable increase in Handysize and Panamax shipping rates suggests that commodity demand is robust, especially industrial commodities. Returning to US shores, the most recent retail sales report also caused a jump in the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow and the NY Fed’s Nowcast forecasts for Q1 near double digit real GDP growth. For calendar 2021, according to daily data from Bloomberg, economists expect US real GDP growth north of 4.9% (Chart 5). More blow out quarters are in the offing courtesy of the inoculation of the population, the reopening of the economy and persistent government largesse. Chart 4Look Beneath The Surface… Chart 5…And The Economic Recovery Is Gaining Steam… Crudely put, while consumers will not buy 10 coffees or eat 10 meals at a restaurant all at once when the economy fully reopens, they may choose to fly business on their next vacation and indulge on a more lavish hotel. Add on that the hospitality industry specifically has aggressively shut down capacity and an inflationary impulse is likely as consumer purse strings will loosen very quickly. Thus, trust in the Fed’s ultra-dovishness represents the biggest equity market risk in the coming months as the FOMC allows the economy to run hot and there are high odds that the bond market will continue to test the Fed’s resolve. Our sense is that the Fed will initially ignore the spike in inflation, at least until the summer, thus refraining from removing the proverbial “punch bowl”. However, if the market detects any signs of a “less dovish” Fed, especially if high inflation prints persist for whatever reason, risk premia will get repriced a lot higher (Chart 6). Chart 6…But A Lot Of Good News Is Baked In Staying on the topic of interest rates, we have a long-held rule of thumb that stocks cannot stomach more than 100-125bps tightening via a selloff in the 10-year US Treasury bond in a less than a year time frame basis. In other words, were the 10-year US Treasury yield to surpass and stay over 1.55% by March, 2.05% by June, and 1.75% by August, then the equity market will likely suffer a pullback, especially given the absence of a valuation cushion. In fact, last Thursday the 10-year US Treasury yield cleared the 1.6% hurdle and stocks sold off violently. In more detail, we examined data from 2009 onward, therefore only covering the QE era, which would increase the applicability of our analysis. Importantly, the 2009-2011 iterations provide the closest parallels as to what will likely take root this cycle as those instances occurred in a post recessionary environment, which is similar to today. The 2009-2011 period also best aligns with the main reason for having this rule of thumb in the first place: to gauge the risk of interest rates undermining the market by weighing on forward multiples and/or via an economic slowdown because of tightening in monetary conditions. Our analysis shows that while the exact timing and size of the stock market drawdown varies from episode to episode, it is generally consistent with a roughly 10% pullback in the S&P 500 albeit with a 1-2 month lag following the trigger in our rule1 (Chart 7). Chart 7Monitoring Our 100-125bps Rule Of Thumb Keep in mind that such a pullback is consistent with historical precedents when the Fed is actively engaged in QE, with the most recent example being last September’s/October’s 10% drawdown. Our sense is that the ongoing bond market selloff will serve as a catalyst for a continuation/acceleration of the reopening/rotation/reflation trade out of highly valued tech stocks and into more compellingly valued deep and early cyclicals. Such a transition typically proves tumultuous. This week, we update our sanguine view on an early-cyclical sector, and act on the downgrade alert to a deep cyclical sector via downgrading a safe haven commodity index to a below benchmark allocation. Financials Are On Fire Within the GICS1 universe, the most levered sector to interest rates is the S&P financials sector. Given that the bond selloff has staying power, we reiterate our overweight stance on this early-cyclical sector that we fist boosted to an above benchmark allocation on November 16, 2020. Following up from the 100-125bps bond market tightening rule of thumb, adding another layer of complexity via bringing in the yield curve (YC) is instructive. This analysis corroborates our rule of thumb and suggests that not only do 10-year US Treasury yields have more room to rise, but also so does the S&P financials sector, especially given that it is hovering at an extremely depressed level relative to the S&P 500 (Chart 8). Chart 8V-Shaped Recovery? Historically the yield curve peaks at a range of 150 to 250 bps. In the past 7 cycles, this range was in place with only one exception: the first leg of the double dip recession in the early 80s. This represents a stellar track record of where the YC peters out based on empirical evidence. Even in the post GFC world, the YC steepened north of 250bp (thrice) and during the early stages of that recovery. The implication is that if history at least rhymes, then the yield curve can steepen a lot more. Were it to revisit the 250bps level, the YC could nearly double from current levels (Chart 9A). Practically, given that the Fed will pin the 2-year US Treasury yield near zero with a near-term max value of roughly 50bps, this equates to a tentative early-cycle peak 10-year Treasury yield range of 2% to 3%. Chart 9AYield Curve Can Steepen A Lot More Putting this in perspective, at current levels, the 10-year US Treasury yield is roughly where it stood right after Brexit in mid-2016, which was last cycle’s trough, and still deeply in overvalued territory according to BCA bond valuation model (Chart 9B). Importantly, back then, as now, yields have been late comers to the equity rally. As a reminder, during the manufacturing recession the SPX troughed on Feb 15, 2016 – the day the Royal Dutch Shell / BG Group merger closed – while interest rates bottomed in the first week of July 2016. One key driver of the positive impact of rising interest rates on relative financials share prices will be the end to the banking sector’s hemorrhaging net interest margins (Chart 10). Chart 9BBonds Remain Extremely Overvalued Chart 10NIM Turnaround Looms Financial services companies represent the nervous system of every economy and a vibrant economy is synonymous with firming loan growth (bottom panel, Chart 11). Beyond the recovery in the broad non-financial corporate sector, the overheating residential housing market in particular is another vital area that is propping up the financials sector (top panel, Chart 11). All of this suggests that relative profitability will pick up steam this year, a message that our macro-driven relative EPS models also corroborate (second panel, Chart 12). This stands in marked contrast to sell-side analysts’ profit expectations and represents an exploitable trading opportunity: the earnings hurdle is so low for financials that even a modest beat of suppressed EPS growth expectations will go a long way in breathing fresh life into this neglected early-cyclical sector (third & bottom panels, Chart 12). Tack on pent up financials sector buyback demand and a 40bps dividend yield carry versus the SPX and the profit outlook brightens further for this interest rate-sensitive sector. Chart 11Financials Rising Alongside The Economy Finally, relative valuations are bombed out on any metric used (middle, fourth & bottom panels, Chart 13). Granted, relative technicals are not as alluring as last November, however our Technical Indicator is still below overbought levels that have marked prior relative performance peaks (second panel, Chart 13). Chart 12Green Light On Earnings Chart 13Financials Are Cheap No Matter How You Cut It Adding it all up, the selloff in the long end of the Treasury bond market and the associated yield curve steepening, rising loan growth and a turnaround in bank net interest margins signal that a durable re-rating phase looms for the beaten down financials sector. Bottom Line: Continue to overweight the S&P financials sector. Are Gold Miners Losing Their Luster? Last December when we penned the 2021 high-conviction calls Strategy Report, we put global gold miners in the “also rans” section as we did not have the courage to go underweight despite our view of an economic reopening and selloff in the bond market. It is never too late. Today, we use the downgrade alert we issued on the S&P materials sector to trim the sector to neutral via downgrading the global gold mining index to a below benchmark allocation. As a reminder, in mid-January we had put the materials sector on our downgrade watch list as a way to express the move of the cyclicals/defensives portfolio bent back down to even keel. The stock-to-bond (S/B) ratio has broken out to at least a three decade high because stocks are near all-time highs and bonds are selling off violently. This represents an explosive cocktail for gold stocks and is warning that there is ample downside for relative share prices (S/B ratio shown inverted, Chart 14). Chart 14Sell Gold Miners… This is largely due to the definitive reopening of the US economy in the coming quarters (bottom panel, Chart 15). It is also evident in 5-year/5-year forward real yields that have been soaring year-to-date signaling that investors should shy away from gold miners (real yields shown inverted, middle panel, Chart 15). Even nominal yields underscore that the path of least resistance for global gold mining equities points lower, especially given that the recent bond market selloff is driven by the real (i.e. growth) not inflation component. As a reminder, gold bullion and gold miners yield next to nothing thus when real rates rise, the opportunity cost to hold gold and gold miners skyrockets and investors abandon gold miners for higher yielding assets (top panel, Chart 16). The recent fall in the share of global negative yielding bonds by over $4tn also weighs on the prospects of gold miners (bottom panel, Chart 16). Importantly, while we are not calling for the Fed to raise rates any time soon, the 12-month forward fed funds rate discounter (as backed out of the OIS curve) has jumped back to the zero line, opening a wide gap with relative share prices. This is unsustainable and our sense is that this gulf will narrow via a drop in the latter in the coming months (fed funds rate discounter shown inverted and advanced, middle panel, Chart 16). Chart 15…When The Economy Is Roaring Another source of worry for gold stocks is the USD. Historically, a rising greenback pushes gold bullion and gold equities lower and vice versa. If the US economy will rebound at a faster clip than the euro area as the Fed is explicitly taking inflation risk and is allowing the economy to run hot, then at some point the US dollar may start to flex its muscles. Granted, this will likely be a countertrend rally in the context of a USD bear market that commenced last spring, especially given the still lopsided US dollar positioning (Chart 17). Chart 16Rising Rates Are bearish Bullion Chart 17Mighty USA = Countertrend Rally In The USD In addition, US and global policy uncertainties are melting as the US/Sino trade war has been in hibernation, the US elections are behind us and a “Blue Wave” sweep is certain to deliver mega fiscal easing packages, thus exerting downward pressure on the safe haven status of gold bullion and gold mining equities (Chart 18). Finally, the global equity risk premium is in freefall as not only the Fed, but also the ECB, the BoJ, and a plethora of other CB including EM ones are doing QE effectively engineering a “risk on” asset price inflation phase (Chart 18). Nevertheless, our bearish gold mining equity thesis has to contend with oversold conditions and bombed out relative valuations. We will be closely monitoring these two risks and stand ready to act and cut losses in case value oriented buyers come out of left field (Chart 19). Chart 18Mind The Catch Down Phase Chart 19Two Risks To Monitor Netting it all out, soaring real and nominal yields on the back of a US economic reopening, sinking policy uncertainty, and the specter of a countertrend USD rally, all undermine global gold mining stocks. Bottom Line: Downgrade the global gold mining index to underweight today. This move also pushes the S&P materials sector back to the neutral zone. A Few Words On The “Back-To-Work” Trade Last year we created two baskets of stocks to capture the economic reopening theme by constructing a long/short pair trade. This year, we crystallized 21.5% in gains from that pair trade and subsequently reopened it and it is already up another 21.3% since the second inception on February 3, 2021. Two weeks ago, we took a fresh look at the economic reopening theme and pitted “Back-To-Work” laggards against leaders. First, we filtered for well-behaved cyclical industries among all the sectors and sub-sectors we cover. We define a well-behaved cyclical industry as one that trailed the SPX from February 19, 2020 to March 23, 2020; and then outpaced the broad market from March 23, 2020 to today (all computations are in relative to SPX terms). Such filtering excluded all of the defensive & cyclical industries that outperformed the market during the recession, and it also excluded those industries that were too damaged by the pandemic and could not recover above the March 23 trough level (for example, airlines) always in relative terms. Chart 20 is a stylized depiction of our analysis. In total 27 industries survived the filtering. We then computed what is the minimum percentage increase required in order for each group to recover to its February 19 level, and then calculated the difference between that required increase and the one that actually materialized. A positive value signifies that the sector climbed above its February 19 level, whereas a negative value means that the sector still has not recovered. Chart 20Stylized Depiction Of “Back-To-Work” Sectors To Buy And To Avoid… Chart 21 displays the results. Our rationale is as follows: should the economic recovery and normalization themes continue unabated as we expect, then the risk/reward trade-off of owning the “laggards” is greater than the “overshooters”: the former have ample upside potential left, whereas the latter are already discounting a lot of good news. Chart 22 plots the ratio of the two baskets against the ISM manufacturing prices paid sub-component and the 10-year US Treasury yield and supports our rationale that the “laggards” have a long runway ahead versus the “overshooters”. Chart 21…Buy The Laggards / Sell The Overshooters Chart 22Inflation Impulse Beneficiaries Bottom Line: We deem there is an exploitable opportunity within the reopening theme and we reiterate our recent pair trade recommendation: long USES “Laggards” basket/short USES “Overshooters” basket (excluding the GICS1 sectors). As a proxy for this trade we include tickers for the largest stock in each sub-sector (excluding GICS1). Laggards: V, BLK, HCA, MCD, HON, AXP, JPM, COP, PSX, MAR, SLB. Overshooters: EMR, BLL, LIN, NUE, UNP, HD, DHI, CAT, MS, J, TSLA, AMAT. We are aware of some minor conflicts between the “Overshooters” and the “Back-To-Work” basket and also versus our current recommendations table, but we still recommend investors stick with this pair trade. Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 A quick note on the taper tantrum and the 2016 iterations. During those periods the S&P 500 actually fell at the same time as yields rose (not after the rule was triggered), so technically we should not have counted that as a valid iteration on our chart. Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views February 24, 2021 Stay neutral cyclicals over defensives January 12, 2021 Stay neutral small over large caps June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, ABNB, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
Underweight Recently we highlighted how the inclusion of TSLA in the S&P consumer discretionary sector catapulted the sector’s 5-year growth forecasts to the stratosphere. We also mentioned anecdotes of sell-side analysts having to conduct 20 year out DCF models to justify TSLA’s price. As a result of all of this mania-like behavior, we downgraded the S&P autos & components index to underweight coincidentally the same week that TSLA surpassed $900/share; this move also pushed the overall consumer discretionary sector to a below benchmark allocation. Since then, the underweight stance in the S&P autos & components index has netted 19% in gains for our portfolio as the bond market vigilantes are trying to talk some sense into high-flying stocks. Not only is the bond market weighing heavily on stratospheric valuations, but also dark clouds are gathering on the operating front. For instance, VW Group outsold TSLA last year by a factor of over 3-to-1 in Norway, which is the most advanced BEV market in the world. Given that auto manufacturing is a cutthroat business with razor thin margins, we doubt it will be long before Japanese, German, Chinese and other BEV manufacturers enter the scene and question TSLA’s position in the market. As a reminder, TSLA continues to command a higher market capitalization than all the other global auto stocks put together. Something has got to give. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the S&P automobiles & components index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AUCO – TSLA, GM, F, APTV, BWA.
Highlights The multiple paid for oil sector profits is collapsing because the market fears that the profits slump will not be short-lived. The fear is not just of a lasting hit to aviation and a slower recovery in road mobility, but an existential fear for fossil-fuelled road transportation in the post-pandemic world. Stay structurally underweight oil and gas. Within the cyclical and value segments of the equity market, overweight metals and miners versus oil and gas. Structurally underweight the stock markets of Norway and the UK which are oil and gas heavy. Structurally overweight the stock markets of Germany, Switzerland, and Denmark which have zero exposure to oil and gas or basic resources. Fractal trade: tin’s near-vertical rally is at high risk of correction. Feature Chart of the WeekOil Production Has Gone Nowhere The Brent crude oil price recently hit $65, not far below its pre-pandemic level of $69. Yet in the stock market, oil and gas equities remain the dogs, languishing 32 percent below their pre-pandemic price level. Relative to the market, the oil and gas sector has underperformed by 42 percent, and the underperformance has been almost a straight line down. Moreover, since last June when the crude oil price has risen by 50 percent, oil and gas equity prices have gone nowhere. This massive divergence of a surging crude oil price from slumping oil and gas equities raises the obvious question, what can explain this dichotomy? (Chart I-2 and Chart I-3) Chart I-2Oil And Gas Equities Have Slumped In Absolute Terms... Chart I-3...And In Relative ##br##Terms One apparent puzzle is that the oil sector’s profits have underperformed their established relationship with the crude oil price. In fact, there is no puzzle. The oil sector’s profits might appear to track the oil price, but the reality is that profits track the value of oil production, meaning the product of oil production and the oil price. Clearly though, if output is flat, then profits will appear to track the oil price. But as it took a massive cut in oil output to support the oil price, the value of oil production and therefore, the oil sector’s profits, have significantly underperformed the oil price. Put another way, if you need to cut output to boost the commodity price it might help the commodity price, but it doesn’t much help the equity sector’s profits! (Chart I-4 and Chart I-5). Chart I-4Oil And Gas Profits Appear To Track The Oil Price Chart I-5In Reality, Oil And Gas Profits Track The Value Of Oil Output Will Fossil-Fuelled Road Transportation Be Driven To Extinction? We can now explain the 42 percent underperformance of oil equities, and perhaps more importantly, forecast what will happen next. When the pandemic took hold, and economic mobility ground to a halt, the oil sector’s 12-month forward profits slumped. Bear in mind that aviation accounts for 8 percent of oil consumption but, more crucially, road transportation accounts for half of all oil consumption. However, as the pandemic’s impact was expected to be short-lived, the multiple paid for those depressed 12-month forward profits rose. This partly compensated for the profit slump, but still left oil equity prices much lower. The multiple paid for oil sector profits is collapsing because the market fears that the profit slump will not be short-lived. When profits started to recover – albeit, as just discussed, by much less than the oil price rise – it should have boosted oil equity prices. The problem was that the multiple paid for those profits fell by much more than the recovery in profits, with the result that oil equities continued to underperform. Begging the question, why is the multiple paid for oil sector profits collapsing? (Chart I-6) Chart I-6Why Is The Multiple Paid For Oil Sector Profits Collapsing? The multiple paid for oil sector profits is collapsing because the market fears that the profit slump will not be short-lived. The fear is not just of a lasting hit to aviation and a slower recovery in road mobility. The fear has become existential. Governments’ plans for pandemic stimulus and recovery have put green energy at front and centre stage. Thereby the recovery has fast-tracked the ultimate nemesis of the oil industry – the extinction of fossil-fuelled road transportation. Are the fears for oil consumption justified? Yes. Aviation is not likely to reach its pre-pandemic level of oil consumption for many years, and long-haul aviation may never get there. But the much bigger threat is fossil-fuelled road transportation. From October 2021, London will extend its Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ) to an 8 mile radius from the city centre.1 The effect will be to banish from London all diesel-fuelled vehicles made before 2015 as well as some older petrol-fuelled vehicles. We expect other major cities to follow London’s example. In most cases, this initiative will happen regardless of the success (or not) of electric vehicles (EVs). Combined with other green initiatives around the world, policymakers’ unashamed aim is to drive fossil-fuelled road transportation to extinction. To repeat, road transportation accounts for half of all oil consumption. The upshot is that the structural downtrend in oil consumption will persist unless the shift away from fossil-fuelled road transportation hits a brick wall, or at least a bottleneck. We do not see such a brick wall or a bottleneck in the foreseeable future. We conclude that though the sector may offer occasional countertrend tactical buying opportunities, long-term equity investors should underweight oil and gas. Structurally Prefer Metals And Miners To Oil And Gas The preceding analysis of the oil sector can be extended to other commodity equities, like the metals and miners. To reiterate, it is the total value of commodity output – the product of commodity production and the commodity price – that drives the profits of commodity equities. On this basis, the long-term prospects for the metals and miners appear somewhat brighter than for oil and gas equities (Chart I-7). Chart I-7Commodity Sector Profits Track The Value Of Commodity Output Looking at the production of copper, it has increased by around 25 percent over the past decade, albeit this is just in line with world real GDP. By comparison, the production of oil has gone nowhere (Chart of the Week). It is the total value of commodity output that drives the profits of commodity equities. Turning to price, relative to the 2011 high the copper price is around 15 percent lower, whereas the oil price is 50 percent lower (Chart I-8). Chart I-8The Copper Price Has Outperformed The Oil Price Hence, on the all-important value of output, copper has moved in a sideways channel over the past decade while oil has been in an unmistakeable structural downtrend, with lower highs and lower lows (Chart I-9). Chart I-9The Value Of Output Is Trending Sideways For Copper, But Downwards For Oil This relative trend is likely to continue as the shift from fossil-fuelled road transportation to EVs will weigh on oil demand, while supporting copper (and other metal) demand. We do not recommend an outright overweight in metals and miners given that their profits are just moving in a sideways channel. However, within the cyclical and value segments of the equity market, a good structural position is to overweight metals and miners versus oil and gas. When Oil And Gas Underperforms, So Does Norway’s OBX And The UK’s FTSE 100 Regional and country equity market performances is driven by the dominant sectors within each stock market. In relative terms, it is also driven by the sectors that are missing. If the oil and gas sector is a structural underperformer, then oil and gas heavy stock markets such as Norway and the UK will be structural underperformers too. If the oil and gas sector is a structural underperformer, it inevitably means that oil and gas heavy stock markets such as Norway and the UK will be structural underperformers too (Chart I-10 and Chart I-11). Chart I-10When Oil And Gas Underperforms, Norway's OBX Underperforms... Chart I-11...And The UK's FTSE 100 ##br##Underperforms The corollary is that stock markets which are under-exposed to the structurally underperforming sector will be at a relative advantage. This supports our structural overweighting to the stock markets of Germany, Switzerland, and Denmark, which all have zero exposure to oil and gas and basic resources. Fractal Trading System* Tin’s near-vertical rally is at high risk of correction based on fragility on all three fractal structures: 65-day, 130-day, and 260-day. A good trade is to short tin versus lead, setting a profit target and symmetrical stop-loss at 13 percent. In other trades, the underweights to China and Korea surged, but short AUD/JPY and short copper/gold reached their stop-losses. The rolling 12-month win ratio stands at 57 percent. Chart I-12Tin Vs. Lead 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 ULEZ will be the zone inside London’s North Circular and South Circular Roads. Fractal Trading System Cyclical Recommendations Structural Recommendations Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Euro Area Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Europe Ex Euro Area Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Asia Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields - Other Developed Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
In an Insight late last week, we mentioned our rule of thumb that stocks cannot stomach more than 100-125bps tightening via a selloff in the 10-year US Treasury bond within a year. Applying this rule to the present-day suggests that equities will become turbulent should the 10-year US Treasury yield surpass 1.55% by March, 2.05% by June, and 1.75% by August. Today, we provide more color on this 100-125bps rule by looking at historical SPX drawdowns once yields sprint higher (please see chart on the next page). While the exact timing and the size of the drawdown varies from episode to episode, it is generally consistent with a roughly 10% pullback in the S&P 500 albeit with a 1-2 month lag following the trigger in our rule. We chose to examine data from 2009 onward thus only covering the QE era, which would increase the applicability of our analysis. Speaking of applicability, the 2009-2011 iterations provide the closest parallels as to what will likely take root this cycle as those iterations occurred in a post recessionary environment, which is similar to today. (We have drawn a number of parallels between circa 2010 and today in previous Insights, please see here, here and here). The 2009-2011 period also best aligns with the main reason for having this rule of thumb in the first place: to gauge the risk of interest rates undermining the market by weighing on the forward multiple component of price and/or via an economic slowdown because of tightening in monetary conditions. Before we conclude, a quick note on the taper tantrum and the 2016 iterations. During those periods the S&P 500 actually fell at the same time as yields rose (not after the rule was triggered), so technically we should not have counted that as a valid iteration on our chart. Bottom Line: Were the 10-year US Treasury yield to surpass 1.55% by March, 2.05% by June, and 1.75% by August, then the equity market will likely suffer a pullback especially given the absence of a valuation cushion.
The Fed has telegraphed that they will not be backing down from QE and their ZIRP policy. The FOMC is not even thinking about thinking about tapering asset purchases despite a looming inflation spike in the coming months due to base effects that they vehemently deem transitory. Importantly, Charts 1 & 2 show that both the ISM’s manufacturing prices paid index and a sideways move in retail gasoline prices predict a surge in headline CPI in the April/May time frame as we first showed in a recent Special Report. Tack on a plethora of anecdotes regarding shortages and price hikes in a slew of industries and an inflationary spurt is already here. This week’s retail sales report also caused a jump in the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow forecast for Q1 near double digit real GDP growth. More blow out output quarters are in the offing courtesy of the inoculation of the population and reopening of the economy and persistent government largesse. Thus, trust in the Fed’s ultra dovishness represents the biggest equity market risk in the coming months and there are high odds that the bond market will really test the Fed’s resolve. Chart 1 Chart 2 Our sense is that the Fed will initially ignore the spike in inflation at least until the summer, thus refraining from removing the proverbial “punch bowl”. However, if the market detects any signs of a “less dovish” Fed, especially if high inflation prints persist for whatever reason, risk premia will get repriced a lot higher. Finally, staying on the topic of interest rates, we have a long-held rule of thumb that stocks cannot stomach more than 100-125bps tightening via a selloff in the 10-year US Treasury bond on a year-over-year basis. In other words, were the 10-year US Treasury yield to surpass 1.55% by March, 2.05% by June, and 1.75% by August, then the equity market will likely suffer a pullback especially given the absence of a valuation cushion. Bottom Line: A marginally less dovish Fed represents a key risk for the broad equity market as inflation rears its ugly head in the coming months.