Sectors
We recommend investors monetize gains in the hedge we first recommended on December 7, 2020 in the form of VIX June futures, for a gain of 19% since inception, assuming conservatively that no leverage was used in executing this hedge. While the GME/Wallstreetbets saga has yet to fully play out, three reasons underpin our decision. First, this appears to be an equity only event as both USDJPY and USDCHF foreign exchange pairs went up last Wednesday and Friday. In a traditional “risk off” phase, the yen and the franc would spike versus the greenback not selloff. Second, during periods of active Fed QE the broad equity market has never fallen more than 10% from respective peaks. Using the Sunday night low for ES futures results in a 5.3% peak to trough fall for the broad market, well in the range of previous active Fed QE pullbacks. Finally, the spot VIX has jumped from 21 to a recent peak of 38, likely reflecting a lot of negative news. Spot VIX with a current (as we went to press) 33 handle implies that in the next 30 days the S&P 500 will either fall or rise by roughly 10% and vault to all-time highs or sink back to 3400. While the jury is still out on how this short squeeze phase will play out, a steeply inverted vol curve last week also signaled that the worst is likely behind us (see chart). Bottom Line: Crystalize 19% gains since inception in the VIX futures hedge, but stay vigilant.
In last week’s US Sector Insight we showed how TSLA’s inclusion in the S&P 500 pushed consumer discretionary 5-year forward EPS growth into the stratosphere. We then dove deeper into this GICS1 sectors in this Monday’s Strategy Report and downgraded the S&P automobiles & components index to underweight. On the profit front, a wide gap has opened between relative share prices and relative forward EPS, which suggests that high-flying auto stocks will soon stop defying gravity (Chart 1). At the same time, technicals are also waving a red flag: the S&P autos & components relative annualized 13-week rate of change clocked in at over 250%/annum, steeply diverging from relative net EPS revisions (Chart 2). Chart 1Shy Away From Cult Stocks Chart 2Shy Away From Cult Stocks Given that auto manufacturing is a cutthroat business with razor thin margins and that other Japanese, German and Chinese BEV manufacturers are entering the scene (for example VW Group outsold TSLA last year by a factor of over 3-to-1 in Norway, which is the most advanced BEV market), we doubt that prices will sustain their divergence from profits for much longer. Bottom Line: We trimmed the S&P automobiles & components index to underweight. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AUCO – TSLA, GM, F, APTV, BWA.
Neutral We have been on the right side of the underweight utilities position for the better part of the past two years, but now that the easy money has been made, we are compelled to book handsome gains of 14.8% for the portfolio since inception and move to the sidelines. Extreme euphoria has taken over in the overall equity space and while the vaccine rollout news is a big positive, we doubt the ISM manufacturing survey reading can rise significantly from the current historically stretched level (ISM survey shown inverted, top panel). Similarly, junk yields are at all-time lows confirming that investor complacency is sky-high, and the USD very oversold with positioning stretched to the short dollars side. Any hiccups would cause all three of these macro indicators to reverse course abruptly, which would boost relative utilities share prices (middle & bottom panels). Bottom Line: We booked gains of 14.8% since inception in the S&P utilities sector and upgraded it from underweight to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5UTIL – NEE, D, DUK, SO, AEP, EXC, XEL, ES, SRE, WEC, AWK, PEG, ED, DTE, AEE, EIX, ETR, PPL, CMS, FE, AES, LNT, ATO, EVRG, CNP, NI, NRG, PNW. For more details, please refer to this Monday’s Strategy Report.
As the economy is transitioning from liquidity to growth, the oil-to-gold price ratio has caught our attention again this year. As a reminder, last year we successfully traded this high-octane pair using the S&P oil & gas exploration & production (O&G E&P) index on the long side and the global gold miners index on the short side. We pocketed gains of 10% in early May of 2020, only to reinstate the trade again and to scoop a further 32% in gains. This year, the latest ISM manufacturing survey release painted a bright picture for this intra-commodity price ratio once again (see chart), and while we are not reinstituting the pair trade just yet, it is now flashing on our radar screen; we are patient and await a better entry point. Reopening of the economy and related energy demand recovery will underpin oil prices and producers going forward, at the same time as rising real yields will weigh on the shiny metal and gold mining stocks. Bottom Line: Put a stop buy on long S&P O&G E&P/short global gold miners via the XOP/GDX exchange traded funds at a ratio of 1.2.
In the January 19th Special Report we instituted a long S&P REITs / short S&P homebuilders pair trade with a 10% stop loss. Yesterday, our stop was triggered and we are obeying it and closing this pair trade. Among other reasons, one of the macro drivers that compelled us to put this pair trade on was the 10-year US Treasury yield: historically the correlation between the relative share price ratio and interest rates would snap positive especially following a recession. Hence, a pullback in yields was also a key risk we highlighted for this pair trade. The 10-year US Treasury yield peaked near 1.19% and has continued to correct breaking below 1.04%, which at the margin boosts the allure of homebuilding stocks and consequently put our pair trade offside. While the original reasoning for putting this pair trade on remains intact, we refrain from fighting the trend and opt to move to the sidelines for the time being. We will be on the lookout for a better-timed entry point in the near future. Bottom Line: Obey the trailing stop and close the long S&P REITs / short S&P homebuilders pair trade for a loss of 10%.
Highlights Portfolio Strategy Speculative fervor dominates trading in the S&P auto & components group, but soaring long-term profit projections, lofty valuations, overbought technicals, and a looming German/Japanese/Chinese BEV competitive attack on TSLA’s BEV home turf, all but guarantee some cooling off in the recent exuberance in this GICS2 industry group, and compel us to downgrade exposure to underweight. This move also pushes the S&P consumer discretionary sector to a below benchmark allocation, today. A firming operating backdrop, a stealthy turn in select macro data, extreme sell-side pessimism, bombed out technicals and compelling valuations all signal that it no longer pays to be bearish the S&P utilities sector. Upgrade to neutral. Recent Changes Downgrade the S&P automobiles & components index to underweight, today. This move also pushes the S&P consumer discretionary sector to a below benchmark allocation, today. Upgrade the S&P utilities sector to neutral today, locking in gains of 14.8% since inception. Last Wednesday our rolling stop on the long “Back To Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade got triggered and we booked gains of 21.5% since the September 8 inception. Table 1 Feature The SPX cheered Joe Biden’s inauguration and vaulted to fresh all-time highs last week. It is now at spitting distance from our 4,000 target, a mere 3.8% higher. While loose fiscal and easy monetary policies have staying power and will remain largely intact in 2021, their efficacy is dwindling. Crudely put, it would take additional extra-ordinary larger amounts of stimuli to move the needle, as all the good news and then some, is already reflected in fully valued stocks. Financial conditions are the easiest on record, as we highlighted recently, and investor complacency reigns supreme given the 0.34 print in the equity put/call ratio (Chart 1). Chart 1Complacency Reigns In the near-term, something’s got to give. Importantly, a rising number of indicators we track are flashing red. Not only is there a plethora of anecdotes that the newly minted stock traders using Robinhood are chasing story stocks armed with freshly-written stimulus checks, but margin debt is also exploding (Chart 2). Granted, the latter is a coincident indicator, nevertheless the stampede into stocks via tapping margin accounts is near previous cyclical zeniths: the annualized 13-week rate of change of margin debt uptake surpassed 100%/annum, a move last seen in 2007/2008 and 1999/2000 (Chart 2). Correcting margin debt for GDP and total stock market capitalization for the size of the US economy (Buffett Indicator) is revealing. Both measures are at an extreme using data going back to the 1970s, making the equity market susceptible to disappointment (Chart 3). Buyer exhaustion will come sooner rather than later, and such a dearth of buyers will cause at least an air pocket in stocks. Chart 2Maxed Out On Debt? Chart 3Off The Charts Moreover, there is an element of pre-GFC-type excesses, but now investors are speculating with equities instead of housing. Back then, NINJA loans, ARM loans and subprime loans in general were sustaining the house of cards as long as the price of the underlying asset kept on rising. As soon as prices crested and moved sideways to lower, debt deflation hit real estate speculators hard, especially ones that owned multiple homes. Currently, anecdotes of homeowners speculating on the stock market via Mortgage Equity Withdrawals (Greenspan-Kennedy MEW)1 are also mushrooming. In other words, many retail investors are tapping into their home equity and money saved from ultra-cheap re-financings and redeploying it into stocks. As of Q3/2020 MEW is running at the highest level since the GFC at $300bn or roughly 2% of disposable income; keep in mind that the latter has also gotten a COVID-19 fiscal boost to the order of $1.2tn, which makes the galloping MEW even more remarkable (Chart 4). Chart 4Even MEW Is Spiking While MEW is nowhere near its 2007/2008 peak, surely some of it is leaking into equities, beyond PCE, further fueling the recent stock market exuberance. Another indicator that has sprang to life of late is our Equity Capitulation Index. Back in March we used this indicator from a contrary perspective when we recommended investors go long equities on a cyclical basis (reason #16 to start buying equities). Subsequently we have remained cyclically exposed, but we cannot neglect the negative signal this indicator is now emitting: it has clawed back all the losses since March and is now at a level that has marked previous near-term tops, and at an eerily similar level as during the 2010 SPX peak (second panel, Chart 5). Further on the sentiment front, bulls are abundant, but bears have gone extinct: according to Investors Intelligence the bull/bear ratio is closing in on 4, an historically elevated ratio (Chart 6). Chart 5Contrary Alert: Bears Capitulated? Chart 6Extreme Sentiment Reading Netting it all out, speculative fervor has taken over the equity markets and at least a healthy near-term breather is warranted in order to consolidate recent impressive gains. We remain cautious on the short-term prospects of the broad equity market and continue to recommend investors go long a $390/$410 call spread on the SPY exchange traded fund financed by a short $340 put on the SPY for either March or June option expiries. This week, we downgrade a consumer goods index to underweight that is at the epicenter of the recent equity market bubble talk. This change also pushes the S&P consumer discretionary index to a below benchmark allocation. Further, we trigger our upgrade alert on a niche defensive sector monetizing sizable gains for the portfolio. Downgrade Autos & Components To Underweight We recommend investors shy away from the S&P automobiles & components GICS2 industry group, and today we downgrade it to an underweight stance. Before analyzing this group that has an 80%+ weight in TSLA in more detail, a couple of bubble-related observations are in order. The top panel of Chart 7 shows the google trends search term ‘stock market bubble’ as a time series, and it has hit all-time highs since the 2004 start in this data search query. Importantly, linking this to the SPX is instructive. Every time these search results pick up steam, so does S&P 500 momentum until it cracks. Assuming a sideways move from here onward on the S&P until the spring, it will boost year-over-year momentum to a peak over the 50%/annum mark (bottom panel, Chart 7). Using weekly data, the SPX has only managed such a feat three other times since WWlI, in 1983, in 1998 and in 2010 (as a reminder we drew SPX parallels to 1998 and 2010 earlier this month). True, this does not prove that the SPX is in a bubble per se, however it does highlight that it is overstretched and at risk of a snapback. While everyone was preoccupied with the effect TSLA’s SPX inclusion would have on the index’s 12-month forward P/E, the real change crept up in the long-term EPS growth expectations. This story stock caused the S&P 500’s five-year profit growth expectation to skyrocket from 12% to 21% overnight (top panel, Chart 8) and pushed down the S&P 500 forward P/E/G ratio to near par (not shown). Chart 7Bubble Talk Mushrooming Chart 8"It's too good for true, honey, it's too good for true" (Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1884), Mark Twain. Back in late-1999, YHOO’s SPX inclusion also caused a bump in this metric, but it paled in comparison to TSLA’s current dominance. In other words, nine percentage points of growth are attributed to a single stock or 43% of the SPX EPS growth is tied to the fortunes of TSLA. We highly doubt this will occur as analysts have been upgrading profit estimates and price targets for TSLA hand over fist over the past few months, with some using DCFs out to 2040 in order to back up their forecasts. Drilling deeper beneath the surface into the consumer discretionary sector is revealing. TSLA’s inclusion pushed the sector’s 5-year forward profit growth estimates to 83% (bottom panel, Chart 8). To put this in perspective it translates into consumer discretionary profits increasing 20 fold in the next 5 years; no, this is not a typo. Assuming that stock prices follow profits as it typically transpires, then prices will have to rise by a similar amount. Again, our sense is that this is highly unlikely. In comparison, AMZN’s graduation to the SPX in late-2005 barely budged this profit growth metric for the GICS1 sector as tech stocks were still licking their wounds from the dotcom bubble burst. One level lower into GICS2 territory and circling back to S&P auto & components, data series go fully parabolic, to a degree not seen even during the dotcom bubble era. The same aforementioned long-term growth rate zooms to over 300% for the S&P automobiles & components index compared with the broad market (Chart 9). Turning over to relative revenue expectations for the coming 12 months that data point surges close to 15% (middle panel, Chart 9). With regard to valuations, relative forward P/E, relative P/S and P/B are all in the stratosphere, warning that there is no valuation cushion to fall back on in case of an earnings mishap (Chart 10). Chart 9Dizzying… Chart 10...Heights Importantly, on the profit front, a wide gap has opened between relative share prices and relative forward EPS, which suggests that high-flying auto stocks will soon stop defying gravity (Chart 11). Technicals are also waving a red flag: the S&P autos & components relative annualized 13-week rate of change clocked in at over 250%/annum, steeply diverging from relative net EPS revisions (Chart 12). Chart 11Stocks Should Follow Profits Chart 12Cult Stock… Using the datastream index equivalent to the S&P automobiles & components (this data provider had included TSLA prior to the S&P’s inclusion in the S&P 500) reveals that this relative share price ratio is on a tear and warns investors that the S&P automobiles & components index is not as depressed as it first appears to the naked eye (Chart 13). Chart 13...Effect Looking at the single stock level, TSLA exemplifies the mania of the 2020s (bottom panel, Chart 14). This story stock has been moving in lockstep with M1 money supply. Such a breakneck pace of appreciation is clearly unsustainable (Chart 15). Chart 14TSLA Is A Mania Chart 15Spurious? Doubt It Finally, comparing TSLA to its global peers is also mind boggling. TSLA is worth a couple hundred billion US dollars more than all of the other global auto stocks put together (top panel, Chart 14)! Auto manufacturing is a cutthroat business with razor thin margins. Thus, we doubt that the German and Japanese (and lately even Chinese BEV makers) auto makers are not going to make inroads into TSLA’s BEV home turf. In Norway, the most advanced BEV market in the world, VW Group outsold TSLA last year by a factor of over 3-to-1. In sum, speculative fervor dominates trading in the S&P auto & components group, but soaring long-term profit projections, lofty valuations, overbought technicals, and a looming German/Japanese/Chinese BEV competitive attack on TSLA’s BEV home turf all but guarantee some cooling off in the recent exuberance in this GICS2 industry group. Bottom Line: Trim the S&P automobiles & components index to underweight today. This move also pushes the S&P consumer discretionary sector to a below benchmark allocation. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5AUCO – TSLA, GM, F, APTV, BWA. Act On The Utilities Upgrade Alert, Lock In Gains And Lift Exposure To Neutral We have been on the right side of the underweight utilities position for the better part of the past two years, but now that the easy money has been made we are compelled to book handsome gains of 14.8% for the portfolio since inception and move to the sidelines. The bearish story is well known on utilities and avoiding them is now a consensus trade. Chart 16 shows that when the economy is in expansion mode, it pays to minimize utilities exposure. The pendulum always swings the opposite direction and when the cycle matures, investors seek the safe haven stable cash flow status of this niche defensive sector. Extreme euphoria has taken over in the overall equity space and while the vaccine rollout news is a big positive, we doubt the ISM manufacturing survey reading can rise significantly from the current historically stretched level (ISM survey shown inverted, top panel, Chart 16). Similarly, junk yields are at all-time lows confirming that investor complacency is sky-high, and the USD very oversold with positioning stretched to the short dollars side. Any hiccups would cause all three of these macro indicators to reverse course abruptly, which would boost relative utilities share prices (Chart 16). Already, the CITI economic surprise index is sinking like a stone, equity market vol refuses to fall below 20, and the gap between the 10-year US Treasury (UST) yield and relative share prices remains historically wide, leaving ample room for utilities to catch up to the year-over-year drubbing in yields (yields shown inverted, top panel, Chart 17). In fact, were the broad equity market to correct as we expect in the near-term, there are high odds that the 10-year UST yield would fall, further boosting the allure of high yielding utilities. Chart 16Bearish Story Is Well Known Chart 17It No Longer Pays To Avoid Utilities On the operating front, nat gas prices have stopped hemorrhaging and as this least dirty fossil fuel gains broader investor acceptance in the new EV/ESG and responsible investing world, there is scope for utilities to reassert some of their lost pricing power. As a reminder, natural gas prices are the marginal price setter for utilities and the recent jump in momentum in the former is encouraging for utilities selling prices (second panel, Chart 18). Chart 18Positive Operating… Chart 19...Backdrop Moreover, industry inventories are whittled down and utilities construction has been receding, throughout last year (inventories shown inverted, top panel, Chart 19). In fact, it is contracting at roughly a 10%/annum pace (construction shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 19). Taken together, it no longer pays to be overly bearish this niche defensive sector. Unsurprisingly, sell-side analysts have thrown in the towel and relative 12-month profit forecasts have plummeted, probing all-time lows near the negative 20% mark (third panel, Chart 18). Analyst pessimism is even more pronounced on the five-year outlook, with relative profit growth collapsing again near the negative 17% mark (bottom panel, Chart 18)! Granted this is a single stock’s effect as we showed in the previous section, with late-December TSLA inclusion to the index pushing the SPX long-term profit growth estimate to nearly 21%. We would lean against such pessimism. Finally, relative technicals and valuations also warn against staying negative on the prospects of the S&P utilities sector (Chart 20). Importantly, our Technical Indicator has fallen to one standard deviation below the historical mean, a level that has marked six countertrend up-moves in the past 25 years (bottom panel, Chart 20). Adding it all up, a firming operating backdrop, a stealthy turn in select macro data, extreme sell-side pessimism, bombed out technicals and compelling valuations all signal that it no longer pays to be bearish the S&P utilities sector. Bottom Line: Execute the upgrade alert and augment the S&P utilities sector to neutral today locking in gains of 14.8% since inception. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5UTIL – NEE, D, DUK, SO, AEP, EXC, XEL, ES, SRE, WEC, AWK, PEG, ED, DTE, AEE, EIX, ETR, PPL, CMS, FE, AES, LNT, ATO, EVRG, CNP, NI, NRG, PNW. Chart 20Unloved And Undervalued Anastasios Avgeriou US Equity Strategist anastasios@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 https://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2007/200720/200720pap.pdf Current Recommendations Current Trades Strategic (10-Year) Trade Recommendations Size And Style Views January 12, 2021 Stay neutral small over large caps October 26, 2020 Favor small over large caps July 27, 2020 Overweight cyclicals over defensives (Downgrade Alert) June 11, 2018 Long the BCA Millennial basket The ticker symbols are: (AAPL, AMZN, UBER, HD, LEN, MSFT, NFLX, SPOT, TSLA, V). January 22, 2018 Favor value over growth
In the September 8thStrategy Report we first created the “Back To Work” basket and recommended investors to gain exposure to the reopening trade by initiating a long “Back To Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade. More recently, and in light of the handsome gains that this trade has produced, we instituted a 5% rolling stop in order to protect profits. Yesterday, our stop was triggered compelling us to crystallize 21.5% in gains since inception. Not only did this long/short trade serve its purpose by capturing the economic reopening and vaccine related rollout euphoria, but it also outperformed the market by 700bps as the SPX rose only by 14.5% since September 8th. Bottom Line: Lock in 21.5% gains in the long “Back-To Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade since the early-September inception.
While everyone was preoccupied with the effect TSLA’s SPX inclusion would have on the index’s 12-month forward P/E, the real change crept up in the long-term EPS growth expectations. This story stock caused the S&P 500’s five-year profit growth expectation to skyrocket from 12% to 21% overnight (top panel) and push down the S&P 500 forward P/E/G to near par (not shown). Back in late-1999, YHOO’s SPX inclusion also caused a bump in this metric, but it paled in comparison to TSLA’s current dominance. In other words, nine percentage points of growth are attributed to a single stock or 43% of the SPX EPS growth is tied to the fortunes of TSLA. We highly doubt this will occur as analysts have been upgrading profit estimates and price targets for TSLA hand over fist, with some using DCFs out to 2040 in order to back up their forecasts. Drilling deeper beneath the surface into the consumer discretionary sector is revealing. TSLA’s inclusion pushed the sector’s 5-year forward profit growth estimates to 83% (bottom panel). To put this in perspective it translates into consumer discretionary profits increasing 20 fold in the next 5 years; no, this is not a typo. Assuming that stock prices follow profits as it typically transpires, then prices will have to rise by a similar amount. Again, our sense is that this is highly unlikely. In comparison, AMZN’s graduation to the SPX in late-2005 barely budged this profit growth metric for the GICS1 sector as tech stocks were still licking their wounds from the dotcom bubble burst. Bottom Line: Frothiness is prevalent in certain parts of the equity market and some near-term caution is warranted. We reiterate our recent recommendation that investors deploy fresh capital via going long the $390/$410 SPY call spread and financing it via a $340 put either for March or June expiries. For additional analysis please look forward to this coming Monday’s Strategy Report.
Overweight The S&P movies & entertainment index has been on a tear recently likely due to receding fiscal uncertainty and the normalization process in the economy (third panel). This niche communication services sub-industry is dominated by the two key players DIS and NFLX, and while they are fierce competitors, our view remains that there is plenty demand for the pair of them to remain successful. We first showed the relative P/E/G ratio for this index in mid-December, and highlighted how the ratio was below the historical mean and offered compelling value. True, today it has spiked, but it is nowhere near previous extreme readings (bottom panel). Keep in mind that analysts still remain relatively neutral to slightly pessimistic on the industry’s growth prospects and earnings power (second panel). The fact that relative net earnings revisions are negative, underscores that investors should buy the breakout in relative share prices. Bottom Line: We remain overweight the S&P movies & entertainment index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MOVI – DIS, NFLX, LYV.
Underweight Countercyclical consumer staples stocks served their purpose and supported our portfolio in the front half of 2020. Now that vaccines are here, we added the S&P consumer staples sector to the high-conviction underweight call list. The current macro backdrop underscores that the path of least resistance is lower for relative share prices. Not only is the ISM manufacturing survey on fire, but also, consumer confidence is forming a trough (ISM manufacturing shown inverted, second panel). One of the factors that will drive relative earnings lower is the weaker US dollar. As a reminder, the S&P consumer staples sector derives approximately 32% of its sales from abroad, which is 10 percentage points lower than the S&P 500. As a consequence, on a relative basis, staples stocks benefit much less than the rest of the market from a falling currency (third panel). Our relative macro earnings model does an excellent job in encapsulating all these moving parts and paints a dark profit picture for this GICS1 sector this year (fourth panel). Bottom Line: The S&P consumer staples sector is a high-conviction underweight.