Sectors
Neutral Relative share price gains for the S&P managed health care index are nearly exhausted. In Tuesday's Weekly Report, we acted on our late-March downgrade alert and took profits of 28% versus the S&P 500 since inception. At the margin, macro drivers have turned from a tailwind to a mild headwind. If relative health care spending has troughed for the cycle, then there are high odds that the decade long relative bull market has run its course and a major top is in place (top panel). Industry revenue growth is fraying around the edges. The second panel shows that the hiring plans subcomponent of the NFIB survey of small business owners has sunk recently. The implication is that enrollment may also be nearing a peak. Finally, the recent industry M&A frenzy is ebbing, signaling that the M&A premia may soon come out of relative valuations, which are already trading one standard deviation above the historical mean (bottom panel). Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P managed health care index to neutral. Please see our Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, AET, ANTM, CI, HUM, CNC.
Managed Health Care - Do Not Overstay Your Welcome
Managed Health Care - Do Not Overstay Your Welcome
Highlights The global trade slowdown will intensify, even if U.S. domestic demand remains robust. The large emerging Asian bourses will recouple to the downside with their EM peers. Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. In Chile, receive 3-year swap rates. Continue to overweight stocks relative to the EM benchmark. Short the Colombian peso versus the Russia ruble. Stay neutral on Colombian equities and local bonds but overweight sovereign credit within their respective EM universes. Feature Performance of large equity markets in north Asia - Korean, Taiwanese and Chinese investable stocks -- has been relatively resilient compared with other EM bourses. Specifically, the EM ex-China, Korea and Taiwan equity index has already dropped 16% in U.S. dollar terms, while the market cap-weighted index of investable Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese stocks is down only 8% from its peak in late January.1 These three markets account for 60% of the MSCI EM stock index. A pertinent question is whether these North Asian markets will de-couple from or re-couple with the rest of EM. Our bias is that they will re-couple to the downside. Global equity portfolios should continue to underweight Asian stocks versus the DM bourses in general, and the S&P 500 in particular. That said, dedicated EM equity portfolios should overweight Korea and Taiwan and maintain a neutral stance on China and Hong Kong relative to the EM and Asian equity benchmarks. The Global Trade Slowdown Will Intensify Emerging Asian stock markets are very sensitive to global trade cycles. Slowing global trade is typically negative for them. There is growing evidence that the global trade deceleration will intensify: The German IFO index for business expectations in German manufacturing - a good leading indicator for global trade - is pointing to a further slowdown in global exports (Chart I-1). Chart I-1Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist
Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist
Global Trade Slowdown Will Persist
Export volume growth has already slowed across manufacturing Asia (Chart I-2). The most recent data points for these series are as of April. Asia's booming tech/semiconductor industry is also slowing. Both Taiwan's export orders growth and Singapore's technology PMI new orders-to-inventory ratio have relapsed (Chart I-3). Chart I-2Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward
Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward
Asian Exports Growth: Heading Southward
Chart I-3Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch
Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch
Asian Tech: Feeling The Pinch
One of the causes of weakness in the global semiconductor cycle could be stagnating global auto sales (Chart I-4). The latter are being weighed down by weakness in auto sales in China and the U.S. Cars require a significant amount of semiconductors, and lack of improvement in global auto sales will suppress semiconductor demand. So far, China has not been at the epicenter of investors' concerns, but this will soon change as its growth slowdown intensifies. Credit conditions continue to tighten in China, which entails downside risks to mainland capital spending and consequently imports. China's imports are set to slump considerably, reinforcing the global trade downturn.2 First, China's bank loan approvals have dropped considerably in the past 18 months, suggesting a meaningful slowdown in bank financing and in turn the country's investment expenditures (Chart I-5). Chart I-4Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales
Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales
Global Auto And Semiconductor Sales
Chart I-5China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex
China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex
China: Bank Loan Approval And Capex
Second, not only are bank loan standards tightening but costs of financing are also rising. The share of loans extended above the prime lending rate has risen to a 15-year high (Chart I-6, top panel). This represents marginal tightening. Finally, onshore corporate bond yields as well as offshore U.S. dollar-denominated corporate bond yields have broken to new highs in this cycle (Chart I-6, bottom panels). Mounting borrowing costs and tighter credit standards in China point to further deceleration in credit-sensitive spending such as investment expenditures and property purchases. On the whole, rising interest rates and material currency depreciation in EM ex-China and credit tightening in China will prompt a considerable slump in imports, depressing world trade. EM including Chinese imports account for 30% of global imports, while the U.S. and EU together make up 24% of global imports values. Hence, global trade will disappoint if and as EM and Chinese imports stumble. A final word on the history of de-coupling among EM regions is in order. There have been a few episodes when emerging Asian and Latin American stocks de-coupled: In 1997-'98, the home-grown Asian crisis devastated regional markets, but Latin American stocks continued to rally until mid-1998 - when they plummeted (Chart I-7, top panel). Chart I-6China: Rising Borrowing Costs
China: Rising Borrowing Costs
China: Rising Borrowing Costs
Chart I-7De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America
De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America
De-coupling Between Asia And Latin America
In 2007-'08, emerging Asian equities tumbled along with the S&P 500, but Latin American bourses fared well until the middle of 2008 due to surging commodities/oil prices (Chart I-7, middle panel). Finally, the bottom panel of Chart I-7 illustrates that in early 2015, Asian stocks performed well, supported by the inflating Chinese equity bubble. Meanwhile, Latin American stocks plunged. In all of these episodes, the de-coupling between Asia and Latin America proved to be unsustainable, and the markets that showed initial resilience eventually re-coupled to the downside. Bottom Line: Global trade is set to head southward, even if U.S. demand remains robust. China's growth slump will be instrumental to this global trade slowdown. Consequently, Chinese, Korean and Taiwanese equities will be vulnerable. Heeding To Market Signals Financial markets often move ahead of economic data, and simply tracking data is not always helpful in gauging turning points in business cycles. By the time economic data change course, financial markets would typically have already partially adjusted. Besides, past economic and financial market performance is not a guarantee of future performance. This is why we rely on thematic fundamental analysis and monitor intermediate- and long-term trends in financial markets to navigate through markets. There are presently several important market signals that investors should be heeding to: EM corporate bond yields are surging, which typically foreshadows falling EM share prices (Chart I-8). Meanwhile, there is no robust correlation between EM equities and U.S. bond yields. Chart I-8EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise
EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise
EM Share Prices Always Decline When EM Corporate Bond Yields Rise
The basis: So long as the rise in U.S. bond yields is offset by compressing EM credit spreads, EM corporate bond yields decline and EM share prices rally. But when EM corporate (or sovereign) yields rise, irrespective of whether this is due to rising U.S. Treasury yields or widening EM credit spreads, EM equity prices come under considerable selling pressure. Lately, both EM credit spreads have been widening, offsetting the drop in U.S. bond yields. Hence, a drop in U.S. bond yields is not in and of itself sufficient to halt a decline in EM share prices. So long as EM corporate and sovereign credit spreads are widening by more than the decline in U.S. Treasury yields, EM corporate and sovereign bond yields will rise, heralding lower EM share prices. The ratio of total return (including carry) of six commodities currencies relative to safe-haven currencies3 is breaking below its 200-day moving average after having bounced from this technical support line several times in the past 12 months (Chart I-9). This could be confirming that the bull market in EM risk assets is over, and a bear market is underway. Chinese property stocks listed onshore have broken down, and those trading in Hong Kong seem to be forming a head-and-shoulder pattern (Chart I-10). In the latter case, such a technical formation will likely be followed by a considerable down-leg. Chart I-9An Important Breakdown
bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s1_c9
bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s1_c9
Chart I-10Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable
Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable
Chinese Property Stocks Look Very Vulnerable
Further, China's onshore A-share index has already dropped by 15% from its cyclical peak in late January. Finally, both emerging Asia's relative equity performance against developed markets, as well as the emerging Asian currency index versus the U.S. dollar (ADXY) seem to be rolling over at their long-term moving averages (Chart I-11). The same technical pattern is presenting itself for global energy and mining stocks in absolute terms, and also in the overall Brazilian equity index (Chart I-12). Chart I-11Asian Equities And Currencies Are ##br##At Critical Juncture
Asian Equities And Currencies Are At Critical Juncture
Asian Equities And Currencies Are At Critical Juncture
Chart I-12Commodity Equities And Brazil ##br##Are Facing Technical Resistance
Commodity Equities And Brazil Are Facing Technical Resistance
Commodity Equities And Brazil Are Facing Technical Resistance
The failure of these markets to break above their long-term technical resistance levels may be signalling that their advance since early 2016 has been a cyclical - not structural - bull market, and is likely over. These technical chart profiles so far confirm our fundamental analysis that the EM and commodities rallies since early 2016 did not represent a multi-year secular bull market. If correct, the downside risks to EM including Asian markets are substantial, and selling/shorting them now is not too late. Bottom Line: EM including Asian stocks, currencies and credit markets are at risk of gapping down. Absolute-return investors should trade these markets on the short side. Asset allocators should underweight EM markets relative to DM in general and the U.S. in particular. A complete list of our currency, fixed-income and equity recommendations is available on pages 20-21. An EM Equity Sector Trade: Long Consumer Staples / Short Banks EM consumer staples have massively underperformed banks as well as the overall EM index since January 2016 (Chart I-13). The odds are that their relative performance is about to reverse. Equity investors should consider implementing the following equity pair trade: long consumer staples / short banks: Consumer staples are a low-beta sector because their revenues are less cyclical. As EM growth downshifts, share prices of companies with more stable revenue streams will likely outperform. Bank stocks are vulnerable as local interest rates in many EMs rise in response to the selloff in their respective currencies (Chart I-14). Consumer staples usually outperform banks when local borrowing costs are rising. Chart I-13Go Long EM Consumer Staples / ##br##Short EM Banks
Go Long EM Consumer Staples / Short EM Banks
Go Long EM Consumer Staples / Short EM Banks
Chart I-14EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With##br## EM Local Bond Yields
EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With EM Local Bond Yields
EM Banks Stocks Are Inversely Correlated With EM Local Bond Yields
We expect more currency depreciation in EM, which will exert further upward pressure on local rates, including interbank rates. Further, growth weakness in EM economies typically leads to rising non-performing loan (NPL) provisions. Chart I-15A and Chart I-15B demonstrates that weakening nominal GDP growth (shown inverted on the charts) leads to higher provisioning. Hence, a renewed EM growth slowdown will hurt bank profits. Chart I-15AWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions
Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions
Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions
Chart I-15BWeaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails ##br##Higher NPL Provisions
Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions
Weaker Nominal GDP Growth Entails Higher NPL Provisions
Our assessment is that banks in many EM countries have provisioned less than what is probably necessary following years of a credit boom. Indeed, in the last 12-18 months or so, many banks have even been reducing their NPL provisions to boost profits. Hence, a reversal of these dynamics will undermine banks' earnings. Bottom Line: Market-neutral EM equity portfolios should consider going long consumer staples while shorting banks. This is in addition to our long-term strategy of shorting EM banks versus U.S. banks as well as shorting banks in absolute terms in individual markets such as Brazil, Turkey, Malaysia and small-cap banks in China. Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com 1 These calculations are done using MSCI investible stock indexes in U.S. dollars terms. 2 Please see Emerging Markets Strategy Weekly Report, "The Dollar Rally And China's Imports", dated May 24, 2018, available at ems.bcaresearch.com. 3 Average of cad, aud, nzd, brl, clp & zar total returns (including carry) relative to average of jpy & chf total returns (including carry). Chile: Stay Overweight Equities, Receive Rates 31 May 2018 Chart II-1Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices
Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices
Chilean Equities Relative Performance And Copper Prices
It is often assumed that Chilean financial markets are a play on copper. While this largely holds true for the Chilean peso, it is not always correct regarding its stock market's relative performance to its EM peers. Chile has outperformed in the past amid declining copper prices (Chart II-1). Despite our negative view on copper prices, we are reiterating our overweight allocation to this bourse within an EM equity portfolio. There are convincing signs that growth in the Chilean economy is moving along fine for now (Chart II-2). While weakness in global trade will weigh on the economy, the critical variable that makes Chile stand out from other commodities producers in the EM universe is its ability to cut interest rates amid currency depreciation. Chart II-3 illustrates that interest rates in Chile can and do fall when the peso depreciates. This stands in stark contrast with many others economies in the EM universe. There are a number of factors that suggest inflationary pressures will remain dormant for some time. This will allow the Central Bank of Chile (CBC) to cut rates as and when required. Chart II-2Chile: Economic Conditions
Chile: Economic Conditions
Chile: Economic Conditions
Chart II-3Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates
Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates
Interest Rates In Chile Can Fall When Peso Depreciates
First, the output gap is negative and has been widening, which has historically led to falling core inflation (Chart II-4). Second, a wide range of consumer inflation measures - services and trimmed-mean inflation rates - are very low and remain in a downtrend (Chart II-5). Chart II-4Chile: Output Gap And Inflation
Chile: Output Gap And Inflation
Chile: Output Gap And Inflation
Chart II-5Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling
Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling
Chile: Inflation Is Very Low And Falling
Finally, there are no signs of wage inflation, which is the key driver of genuine inflation. In fact, wage growth is decelerating sharply (Chart II-6). Odds are that this disinflationary rout will go on for longer, given Chile's demographic and labor market dynamics. The country's labor force growth has accelerated and the economy does not seem able to absorb this excess labor supply (Chart II-7). Consistently, our labor surplus proxy - calculated as the number of unemployed looking for a job divided by the number of job vacancies - has surged to all-time highs (Chart II-8). Chart II-6Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak
Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak
Chile: Wage Growth Is Very Weak
Chart II-7Chile: Rising Labor Force
Chile: Rising Labor Force
Chile: Rising Labor Force
Chart II-8Chile: Excessive Labor Supply...
Chile: Excessive Labor Supply...
Chile: Excessive Labor Supply...
Interestingly, this is not happening because of weak employment. Chart II-9 shows that the employment-to-working population ratio is at a record high, while employment growth is robust. This upholds that decent job growth is not sufficient to absorb the expanding supply of labor. All in all, a structural excess supply of labor as well as a cyclical slowdown in global trade and lower copper prices altogether will likely warrant a decline in interest rates in Chile. Consequently, we recommend a new fixed income trade: Receive 3-year swap rates. The recent rise provides a good entry point (Chart II-10). Chart II-9...Despite Robust Employment Growth
...Despite Robust Employment Growth
...Despite Robust Employment Growth
Chart II-10Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates
Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates
Chile: Receive 3-Year Swap Rates
The ability to cut interest rates will mitigate the effect of weaker exports on the economy. We recommend dedicated EM investors maintain an overweight allocation in Chile in their equity, local currency bond and corporate credit portfolios. For absolute return investors, the risk-reward profiles for Chilean stocks and the currency are not attractive. The peso will depreciate considerably, and shorting it versus the U.S. dollar will prove profitable. Consistent with our negative view on copper prices, we have been recommending a short position in copper with a long leg in the Chilean peso. This allows traders to earn some carry while waiting for copper prices to break down. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com Colombia: The Currency Will Be A Release Valve The structural long-term outlook for Colombia is positive, as a combination of pro-market orthodox policies and reform initiatives amid positive tailwinds from demographic should ensure a reasonably high potential GDP growth rate. In the first round of presidential elections held last weekend, the gap between right wing candidate Ivan Duque and left-wing candidate Gustav Petro came out large enough to make a Duque victory highly likely in the second round to be held on June 17. His election would entail a positive backdrop for the reform agenda and business investment over the coming years. Yet despite the positive structural backdrop, Colombia is still facing a major imbalance - excessive reliance on oil in sustaining stable balance of payments (BoP) dynamics. The trade balance deficit - including oil - is $8 billion, while excluding oil it stands at $20 billion, or 7.5% of GDP (Chart III-1). Hence, if oil prices drop materially in the second half of this year - as we expect - Colombia's balance of payments will be strained. Consequently, the currency will come under depreciation pressure. The peso is presently fairly valued as the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs is at its historical mean (Chart III-2). Chart III-1Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil
Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil
Colombia's Achilles' Hill: Trade Balance Excluding Oil
Chart III-2The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued
The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued
The Colombian Peso Is Fairly Valued
The central bank has adopted a "hands-off" approach toward the exchange rate, and is likely to allow the peso to depreciate if the BoP deteriorates. Weak economic conditions will likely prevent it from hiking interest rates to bolster the peso: Even though the central bank has reduced its policy rate by 350 basis points since the end of 2016, lending rates remain restrictive when compared with the nominal GDP growth rate (Chart III-3, top panel). Fiscal policy has been tight, with government expenditures subdued and the primary deficit narrowing (Chart III-3, bottom panel). This is unlikely to change for now if conservative candidate, Ivan Duque, wins the election. Consumer and business demand has failed to pick up, and shows little sign of recovery (Chart III-4). Non-performing loans (NPL) continue to rise, forcing banks to raise their NPL provisioning (Chart III-5). Weak nominal GDP growth suggests provisions may rise further. Chart III-3Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery
Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery
Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery
Chart III-4Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery
Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery
Colombia: Little Sign Of Recovery
Chart III-5Colombian Banks: NPL And NPL Provision Continue Rising
bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s3_c5
bca.ems_wr_2018_05_31_s3_c5
Overall, banks' balance sheets remain impaired, hampering their ability to extend loans. Investment Recommendations Despite a favorable structural outlook, Colombia's cyclical growth and financial market outlooks remain poor. Chances are that the peso will come under selling pressure as the external environment deteriorates - i.e., the currency will act as a release valve. We recommend staying neutral on Colombian stocks and local bonds relative to their EM peers, and to overweight Colombian sovereign credit within an EM credit portfolio. The basis is that sound and tight fiscal policies and a continuation of supply side reforms will benefit this credit market. To capitalize on potential currency depreciation while hedging for the uncertainty of oil price decline, we recommend shorting the peso against the Russian ruble. Although Colombia's structural outlook is more promising than Russia's, the latter's BoP dynamics is healthier and its cyclical growth outlook is better than Colombia's. Andrija Vesic, Research Analyst AndrijaV@bcaresearch.com Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Highlights The 10-year Italian BTP yield at 4% yield marks a 'line in the sand' at which the current drama could escalate into something considerably worse. The global 6-month credit impulse is now indisputably in a mini-downswing phase. Stay underweight in the classically cyclical sectors: banks, basic materials and industrials. Prefer France's CAC over Italy's MIB and Spain's IBEX. The equity market's range-bound pattern can continue, as long as the line in the sand isn't breached. It is a good time to own a small portfolio of high-quality 30-year government bonds. It was a spectacular week for our fractal trades with four positions hitting their profit targets: long Poland/short Italy; short energy/long basic materials; short Spanish Bonos/long German bunds; and long AUD/NOK. Feature Italian politics have blindsided almost everybody, us included. Few anticipated that the unlikely bedfellows 5S and Lega would try and form a 'government of change'. In March we wrote: "The Italian election result is not an investment game changer. The one exception would be if 5S and Lega joined forces to govern, as it could throw EU integration into reverse. But the likelihood of this unholy alliance seems very low." Even fewer anticipated that Italy's President, Sergio Mattarella, would then scupper this government of change by vetoing the proposed Finance Minister. This has cast a new pall of uncertainty over Italian politics and Italian public support for EU rules and institutions. The 10-Year BTP Yield At 4% Marks A 'Line In The Sand' The market's response has been to fear the worst: shoot first, ask questions later. The danger is that this sets off a negative feedback loop. Higher bond yields weaken Italy's still-fragile banks; which threatens Italy's economic recovery; ahead of a possible new election, this increases the support for parties and policies that push back against EU rules; which further lifts bond yields; and then in a vicious circle until the fear of the worst becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy... Chart of the WeekItalian Banks' Solvency Would Be In Question If The 10-Year BTP Yield Breached 4%
Italian Banks' Solvency Would Be In Question If The 10-Year BTP Yield Breached 4%
Italian Banks' Solvency Would Be In Question If The 10-Year BTP Yield Breached 4%
The Italian BTP versus German bund yield spread is effectively a fear gauge for Italy's future in the euro (Chart I-2). As these fears increase, and Italian bond prices decline, it erodes the value of Italian banks' €350 billion portfolio of BTPs and weakens the banks' balance sheets. Chart I-2The BTP-Bund Yield Spread Is A Fear ##br## Gauge For Italy's Future In The Euro
The BTP-Bund Yield Spread Is A Fear Gauge For Italy's Future In The Euro
The BTP-Bund Yield Spread Is A Fear Gauge For Italy's Future In The Euro
As a rule of thumb, investors start to get nervous about a bank's solvency when equity capital no longer covers net non-performing loans (NPLs). On this rule, the largest Italian banks now have €165 billion of equity capital against €130 billion of net NPLs, implying excess capital of €35 billion (Chart I-3). Chart I-3Italian Banks' Equity Capital Exceeds Net NPLs By Euro 35 Bn
Italian Banks' Equity Capital Exceeds Net NPLs By €35Bn
Italian Banks' Equity Capital Exceeds Net NPLs By €35Bn
It follows that there would be fresh doubts about Italian banks' mark-to-market solvency if their bond valuations sustained a drop of just a tenth from the recent peak. We estimate this equates to the 10-year BTP yield breaching and remaining above 4%.1 Hence, the 10-year BTP yield at 4% marks a 'line in the sand' at which the current drama could escalate into something considerably worse (Chart of the Week). To short-circuit the negative feedback loop, the financial markets would need to sense a discernible shift in Italian support for its populist parties; or an explicit de-escalation in the populist pushback against the EU. The question is: could this happen quickly enough? Global Growth Is In A Mini-Downswing The market's concerns about Italy come at a time when global growth has in any case been losing momentum. This is one development that did not blindside us, and has unfolded exactly as predicted. In January we wrote: "Global growth experiences remarkably consistent - and therefore predictable - 'mini-cycles', with half-cycle lengths averaging 8 months. As the current mini-upswing started in May 2017 we can infer that it is likely to end at some point in early 2018. So one surprise could be that global growth will lose steam in the first half of 2018 rather than in the second half - contrary to what the consensus is expecting." The theory underlying these mini-cycles is an economic model called the Cobweb Theorem.2 When bond yields rise, interest rate sensitive sectors in the economy feel a headwind, but with a delay. Similarly, when bond yields decline, interest rate sensitive sectors feel a tailwind, but again with a delay. The delay occurs because credit demand leads credit supply by several months (Chart I-4). Chart I-4Turning Points In The Bond Yield Lead Turning Points In The Credit Impulse
Turning Points In The Bond Yield Lead Turning Points In The Credit Impulse
Turning Points In The Bond Yield Lead Turning Points In The Credit Impulse
As credit demand leads credit supply, the turning point in the price of credit (the bond yield) always leads the quantity of credit supplied (the credit impulse). The result is a perpetual mini-cycle oscillation in both economic variables. And because the quantity of credit supplied is a marginal driver of economic activity, this also creates mini-cycles in economic activity. These mini-cycles are remarkably regular with half-cycle lengths averaging around eight months, and the regularity creates predictability. Moreover, as most investors are unaware of these cycles, the next turning point is not discounted in financial market prices - providing a compelling investment opportunity for those who do recognise the predictability. The global 6-month credit impulse is now indisputably in a mini-downswing phase, and exactly as predicted in January, the majority of economically sensitive sectors have underperformed. The glaring anomaly is oil, whose supply-side dynamics have dominated price action (Chart I-5). Given oil's major impact on headline inflation, inflation expectations, and on central bank reaction functions, the global bond yield has also disconnected from the mini-cycle - until now. Chart I-5Oil Is The Glaring Anomaly
Oil Is The Glaring Anomaly
Oil Is The Glaring Anomaly
Mini-downswings last six to eight months and the usual release valve is a decline in bond yields. So one concern is that the apparent disconnect between decelerating global activity and slow-to-react bond yields could extend the current mini-downswing phase beyond the summer. How To Invest Right Now From an equity market perspective, the relative performance of the classically cyclical sectors - banks, basic materials and industrials - very closely tracks the phases of the global credit impulse mini-cycle (Chart I-6 and Chart I-7). For example, in all five of the last five mini-downswings, banks have underperformed healthcare, and we are seeing exactly the same in the current mini-cycle. Chart I-6In A Mini-Downswing##br## Banks Underperform
In A Mini-Downswing, Banks Underperform
In A Mini-Downswing, Banks Underperform
Chart I-7In A Mini-Downswing ##br##Basic Materials Underperform
In A Mini-Downswing, Basic Materials Underperform
In A Mini-Downswing, Basic Materials Underperform
For the next few months at least, it is appropriate to stick with underweights in the classically cyclical sectors: banks, basic materials and industrials. This strategy has worked extremely well since we initiated it at the start of the year, and it should continue to do so. Sector strategy necessarily impacts stock market allocation. Our core philosophy of investment reductionism teaches us that for most stock markets, the sector (and dominant company) skews swamp any effect that comes from the domestic economy. The defining skew for Italy's MIB and Spain's IBEX is their large overweighting to banks (Chart I-8 and Chart I-9). Irrespective of the political uncertainties, our sector allocation establishes our near-term caution on these two markets. Prefer France's CAC over Italy's MIB and Spain's IBEX. Chart I-8Italy's MIB = Long Banks
Italy's MIB = Long Banks
Italy's MIB = Long Banks
Chart I-9Spain's IBEX = Long Banks
Spain's IBEX = Long Banks
Spain's IBEX = Long Banks
For bonds, the implication is that yields can move only slightly higher before stronger headwinds to risk-assets and/or the global economy provide a natural cap and a tradeable reversal in yields. Hence, it is a good time to own a portfolio of high-quality 30-year government bonds. Regarding currencies, the recent developments in Italy have hurt our 50:50 combined long position in EUR/USD and SEK/USD; but this has been countered by gains in our short position in EUR/JPY. We have no tactical conviction on any of these crosses, but we will maintain this medium term currency portfolio unless the Italian 10-year BTP yield breaches the 4% line in the sand. Finally, the hardest call to make is on the direction of equity market. This is because a mini-downswing in global growth creates a headwind to earnings expectations; conversely, if bond yields are capped, this will provide some support to equity market valuations. On balance, this suggests that the year-to-date pattern of a range-bound equity market is set to continue. The caveat is that if Italy's line in the sand is breached, it would warrant a substantial de-risking. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 Assuming that the average maturity of Italian banks' BTPs is around 5 years. 2 Please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report 'The Cobweb Theory And Market Cycles' published on January 11 2018 and available at eis.bcaresearch.com. Fractal Trading Model* It was a spectacular week for our fractal trades with four positions hitting their profit targets: long Poland/short Italy; short energy/long basic materials; short Spanish Bonos/long German bunds; and long AUD/NOK. This week, we note that the 65-day fractal dimension of the Polish zloty / U.S. dollar (or inverse) is approaching its lower limit. Go long PLN/USD with a profit target of 3.5% and symmetrical stop-loss. For any investment, excessive trend following and groupthink can reach a natural point of instability, at which point the established trend is highly likely to break down with or without an external catalyst. An early warning sign is the investment's fractal dimension approaching its natural lower bound. Encouragingly, this trigger has consistently identified countertrend moves of various magnitudes across all asset classes. Chart I-10
Long PLN/USD
Long PLN/USD
The post-June 9, 2016 fractal trading model rules are: When the fractal dimension approaches the lower limit after an investment has been in an established trend it is a potential trigger for a liquidity-triggered trend reversal. Therefore, open a countertrend position. The profit target is a one-third reversal of the preceding 13-week move. Apply a symmetrical stop-loss. Close the position at the profit target or stop-loss. Otherwise close the position after 13 weeks. Use the position size multiple to control risk. The position size will be smaller for more risky positions. * For more details please see the European Investment Strategy Special Report "Fractals, Liquidity & A Trading Model," dated December 11, 2014, available at eis.bcaresearch.com Fractal Trading Model Recommendations Equities Bond & Interest Rates Currency & Other Positions Closed Fractal Trades Trades Closed Trades Asset Performance Currency & Bond Equity Sector Country Equity Indicators Bond Yields Chart II-1Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-2Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-3Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Chart II-4Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Indicators To Watch - Bond Yields
Interest Rate Chart II-5Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-6Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-7Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Chart II-8Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Indicators To Watch - Interest Rate Expectations
Neutral In yesterday's Weekly Report, we pulled the trigger on our upgrade watch for the niche S&P homebuilding index,1 monetizing our 24% relative gains since the late-November 2017 inception. Three main reasons underpin our upgrade to a benchmark allocation: 1. Bond market selloff taking a breather, 2. Housing fundamentals remain robust and 3. Compelling valuations reflect most, if not all, of the bad news. With respect to the first of these, BCA's U.S. Bond Strategists believe that the likelihood of a near-term pullback in U.S. Treasury yields has increased. This should support continued gains in the MBA's mortgage purchase index, which has climbed to a fresh cycle high (top panel). Housing fundamentals have proven resilient; new home prices have exited the deflation zone versus existing home prices which is significant for the relative profitability of homebuilding stocks (second panel). Finally, relative valuations have undershot the historical mean on a price-to-sales basis with homebuilders trading at a 50% discount to the broad market (bottom panel). Bottom Line: We are acting on our upgrade alert in the S&P homebuilding index and lifting exposure to neutral. Please see this week's Weekly Report for more details. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME - DHI, LEN, PHM.
Enough Is Enough - Upgrade Homebuilders To Neutral
Enough Is Enough - Upgrade Homebuilders To Neutral
Dear Clients, Please note that next week's report will be a joint effort with our geopolitical team, focused on North Korea. The report will be sent to you two days later than usual, on Friday June 8. Best regards, Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports Highlights Most episodes of negative relative Chinese equity performance this year have been driven by global stock market selloffs or related to the trade dispute with the U.S. Since Chinese ex-tech stocks have continued to outperform their global peers during this period, we recommend against downgrading China for now, barring hard evidence of a pernicious global slowdown or that severe protectionist action from the U.S. will indeed occur. Our list of charts to watch over the coming months highlights, among several other important points, that monetary conditions are not overly restrictive and that financial conditions are not tightening sharply. This is in spite of a recent clustering in corporate bond defaults that has concerned some investors. Besides broad-based stimulus in response to an impactful trade shock, a sustained pickup in housing construction remains the most plausible catalyst for an acceleration in domestic demand. For now tepid sales volume casts doubt on this scenario, but investors should continue to watch Chinese housing market dynamics closely. Feature There have been several developments affecting Chinese and global stock markets over the past two weeks. On the trade front, Secretary Mnuchin's statement on May 20 that the U.S. would be "putting the trade war" with China on hold was greeted by a material pushback from Congressional Republicans, particularly the administration's plan to ease previously announced sanctions on ZTE Group. The administration's trade rhetoric has since become more hawkish, as evidenced by yesterday's statement from the White House that referenced specific dates for the imposition of tariffs and the announcement of new restrictions on Chinese investment. This uptick in tough language sets the scene for Secretary Ross' Beijing visit this weekend to continue negotiations. More recently, a political crisis in Italy has caused euro area periphery bond yields to rise sharply, roiling global financial markets. The Italian President's rejection of Paolo Savona as proposed finance minister by the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) and Euroskeptic Lega has led to the installation of a caretaker government until the fall, when new elections are set to take place. The sharp tightening in financial conditions for Italy and Spain over the past week has exacerbated concerns about a potential growth slowdown in Europe, and has fed a relative selloff in emerging market equities that began in late-March. Despite the recent turmoil, our recommendation to investors is to avoid making any major changes to their allocation to Chinese ex-tech stocks within a global portfolio. Unless presented with hard evidence that the slowdown in the global economy is more than a simple deceleration from an above-trend pace, or that protectionist action from the U.S. will occur in a severe fashion, Table 1 suggests that investors should stay overweight Chinese ex-tech stocks (with a short leash). The table highlights that most episodes of negative relative Chinese ex-stock performance since the beginning of the year been driven by global stock market selloffs or related to the trade dispute with the U.S., despite the ongoing slowdown in China's industrial sector that we have repeatedly flagged. Since Chinese ex-tech stocks have continued to outperform their global peers during this period, our interpretation is that investors are well aware of the deceleration in China's economy, but do not yet regard it as a material threat to ex-tech equity prices. Table 1YTD Weakness In Chinese Stock Prices Has Been Driven By Global Events
11 Charts To Watch
11 Charts To Watch
Clearly, however, this assessment on the part of global investors can change, underscoring that the situation in China merits continual re-assessment. With the goal of providing investors with a toolkit to continually monitor the state of the Chinese economy and the resulting implications for related financial asset prices, this week's report presents a list of 11 charts "to watch" across five categories of analysis. In our view these charts span key potential inflection points for the economic and profit outlook, and will serve as an important basis for us to update our view on China over the months ahead. Monetary & Fiscal Policy Chart 1: The Policy Rate Versus Borrowing Rates Chart 1Borrowing/Policy Rate Divergence Should Not Last,##br## But Is Worth Monitoring
Borrowing/Policy Rate Divergence Should Not Last, But Is Worth Monitoring
Borrowing/Policy Rate Divergence Should Not Last, But Is Worth Monitoring
An interesting divergence has occurred lately between the 3-month interbank repo rate (currently the de-facto policy rate) and both corporate bond yields and the average lending rate. While the repo rate fell non-trivially after it became apparent in late-March that the PBOC would extend the deadline for the implementation of new regulatory standards for asset management products, corporate bond yields have recently risen sharply and China's weighted-average lending rate ticked higher in Q1. As we highlighted in last week's Special Report, the recent clustering of corporate bond defaults does not (for now) appear to be a source of systemic risk. First, by our estimation, the recent defaults cited above account for only 0.09% of outstanding corporate bonds. Second, the latest PBOC monetary report changed the tone from emphasizing "deleveraging" to "stabilizing leverage and restructuring", which shows that regulators are as concerned about the stability of the economy as they are about reducing excessive debts. But the possibility remains that the ongoing crackdown on China's shadow banking sector will cause some degree of persistence in the recent divergence between the interbank market and actual borrowing rates, implying that investors should continue to watch Chart 1 over the months for signs of materially tighter financial conditions. Chart 2: The Correlation Between Sovereign Risk And The Repo Rate We noted in a February Special Report that investors could use the rolling 1-year correlation between the 3-month interbank repo rate and the relative sovereign CDS spread between China and Germany as a gauge of whether Chinese monetary policy has become too restrictive for its economy.1 Despite the fact that actual sovereign credit risk in China is extremely low, Chart 2 shows that the relative CDS spread has acted as a good bellwether for growth conditions in the Chinese economy. It shows that the correlation between this spread and the 3-month interbank repo rate was initially positive in late-2016 (representing concern on the part of investors that monetary policy is restrictive), but has since come back down into negative territory. Interestingly, the correlation was consistently positive from mid-2011 to mid-2014, when average lending rates averaged 7% or higher and the benchmark lending rate exceeded the IMF's Taylor Rule estimate by about 1%.2 For now the correlation remains negative (as it was when we published our February report), meaning that it currently supports our earlier conclusion that monetary conditions are not overly restrictive and that financial conditions more generally are not tightening sharply (despite the recent rise in corporate bond yields). Chart 2No Sign Yet That Monetary Policy Is Overly Restrictive
No Sign Yet That Monetary Policy Is Overly Restrictive
No Sign Yet That Monetary Policy Is Overly Restrictive
Chart 3Watch For Signs Of Fiscal Stimulus
Watch For Signs Of Fiscal Stimulus
Watch For Signs Of Fiscal Stimulus
Chart 3: The Fiscal Spending Impulse Chart 3 presents the Chinese government's budgetary expenditure as an "impulse", calculated as expenditure over the past year as a percent of nominal GDP. Panel 2 shows the year-over-year change in the impulse. When compared with a similar measure for private sector credit, cyclical fluctuations in China's government spending impulse are relatively small. For this reason, BCA's China Investment Strategy service has not strongly emphasized fiscal spending as a major driver of China's business cycle. However, we also noted in a recent report that fiscal stimulus stands out as one of the "least bad" options available to policymakers to combat a negative export shock from U.S. protectionism, were one to occur.3 The potential for broader stimulus from Chinese authorities in response to an impactful trade shock raises the interesting possibility of another economic mini cycle in China, since the economy accelerated meaningfully in response to the last episode of material fiscal & monetary easing. As such, investors should closely watch over the coming months for signs that fiscal spending is accelerating, particularly if combined with potential signs of easing monetary policy. External Demand Chart 4: Global Demand And Chinese Export Growth Chart 4For Now, Resilient Exports ##br##Are Supporting China's Economy
For Now, Resilient Exports Are Supporting China's Economy
For Now, Resilient Exports Are Supporting China's Economy
We have noted in several recent reports that a resilient export sector remains the most favorable pillar of Chinese growth. Besides the clear risk to Chinese trade from U.S. protectionism, two other factors have the potential to negatively impact the trend in export growth. The first (and most important) of these risks is a reduction in global demand, which some investors have recently been concerned about given the decline in global manufacturing PMIs. However, Chart 4 highlights that our global PMI diffusion indicator has done an excellent job of leading the global PMI over the past few years, and has barely registered a decline over the past few months. From our perspective, the odds are good that the recent deceleration in the PMI has been caused by sudden caution (even in developed countries) over the Trump administration's protectionist actions, and does not reflect a material or long-lasting slowdown in the global economy. But we will be closely watching the PMI releases over the coming months to rule out a more painful slowdown in global demand. Importantly, we have also highlighted that stronger exports may actually presage a further slowdown in China's industrial sector if it emboldens policymakers to intensify their reform efforts over the coming year. We argued in our May 2 Weekly Report that China's reform pain threshold is positively correlated with global growth momentum,4 meaning that the external sector of China's economy may have less potential to counter weakness in the industrial sector than many investors believe. In this regard, extreme export readings (to the up and downside) should be regarded by investors as a potentially problematic development. Chart 5: The Competitiveness Impact Of A Rising RMB Chart 5 highlights the second non-protectionist risk to Chinese export growth, namely the significant appreciation in the RMB that has occurred since mid-2017. The chart shows the percentile rank of three different trade-weighted RMB indexes since 2014, and highlights that all three are between their 70th & 80th percentiles (with our BCA Export-Weighted RMB index having risen the most). Importantly, the 2015-high shown in Chart 5 represents the strongest point for the currency in over two decades, suggesting that further currency strength may exacerbate the significant deceleration in export prices that has already occurred. Chart 5A Surging RMB Could Undercut Competitiveness
A Surging RMB Could Undercut Competitiveness
A Surging RMB Could Undercut Competitiveness
Housing Chart 6: Housing Sales Versus Starts We have presented a variation of Chart 6 several times over the past few months, but it is important enough that it deserves to be continually monitored by investors over the coming year. Chart 6 tells the story of China's housing market from the perspective of an investor who is primarily interested in the sector because of its implications for growth. The chart highlights that residential floor space started, our best proxy for the real contribution to growth from residential investment, has fallen significantly relative to sales since 2012-2014. This appears to have occurred because of a significant build up in housing inventories, which has since reversed materially (even though the level remains elevated). To us, this suggests that the gap between housing sales and construction that has persisted for the past several years may finally be over, suggesting that the latter may pick up durably if sales trend higher. For now sales volume remains tepid, but this will be a key chart for investors to watch over the coming year given our view that housing is a core pillar of China's business cycle. The Industrial Sector Chart 7: The BCA Li Keqiang Leading Indicator And Its Components Chart 7 presents our leading indicator for the Li Keqiang index (LKI), which we developed in a November Special Report.5 There are six components of the indicator, all of which are related to changing monetary/financial conditions, and the growth in money and credit. Chart 6Housing Construction Could Accelerate##br## If Sales Pick Up
Housing Construction Could Accelerate If Sales Pick Up
Housing Construction Could Accelerate If Sales Pick Up
Chart 7A Downtrend In Our LKI Leading Indicator, ##br##Within A Wide Component Range
A Downtrend In Our LKI Leading Indicator, Within A Wide Component Range
A Downtrend In Our LKI Leading Indicator, Within A Wide Component Range
The indicator is at the core of our view, and we have been presenting monthly updates of the series in our regular reports since late last year. However, Chart 7 looks at the indicator from a different perspective, by showing it within a range that identifies the weakest and strongest components at any given point in time. Two points are noteworthy from the chart: While the overall LKI indicator has been trending down since early-2017, there is currently a wide range between the components. This gap is in stark contrast to the very narrow range that prevailed from 2014-2015, when the economy slowed considerably. This could mean that some of the components of the indicator are unduly weak, which in turn could imply that the severity of the slowdown in China's industrial sector will be less intense than the overall indicator would otherwise suggest. At least one component provided a lead on the subsequent direction of the overall indicator from late-2011 to late-2012, the last time that a significant gap existed between the components. This is in contrast to the situation today, in that all of the components are currently in a downtrend (albeit with differing paces as well as magnitudes). The key point for investors from Chart 7 is that all of the components of our indicator are moving in the same direction, which suggests with high conviction that China's economy is slowing. However, the wide range among the components suggests that indicator's message about the intensity of the slowdown is less uniform than it has been in the past, meaning that investors should be sensitive to a sustained pickup in the top end of the range. Equity Market Signals Chart 8: The Beta Of Our BCA China Sector Alpha Portfolio Chart 8 revisits a unique insight that we presented in our May 16 Weekly Report.6 The chart shows the rolling 1-year beta of our BCA China Investable Sector Alpha Portfolio versus the investable benchmark alongside China's performance versus global stocks, and suggests that the former may reliably lead the latter. While we noted in the report that drawing market-wide inferences from the beta characteristics of risk-adjusted performers is a not a conventional approach, finance theory is supportive of the idea. If investors are seeking to maximize their risk-adjusted returns and are engaging in tactical allocation across sectors, then it is entirely possible that beta-adjusted sector returns reflect the risk-on/risk-off expectations of market participants. For the purposes of China-related investment strategy over the coming year, our emphasis on Chart 8 will increase markedly if we see a sharp decline in the beta of our Sector Alpha Portfolio. As we noted in our May 16 report, the model is for now sending a curiously bullish signal, which we see as partial validation of our view that investors should have a high threshold to cut exposure to China within a global equity portfolio. Chart 8Watch For A Decline In The Beta Of ##br##Our Sector Alpha Portfolio
Watch For A Decline In The Beta Of Our Sector Alpha Portfolio
Watch For A Decline In The Beta Of Our Sector Alpha Portfolio
Chart 9Decelerating Earnings Growth Could##br## Undermine Investor Sentiment
Decelerating Earnings Growth Could Undermine Investor Sentiment
Decelerating Earnings Growth Could Undermine Investor Sentiment
Chart 9: Ex-Tech Earnings Versus The Li Keqiang Index We noted above that predicting the Li Keqiang index (LKI) is at the core of our view, and Chart 9 highlights why. The chart shows that a model based on the LKI closely fits the year-over-year growth rate of Chinese investable ex-tech earnings and, crucially, provides a lead. While the chart does not suggest that an outright contraction in ex-tech earnings is in the cards over the coming year, it does show that earnings growth is about to peak. This is potentially problematic, and warrants close attention, for two reasons: First, our leading indicator for the LKI suggests that it will decelerate further over the coming year, which could push our earnings growth estimate towards or below zero. Second, the peak in earnings growth could dampen investor sentiment towards Chinese ex-tech stocks, especially since bottom up analyst estimates for 12-months forward earnings growth have recently moved higher and are currently above what is predicted by our model. Chart 10: The Alpha Of Chinese Banks By now, the narrative surrounding Chinese banks is well known among global investors. The enormous leveraging of China's non-financial corporate sector is viewed by many as a clear sign of capital misallocation, meaning that a (potentially material) portion of the loan book of Chinese banks will have to be written off as bad debt. The ultimate scope of the bad debt problem in China is far from clear, but these longstanding concerns about loan quality suggest that Chinese bank stocks are likely to materially underperform their global peers if China's shadow banking crackdown begins to pose a significant threat to growth via restrictions on the provision of credit to the real economy. As such, we recommend that investors monitor Chart 10 over the coming year, which shows the rolling 1-year alpha significance for Chinese banks vs their global peers. While the rolling 1-year alpha of small banks has become less positive over the past few weeks, it remains in positive territory, similar to that of investable bank stocks. So, for now, this indicator supports our earlier conclusion that recent divergence between the interbank market and actual borrowing rates highlighted in Chart 1 is not heralding a material tightening in Chinese financial conditions. Chart 10Investors Should Monitor Chinese Bank Alpha ##br##For Significant Declines
11 Charts To Watch
11 Charts To Watch
Chart 11No Technical Breakdown (Yet) In Ex-Tech Relative Performance
No Technical Breakdown (Yet) In Ex-Tech Relative Performance
No Technical Breakdown (Yet) In Ex-Tech Relative Performance
Chart 11: The Technical Performance Of Ex-Tech Stocks BCA's approach to forecasting financial markets rests far more on top-down macroeconomic assessments than it does on technical analysis. However, technical indicators do contain important information, particularly when our top-down macro approach signals that a change in trend may be imminent. In this regard, technical indicators can provide valuable opportunities to enter or exit a position. To the extent that the technical profile of Chinese ex-tech stocks is informative in the current environment, Chart 11 shows that it is telling investors to stay invested despite the myriad risks to the economic outlook. This message is consistent with that of Table 1, namely that the negative performance of Chinese ex-tech stocks has been in response to global rather than idiosyncratic, China-specific risk. From our perspective, a technical breakdown in relative Chinese ex-tech stock performance in response to China-specific news would serve as a strong basis for a downgrade within a global equity portfolio, and we will be monitoring closely for such a development over the coming weeks and months. Stay tuned! Jonathan LaBerge, CFA, Vice President Special Reports jonathanl@bcaresearch.com 1 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "Seven Questions About Chinese Monetary Policy", dated February 22, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "Monetary Tightening In China: How Much Is Too Much?" dated January 18, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 3 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Question That Won't Go Away", dated April 18, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 4 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "China: A Low-Conviction Overweight", dated May 2, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 5 Please see China Investment Strategy Special Report, "The Data Lab: Testing The Predictability Of China's Business Cycle", dated November 30, 2017, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. 6 Please see China Investment Strategy Weekly Report, "The Three Pillars Of China's Economy", dated May 16, 2018, available at cis.bcaresearch.com. Cyclical Investment Stance Equity Sector Recommendations
Highlights Portfolio Strategy A near-term pullback in U.S. Treasury yields, still robust housing fundamentals and compelling valuations that reflect most, if not all, of the bad homebuilding news and offset thorny input cost inflation, entice us to lift the S&P homebuilding index to neutral. Troughing health care outlays versus overall PCE, minor cracks in small business hiring plans, drug pricing uncertainty and the late stages of industry M&A activity suggest that managed health care relative share prices are as good as they get. Recent Changes Book profits of 24% and augment the S&P Homebuilding Index to a benchmark allocation. Downgrade the S&P Managed Health Care Index to neutral, locking in profits of 28%. Take the S&P Telecom Services Index off the high-conviction underweight list for a gain of 10% (please see the Insight Report on May 24, 2018). Table 1
Seeing The Light
Seeing The Light
Feature Stocks held on to their early-May gains and are on track to end the month with handsome returns. While the SPX is not out of the woods yet, still shaking off the early-February tremor, our cyclically upbeat view remains intact. Recent data suggest that earnings will remain healthy, and we expect this will propel the S&P 500 to a fresh all-time high in the back half of the year. It's true that elevated corporate debt levels are a cause for concern, as we detailed in a recent Special Report titled 'Til Debt Do Us Part', and this week we highlight that the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) private non-financial business sector debt-to-GDP ratio confirms the Fed data we presented in that report (Chart 1). Similarly, BIS's debt service ratio1 for non-financial corporates also confirms the Datastream Worldscope stock market data of a deteriorating interest coverage ratio (EBIT/interest expense) for non-financial equities (Chart 1). While we are closely monitoring unfolding debt dynamics, high debt levels are probably a longer-term problem (beyond the next 9-12 months) for the U.S. equity market. Higher interest rates are required in order for a debt crisis to unravel. With that in mind we were pleasantly surprised to notice that net bond ratings migration is moving in the right direction i.e. upgrades are outpacing downgrades. This is impressive as the V-shaped recovery following the late-2015/early-2016 manufacturing recession is already reflected in the data and the most recent uptick likely represents a fresh/different mini credit cycle (downgrades minus upgrades as a percent of total shown inverted, bottom panel, Chart 2). Chart 1Saddled With Debt...
Saddled With Debt...
Saddled With Debt...
Chart 2...But Ratings Migration Moving In The Right Direction
...But Ratings Migration Moving In The Right Direction
...But Ratings Migration Moving In The Right Direction
Either bond rating agencies are lowering their standards or euphoric rating agencies just reflect the recent fiscal policy easing, extremely low starting point of interest rates and an overall recovery in animal spirits. We side with the latter, and the implication is that SPX momentum will reaccelerate in the coming months, if history at least rhymes (bottom panel, Chart 2). Other indicators we monitor corroborate the positive equity backdrop suggested by the ratings migration data. For example, tracking tax revenue provides an excellent near real-time gauge on corporate sector cash flows. Federal income tax receipts have spiked into double-digit territory. Even state and local government tax coffers are surging, although this dataset is quarterly and trails the monthly released Federal series by four months. Government tax receipt growth has either led or coincided with previous major and sustainable overall profit recoveries (Chart 3). This suggests that S&P 500 second quarter earnings growth will surprise to the upside, despite an already high bar, in-line with our still expanding EPS growth model; the ISM, interest rates, the U.S. dollar and house prices comprise our four factor model (Chart 4). Nevertheless, the latest bout of EM currency weakness spreading beyond the 'fragile five' is a risk to our sanguine EPS growth view, especially in the back half of the year and into 2019. In other words, if this episode mostly resembles the 2013 'taper tantrum' induced devaluations then most of the damage is already done (Chart 5). However, if all of a sudden China falls off a cliff and is forced to devalue à la 2015 then all bets are off and a 'risk off' phase will ensue leading to a spike in the U.S. dollar. Chart 3Money Flowing Into Government Coffers Takes##br## A Real Time Pulse Of Corporate Profits
Money Flowing Into Government Coffers Takes A Real Time Pulse Of Corporate Profits
Money Flowing Into Government Coffers Takes A Real Time Pulse Of Corporate Profits
Chart 4Q2 Profits Will Likely ##br##Surprise To The Upside...
Q2 Profits Will Likely Surprise To The Upside...
Q2 Profits Will Likely Surprise To The Upside...
Chart 5...But A U.S. Dollar##br## Spike Is A Risk
...But A U.S. Dollar Spike Is A Risk
...But A U.S. Dollar Spike Is A Risk
As a reminder, the greenback is a key input to our EPS growth regression model and any sustained gains will eventually weigh on SPX profits. This is clearly a risk, but our sense is that there are more parallels with 2013 than with 2015 and one big difference is the bond market's response. The third panel of Chart 5 shows that spreads have not blown out to an alarming level, at least not yet, and signal that a generalized emerging market currency crisis will be averted. Finally, another big difference with the 2015 episode is that the commodity complex is not reeling (bottom panel, Chart 5). This week we are acting on two alerts, one downgrade and one upgrade, and crystalizing outsized gains in a defensive subsector and also taking profits in a niche early cyclical sub-index. Enough Is Enough, Upgrade Homebuilders To Neutral We put the niche S&P homebuilding index on upgrade watch in late-March,2 and today we recommend pulling the trigger and monetizing our 24% relative gains since the late-November 2017 inception. Three main reasons underpin our upgrade to a benchmark allocation: 1. Bond market selloff taking a breather 2. Housing fundamentals remain robust 3. Compelling valuations reflect most, if not all, of the bad news In March we posited that "any rise above 3.05% on the 10-year Treasury yield in a short timeframe would likely prove restrictive for the U.S. economy".3 Fast forward to today and BCA's U.S. Bond Strategists believe that the likelihood of a near-term pullback in U.S. Treasury yields has increased on the back of largely discounted Fed rate hikes, extended net short positioning and the recent moderation in economic data. This backdrop should, at the margin, give some breathing room to this interest rate-sensitive index. True, refinancing mortgage application activity has nearly ground to a halt, but the MBA's mortgage purchase index continues to climb to fresh cycle highs defying rising 30-year fixed mortgage rates (top panel, Chart 6). The MBA weekly survey is nearly exhaustive as it "covers over 75 percent of all U.S. retail residential mortgage applications".4 Importantly, examining the relative volume of purchase activity is instructive. Currently, purchase applications comprise over 2/3 of total applications. There is a positive correlation between interest rates and the purchase share of overall mortgage activity as the middle panel of Chart 6 clearly depicts. This is because refinancing takes the back seat as mortgage rates rise, whereas first time home buyers are less sensitive to the level of interest rates. Wage growth and job security are most important when undertaking the first mortgage. Put differently, a pick up in economic growth that is synonymous with higher interest rates entices rather than dissuades would-be first time home buyers. The U.S. economy is currently at full employment, underscoring that the unemployment rate should move inversely with the purchase share of mortgage activity. Indeed, empirical evidence confirms this negative correlation (bottom panel, Chart 6). Similarly, the firming economic backdrop should also lead to a renormalization of the residential housing market. Household formation is still running at a higher clip than housing starts, signaling that there is little slack in the residential housing market (middle panel, Chart 7). Homebuilder confidence is as good as it gets and home prices are expanding at a healthy pace (bottom panel, Chart 7). Chart 6Housing Fundamentals...
Housing Fundamentals...
Housing Fundamentals...
Chart 7...Remain On A Solid Footing
...Remain On A Solid Footing
...Remain On A Solid Footing
Importantly, new home prices have exited the deflation zone versus existing home prices which is significant for the relative profitability of homebuilding stocks (third panel, Chart 8). The tightness in the new home market is also evident in the relative sales backdrop: new home sales are outshining existing home sales which is conducive to a further increase in relative top line growth and thus relative share prices (top and second panels, Chart 8). Finally, relative valuations have undershot the historical mean on a price-to-sales basis with homebuilders trading at a 50% discount to the broad market (bottom panel, Chart 8). We deem that most of the bad news is likely reflected in cheap valuations and the message is that it no longer pays to be bearish the niche S&P homebuilding index. Nevertheless, we refrain from swinging all the way to an above benchmark allocation as spiking building material costs are starting to bite, according to the latest NAHB sentiment survey (middle panel, Chart 9). Moreover, long-term EPS euphoria pushing 30%, or twice the rate of the SPX, has hit a level that typically marks relative share price tops, not troughs (bottom panel, Chart 9). Were lumber prices to give way either courtesy of a rising U.S. dollar and/or a positive resolution in the NAFTA negotiations we would not hesitate to boost this index to an overweight stance. Chart 8Firming Top And Bottom Line Growth Prospects
Firming Top And Bottom Line Growth Prospects
Firming Top And Bottom Line Growth Prospects
Chart 9Surging Building Supply Costs Are A Big Risk
Surging Building Supply Costs Are A Big Risk
Surging Building Supply Costs Are A Big Risk
Netting it all out, a near-term pullback in U.S. Treasury yields, still robust housing fundamentals and compelling valuations that reflect most, if not all, of the bad homebuilding news and offset thorny input cost inflation, entice us to move to a neutral stance in the S&P homebuilding index. Bottom Line: We are acting on our upgrade alert and booking gains of 24% in the S&P homebuilding index and lifting exposure to neutral. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5HOME - DHI, LEN, PHM. Managed Health Care: Don't Overstay Your Welcome Relative share price gains for the S&P managed health care index are nearly exhausted. We are acting on our late-March downgrade alert and taking profits of 28% versus the S&P 500 since inception. At the margin, macro drivers have turned from a tailwind to a mild headwind. Long-term trends in HMOs move in distinct cycles tied with overall health care spending. When overall health care outlays begin to accelerate relative to total consumption the pressure increases on payers of medical services (i.e. health insurance) relative to the providers of those services. The opposite is also true (relative health care outlays shown inverted, Chart 10). Chart 10Rising Relative Health Care##br## Outlays Weigh On HMOs
Rising Relative Health Care Outlays Weigh On HMOs
Rising Relative Health Care Outlays Weigh On HMOs
If relative health care spending has troughed for the cycle, then there are high odds that the decade long relative bull market has run its course and a major top is in place. Industry top-line growth is also fraying around the edges. The second panel of Chart 11 shows that the hiring plans subcomponent of the NFIB survey of small business owners has sunk recently. Despite an overall stable and growing employment backdrop, this letdown is disconcerting as roughly 65% of all net new job gains occur in the SME space.5 The implication is that enrollment may also be nearing a peak. Meanwhile, on the input cost front, a softer than expected blow to drug pricing practices revealed in the President's recent speech was music to the ears of Big Pharma executives, but cacophony to HMO CEOs. While no bill has been drafted yet and we are awaiting more details, at the margin, this is a net negative for managed health care profits. Historically, our medical care cost proxy has been inversely correlated with industry operating margins and the current message is that the mini margin expansion phase may be short-circuited (middle panel, Chart 12). Tack on a tick up in HMO labor costs and profits will likely underwhelm analysts' optimistic forecasts: the sell-side expects S&P managed health care index profits to outperform the SPX by 330bps in the coming twelve months (bottom panel, Chart 12). We deem it a tall order. Finally, the recent industry M&A frenzy is ebbing, signaling that the M&A premia may soon come out of this health care sub-group (top panel, Chart 13). Importantly, all this euphoria is likely reflected in relative valuations with the relative forward P/E trading one standard deviation above the historical mean (middle panel, Chart 13). Chart 11Early Signs Of...
Early Signs Of...
Early Signs Of...
Chart 12...Margin Pressures
...Margin Pressures
...Margin Pressures
Chart 13M&A Frenzy Fully Priced Into Expensive Valuations
M&A Frenzy Fully Priced Into Expensive Valuations
M&A Frenzy Fully Priced Into Expensive Valuations
In sum, we do not want to overstay our welcome in the HMO space that has added considerable alpha to our portfolio since our overweight inception in April 2016. Troughing health care outlays versus overall PCE, minor cracks in the small business hiring plans, drug pricing uncertainty and the late stages of industry M&A activity suggest relative share prices are as good as they get. Bottom Line: Downgrade the S&P managed health care index to neutral for a gain of 28% since inception. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5MANH - UNH, AET, ANTM, CI, HUM, CNC. Anastasios Avgeriou, Vice President U.S. Equity Strategy anastasios@bcaresearch.com 1 "The DSR reflects the share of income used to service debt, given interest rates, principal repayments and loan maturities," https://www.bis.org/statistics/dsr.htm. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Report, "Bumpier Ride," dated March 26, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 3 Ibid. 4 https://www.mba.org/2018-press-releases/may/mortgage-rates-increase-applications-decrease-in-latest-mba-weekly-survey 5 https://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/regional-economist/april-2011/are-small-businesses-the-biggest-producers-of-jobs Current Recommendations Current Trades Size And Style Views Favor value over growth Favor large over small caps
Neutral - Downgrade Alert The National Restaurant Association's Restaurant Performance Index (RPI), a measure of the industry's outlook, has spent most of the past decade above 100, indicating industry expansion (second panel). However, this has not translated into restaurant stock outperformance (top panel). On a rate of change basis (right side, second panel), the direction of the RPI offers better insight in the relative share price ratio movements. This metric has recently rolled over, sending a negative message. Restaurants have been continuously losing share of the consumer's wallet for the past two years, while food input costs have held mostly constant (third panel), suggesting industry margins are tightening. At the same time, construction spending has been steadily heading upward (bottom panel) at a time when employment costs (the largest industry input cost) have also been rising. This implication of lower returns on a higher capital base does not bode well for still reasonably expensive valuations. Bottom Line: We are adding a downgrade alert to our neutral recommendation on the S&P restaurants index. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5REST - MCD, SBUX, YUM, DRI, CMG.
Restaurants - Time For The Dessert Menu?
Restaurants - Time For The Dessert Menu?
Feature The prospect of a 5S-Lega government in Italy is unnerving some analysts and commentators. Italy's sovereign debt-to-GDP ratio is already one of the highest in the world. A seemingly endless economic stagnation is constraining GDP, and now the populists are proposing policies that would increase the deficit, lifting sovereign debt even higher. Feature ChartFiscal Thrust Has Driven Italy's ##br##Growth In Recent Years
Fiscal Thrust Has Driven Italy's Growth In Recent Years
Fiscal Thrust Has Driven Italy's Growth In Recent Years
The suggested cures to Italy's high sovereign debt-to-GDP ratio divide into two opposing camps. One camp - Italy's populists - wants to boost GDP, the ratio's denominator. The other camp - Brussels - wants to rein in sovereign debt, the ratio's numerator. Who's right? It is not a simple choice. Growth and debt are not independent variables. It is impossible to boost growth quickly without a positive credit impulse from some part of the economy. Equally, reducing government borrowing can have a devastating impact on growth (Chart I-2). Therefore, to resolve the conflict between Italy's populists and Brussels, we need to understand the specific relationship in Italy between government debt, GDP, and their interaction: the fiscal multiplier. Chart I-2The Fiscal Multiplier Is High ##br##When The Private Sector Or Banks Are Financially Unhealthy
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Italy Is Right, Brussels Is Wrong Imagine that government debt starts at 130 and GDP starts at 100. Imagine also that each unit of government borrowing to spend lifts GDP by one unit, meaning the fiscal multiplier equals one. Under these assumptions, three units of fiscal thrust would lift debt to 133 and lift GDP to 103, reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio to 129%. Conversely, three units of fiscal drag would reduce debt to 127 and reduce GDP to 97, paradoxically increasing the debt-to-GDP ratio to 131% and making the austerity strategy entirely counterproductive. Critics will snap back that these two assumptions appear inconsistent. When sovereign indebtedness is already high, at say 130% of GDP, it seems implausible that the fiscal multiplier could also be high: the government has already done its useful borrowing to spend and, at the margin, additional borrowing is likely to be 'fiscally irresponsible'. This criticism would be valid if the government was the only part of the economy that could borrow. But it isn't. Whether the fiscal multiplier is high or low also depends on what is happening in the private sector (Chart I-3). Chart I-3The Fiscal Multiplier Is Low ##br##When The Private Sector And Banks Are Financially Healthy
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Fiscal multipliers become very high when there is a breakdown in the ability of households and firms to borrow and/or a breakdown in the ability of banks to lend. After such a breakdown, credit flows to the private sector remain depressed however low (or negative) interest rates go. Specifically, this happens after a severe economic trauma when large numbers of households and firms are simultaneously repairing their badly damaged balance sheets and/or when banks are insolvent. If the one and only engine of demand - government spending - then cuts out, the economy can enter a prolonged stagnation. Under such conditions, thrift reinforces thrift: one unit of fiscal drag can trigger an additional private sector spending cut, magnifying the impact of the original cut. In other words, the fiscal multiplier can exceed one and reach a level as high as two according to several academic and empirical studies.1 During and immediately after the global financial crisis, fiscal multipliers surged. Through 2009-12, fiscal thrust had a very strong explanatory power for GDP growth; across 14 major economies, the regression slope of 1.5 confirms a high average fiscal multiplier. In other words, each unit of fiscal thrust boosted GDP by 1.5 units; and each unit of fiscal drag depressed GDP by 1.5 units.2 Another way to see this is to observe that in the global financial crisis the economies that had the largest fiscal thrusts tended to experience the least severe recessions. The annual fiscal thrust in the U.S., U.K. and France equalled 2% of GDP; in Spain it equalled 3%.3 By contrast, Germany and Italy had negligible fiscal thrusts, and they suffered the worst recessions. But by 2012, households and firms around the world were willing to borrow again, and banks were sufficiently recapitalised to lend. Hence, fiscal multipliers slumped: fiscal thrust no longer had any explanatory power for GDP growth (Charts I-4 - I-7). Chart I-4Post 2012: No Connection Between##br## Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.S.
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.S.
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.S.
Chart I-5Post 2012: No Connection Between##br## Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.K.
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.K.
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The U.K.
Chart I-6Post 2012: No Connection Between ##br##Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The Germany
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The Germany
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The Germany
Chart I-7Post 2012: No Connection Between##br## Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The France
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The France
Post 2012: No Connection Between Fiscal Thrust And Growth In The France
There was one glaring exception to this trend: alas, poor Italy. Trapped in the EU's inflexible and misguided fiscal compact, and without an outright crisis, the Italian government could not recapitalise the dysfunctional banks. Although the solvency of the banks has improved in the past year, the evidence strongly suggests that fiscal thrust remains the main driver of the Italian economy (Feature Chart). On this evidence, the best economic policy for Italy right now is not to adhere slavishly to the misguided one-size-fits-all EU fiscal compact. The best policy is to use fiscal thrust intelligently to boost growth. We conclude that, on this specific point, Italy's populists are right and Brussels is wrong. Italy Needs Growth Italian BTPs offer a yield premium over German bunds as a compensation for two possible risks. One risk is a haircut or, more euphemistically, a 'restructuring'. But the likelihood of such a restructuring is very low. Putting aside the damage it would do to Italy's international standing, the simpler explanation is that it would kill the Italian banking system. As a rule of thumb, a bank's investors start to get nervous about its solvency when equity capital no longer covers its net non-performing loans (NPLs). In this regard, the largest Italian banks now have €165 billion of equity capital against €130 billion of NPLs, implying excess capital of €35 billion. The banks also hold around €350 billion of Italian government bonds (Chart I-8). Chart I-8Italian Banks Own 350 Billion Euro Of Italian Government Bonds
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
So a mere 10% haircut on these BTPs could cripple the banking system and send the economy into a new tailspin. Meaning, it is in nobody's interest to restructure Italian bonds. The more likely risk to BTP holders - albeit still small - is redenomination out of the euro and into a reinstated lira. In which case the yield premium on BTPs ought to equal: (The likely loss on being paid in liras rather than deutschmarks) multiplied by (the annual probability of Italy leaving the euro) The first of these terms captures Italy's competitiveness shortfall versus Germany, which will change quite gradually. The second term captures a political risk, as leaving the euro would require a mandate from the Italian people. This means that the second term is very sensitive (inversely) to the popularity of the euro in Italy. It follows that a policy that kick starts growth and improves living standards - thereby boosting the popularity of the euro amongst the Italian people - is also a good policy for Italian bonds, banks, sustainable growth in Italy, and therefore for the euro itself. Bear in mind that Italy's structural deficit, at just 1%, is nowhere near the double-digit percentage levels that reliably signal the onset of a sovereign debt trap (Table I-1). Table I-1Italy's Structural Deficit Has Almost Disappeared
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Italy Vs Brussels: Who's Right?
Given Italy's high fiscal multiplier, we conclude once again that Italy's populists are right and Brussels is wrong. Some Investment Considerations Italian assets rallied strongly at the start of the year and certainly did not discount an election outcome in which the unlikely bedfellows 5S and La Lega formed a government. Therefore, from a technical perspective, the rally was extended and ripe for a pullback. A further consideration for Italy's MIB is that it is over-weighted to banks, so a sustained outperformance from the stock market requires a sustained outperformance from global banks, which we do not expect to start imminently. So in the near term, we prefer France's CAC to Italy's MIB. We have also opened a tactical pair-trade: long Poland's Warsaw General Index, short Italy's MIB. However, later this year, we expect both our credit impulse (cyclical) indicator and fractal dimension (technical) indicator to signal a better entry point into banks, into the Italian equity market and for BTP yield spread compression. Italy's structural deficit, at 1%, is amongst the lowest in the world, so Italy has plenty of 'fiscal space'. Moreover, fiscal stimulus can deliver bang for its buck because Italy appears to have a high fiscal multiplier. This differentiates Italy from other major economies, and makes the EU's one-size-fits-all fiscal compact entirely counterproductive for the euro area's third largest economy. This means that policies that push back against Brussels on this specific point might finally permit Italy to escape its decade-long growth trap. And therefore, somewhat paradoxically, they will enable the yield premium on 10-year Italian BTPs versus 10-year French OATs ultimately to compress. Dhaval Joshi, Senior Vice President Chief European Investment Strategist dhaval@bcaresearch.com 1 For example, please see: When Is The Government Spending Multiplier Large? Christiano, Eichenbaum and Rebelo, Northwestern University. 2 Even removing the outlier data point that is Greece, the best-fit line has a slope of 1.1. And the r-squared explanatory power remains significant at 0.5. 3 Through 2008-9.
Highlights China's industrial sector will continue decelerating, while consumer spending is so far booming. The world economy in general and EM in particular are exposed much more to China's industrial sector than to its consumer spending. The U.S. dollar will continue strengthening, regardless of the trend in U.S. bond yields. The reason is slowing global trade. The dollar rally and weakening global demand will ultimately lead to lower commodities prices. Stay put on / underweight EM financial markets. Turkey will need to hike interest rates more before a buying opportunity in its financial markets emerges. Feature The two key elements affecting the performance of EM financial markets are the U.S. dollar and commodities prices. The combination of a weak U.S. dollar and higher commodities prices is typically bullish for EM. The opposite also holds true: A strong dollar and lower commodities prices are bearish for EM. But what about the recent dynamics - the rally in the greenback and strong commodities prices? This combination is unlikely to be sustained. Historically, the divergence between the dollar's exchange rate and commodities prices has never lasted long (Chart I-1). The fundamental linkage between the U.S. dollar and commodities prices is global growth: improving global growth is positive for resource prices, and the U.S. currency has historically been negatively correlated with global trade - the trade-weighted dollar is shown inverted in this chart (Chart I-2). Chart I-1Commodities And The Dollar
Commodities And The Dollar
Commodities And The Dollar
Chart I-2Global Growth And The Dollar
Global Growth And The Dollar
Global Growth And The Dollar
Hence, if global growth stays strong, the U.S. dollar will pare its recent gains and commodities prices will stay well-bid. Conversely, if global trade decelerates commodities prices will inevitably have to change direction. We expect the dollar to stay well-bid because the current phase of dollar rally will at some point be followed by a second phase where the greenback's strength is driven by a slowdown in global trade. In this phase, commodities prices and U.S. bond yields will drop alongside a strengthening U.S. dollar. Weaker growth in China and in other EMs is the key reason we expect global trade volumes to slow. Is China Slowing? Making sense of growth conditions in China is never easy, but it is particularly confusing these days. We maintain that there is growing evidence that China's industrial segment is slowing and will continue doing so, yet consumer spending is still booming. The basis for the industrial slowdown is a deceleration in both money and credit growth, which has been taking place over the past 18 months or so. With respect to households, the borrowing binge continues. The unrelenting 20%+ annual growth in household credit continues to fuel the property bubble. In turn, a rising wealth effect from real estate as well as decent income growth are the underpinnings behind the booming consumer sector. The main and relevant point for investors from the perspective of China's impact on broader EM is as follows: the drop in the credit and fiscal impulse is heralding a deceleration in capital expenditures/construction. That, in turn, will lead to fewer imports of commodities and materials. Imports are the main transmission mechanism from China's economy to the rest of the world. Mainland imports in RMB terms have indeed decelerated meaningfully, yet import values in U.S. dollar terms have not (Chart I-3). So, what explains the recent gap between imports in yuan and dollar terms? The RMB's rally versus the U.S. dollar in the past 15 months has been responsible for this gap between import values. As one would expect, the spending power of mainland industrial companies has moderated because less credit and fiscal expenditures are being injected into the system (Chart I-4). Yet because the RMB now buys 10% more U.S. dollars than it did a year ago, mainland buyers' purchasing power of foreign goods that are priced in dollars has improved. As a result, the pace of growth of the value of U.S. dollar imports has remained buoyant. Chart I-3Chinese Imports In RMB & USD Terms
Chinese Imports In RMB & USD Terms
Chinese Imports In RMB & USD Terms
Chart I-4Weaker Purchasing Power ##br##In China Will Hurt Imports
Weaker Purchasing Power In China Will Hurt Imports
Weaker Purchasing Power In China Will Hurt Imports
If the RMB's exchange rate versus the dollar remains flat over the next 12 months, the growth rates of both imports in RMB and dollar terms will converge. In this case, a further slowdown in import spending in RMB terms will translate into considerable deceleration in mainland imports in U.S. dollar terms. In brief, the exchange rate is important because the U.S. dollar's depreciation versus the RMB since January 2017 has prevented the spillover from a slowdown in China's imports in local currency terms to the rest of the world in general and EM in particular. Chart I-5Goods And Services Imports: China And U.S.
Goods And Services Imports: China And U.S.
Goods And Services Imports: China And U.S.
If and as the dollar continues to rally versus the majority of currencies, China could allow its currency to slip versus the greenback to assure a flat trade-weighted exchange rate and preserve its competitiveness. In such a scenario, China's purchasing power of goods and services from the rest of world will be impaired - which in turn means this economy will be remitting fewer dollars to the rest of the world. This will reduce the flow of U.S. dollars from China to EMs, adversely impacting the latter's financial markets and economies. Chart I-5 illustrates that China's imports of goods and services amount to $2.3 trillion compared with U.S. imports of goods and services of $3.1 trillion. Therefore, in terms of importance in global imports, China is not too far behind America. This holds true with respect to remitting dollars to the rest of the world. Provided that China imports more from EM - both from Asian manufacturing economies and commodities producers - than the U.S. does, then less mainland imports will entail fewer dollars flowing to EM. In short, the continued slowdown in China's purchasing power in U.S. dollar terms will negatively affect the rest of EM. This rests on our baseline view that mainland credit growth will continue slowing and the RMB will weaken against the dollar, albeit modestly for now. Mirroring the divergence between industrial sectors and consumers in the Middle Kingdom, there has been an equally clear divergence within imports: Imports of industrial supplies excluding machinery have slumped, while imports of household goods have continued to flourish. Chart I-6 demonstrates that imports have decelerated for base metals, chemicals, wood, mineral products and rubber. Even oil and petroleum products imports have slowed (Chart I-7). Yet imports of consumer goods are roaring (Chart I-8). Chart I-6China: Industrial Imports Are Slowing
China: Industrial Imports Are Slowing
China: Industrial Imports Are Slowing
Chart I-7Chinese Fuel Imports Are Slowing
Chinese Fuel Imports Are Slowing
Chinese Fuel Imports Are Slowing
Chart I-8Chinese Consumer Goods Imports Are Robust
Chinese Consumer Goods Imports Are Robust
Chinese Consumer Goods Imports Are Robust
Which one is more important for EM: the industrial sector or consumer spending? Many developing economies in Latin America, Africa, the Middle East as well as countries such as Russia, Indonesia and Malaysia are very dependent on their commodities exports. These economies do not benefit much from booming Chinese consumers. For them, the critical variable is the mainland's industrial sector and its absorption of minerals and resources. In terms of size, Table I-1 illustrates that non-food commodities, industrial goods, machinery, equipment and transportation make up overwhelming majority of China's total imports. Meanwhile, consumer goods imports, excluding autos, comprise 15% of total imports. Hence, their impact on the rest of the world is small. Table I-1Structure Of Chinese Imports
The Dollar Rally And China's Imports
The Dollar Rally And China's Imports
Further, most of consumer goods that households in China consume are produced locally rather than imported. That is why the world economy at large and EM in particular are more exposed to the mainland's industrial sector than its consumer one. Aside from imports, there are several other variables that validate our thesis of an ongoing slowdown in China's industrial sector. In particular: Total floor space sold (residential plus non-residential) has rolled over, heralding weakness in floor space started and, eventually, construction activity (Chart I-9). Growth rates of total freight traffic, diesel consumption, electricity and plate glass output have slumped (Chart I-10). Chart I-9Slowdown In Chinese Real Estate
Slowdown In Chinese Real Estate
Slowdown In Chinese Real Estate
Chart I-10China: Industrial Economy Is Weakening
China: Industrial Economy Is Weakening
China: Industrial Economy Is Weakening
Nominal manufacturing production is decelerating in response to a weaker broad money impulse (Chart I-11). The Komatsu Komtrax index - which measures average hours of machine use per unit of construction equipment (excluding mining equipment) - has begun contracting (Chart I-12). Chart I-11China: Downside Risks In Manufacturing
China: Downside Risks in Manufacturing
China: Downside Risks in Manufacturing
Chart I-12China: Sign Of Construction Slump
China: Sign Of Construction Slump
China: Sign Of Construction Slump
Even though China's spending on tech products has been vibrant, the global semiconductor cycle - a harbinger of overall tech industry growth - is clearly downshifting as evidenced by declining semiconductor prices (Chart I-13). Finally, narrow money (M1) growth has historically correlated with Chinese H-share prices, and is currently pointing to considerable downside risk for Chinese equity prices (Chart I-14). Chart I-13Semiconductor Prices Are Falling
Semiconductor Prices Are Falling
Semiconductor Prices Are Falling
Chart I-14Chinese Share Prices Are At Risk
Chinese Share Prices Are At Risk
Chinese Share Prices Are At Risk
Bottom Line: China's industrial sector has been decelerating, a trend that will persist. Meanwhile, consumer spending is so far booming. The former is more important to the rest of the world in general and EM in particular than the latter. EM Selloff: Two Phases While it is impossible to forecast the timing and character of market dynamics and mini-cycles with precision, our assessment is that two phases of an EM selloff are likely. Phase 1: A relapse in EM financial markets occurs on the back of rising U.S. bond yields, a strong dollar, amid resilient commodities prices. This phase is currently underway. Phase 2: U.S. bond yields peter out and drift lower, yet the U.S. dollar continues to firm up, commodities prices relapse and the EM selloff progresses. This stage has not yet commenced. The driving force behind these dynamics would be slower global demand growth emanating from China and spreading to other developing countries. In between Phases 1 and 2, it is possible that EM will stage a temporary rebound. Yet the duration and magnitude of such a rebound are impossible to gauge. Because of its transient nature, barring precise timing, the rebound will be very difficult to play profitably. It is not impossible to envision that the escalating turmoil in EM financial markets could at some point lead the Federal Reserve to sound less hawkish. That could mark a top in U.S. bond yields. In such a scenario, will a peak in U.S. bond yields mark a bottom in EM currencies? It may do so temporarily, but the sustainability of a rally in EM currencies and risk assets would be contingent on global growth in general and commodities prices in particular. Chart I-15An Unsustainable Rebound ##br##In EM Stocks In 2014
An Unsustainable Rebound In EM Stocks In 2014
An Unsustainable Rebound In EM Stocks In 2014
As a matter of fact, a similar two-phase selloff with a rebound in between occurred in 2013-'15. Chart I-15 illustrates that EM currencies and stocks staged a short-lived rebound after U.S. bond yields peaked in late 2013. Yet this rally proved transient. The underlying impetus behind the resumption in the EM downtrend back in 2014-'15 was weakening growth in China, falling commodities prices and poor domestic fundamentals. Similar to the 2013-'15 episode, any rebound in EM risk assets resulting from lower U.S. bond yields will likely be fleeting if commodities prices drop, the dollar continues to firm up and global growth disappoints. To sum up, a potential rollover in U.S. bond yields in the coming months will not automatically entail an ultimate bottom in EM risk assets. Trends in global growth - particularly in China - and commodities prices will be critical to the outlook for EM. As per our themes and discussion above, we maintain that China's industrial growth and construction will surprise on the downside. Consequently, China's commodities imports will moderate, which will weigh on commodities prices. In the interim, weak global trade dynamics stemming from EM/China will benefit the dollar, which is a countercyclical currency. Bottom Line: The U.S. dollar will continue strengthening regardless of the trend in U.S. bond yields because of slowing global trade. The dollar rally and weakening global demand will ultimately lead to lower commodities prices. EM financial markets will remain under selling pressure as long as global growth continues slowing. EM Foreign Funding Vulnerability Ranking Which countries are most exposed to lower foreign funding? Chart I-16 presents ranking of EM countries based on foreign funding requirements. The latter is calculated as the current account balance plus foreign debt that is due in the coming months. Chart I-16Vulnerability Ranking: Dependence On Foreign Funding
The Dollar Rally And China's Imports
The Dollar Rally And China's Imports
Turkey, Malaysia, Peru and Chile have the heaviest foreign funding requirements in the next six months. Mostly, these stem from foreign debt obligations by their banks and companies. Even though most companies and banks with foreign debt will not default, their credit spreads will likely widen. The basis for this is depreciating currencies will make their foreign debt liabilities more expensive to service. Besides, as these debtors allocate more resources to service foreign debt, their spending will be negatively impacted and their domestic economies will weaken. Investment Conclusions Chart I-17Downside Risks In EM Share prices
Downside Risks In EM Share prices
Downside Risks In EM Share prices
The dollar's strength will be lasting. Stay short a basket of select currencies such as the BRL, TRY, ZAR, CLP, IDR, KRW and MYR versus the U.S. dollar. For portfolios that need to overweight some EM currencies relative to the rest, our favorites are MXN, RUB, PLN, CZK, TWD, THB and SGD. CNY will for now modestly weaken versus the dollar but outperform many other EM peers. The biggest risk to the U.S. dollar in our opinion is the Trump administration's preference for a weaker greenback. Therefore, "open-mouth" operations by the U.S. administration to weaken the dollar are possible, and the dollar could experience temporary setbacks. Yet the path of least resistance for the dollar remains up, for now. There is considerable downside in EM share prices. Stay put and underweight EM versus DM in general and the S&P 500 in particular. Chart I-17 illustrates that rising EM sovereign bond yields and U.S. corporate bond yields (both shown inverted on the chart) herald a further selloff in EM stocks. Our equity overweights are Taiwan, Korea, Thailand, India, central Europe, Chile and Mexico, and our underweights are Brazil, Turkey, South Africa, Peru, Malaysia and Indonesia. For fixed-income investors, defensive positioning is warranted. As EM currencies continue to depreciate, sovereign and corporate credit spreads will widen further. Credit portfolios should continue underweighting EM sovereign and corporate credit relative U.S./DM corporate credit. Foreign holdings of EM local currency bonds remain massive. EM currency depreciation versus DM currencies will erode returns for foreign investors and could spur some bond selling, exerting upward pressure on local yields as well.1 Arthur Budaghyan, Senior Vice President Emerging Markets Strategy arthurb@bcaresearch.com Turkey: Is The Worst Over? After having dropped 30% in U.S. dollar terms since their peak in late January, Turkish equity prices are beginning to look depressed, begging the question whether a buying opportunity is in the cards. Our assessment is as follows: the nation's financial markets are not yet at the point to warrant an upgrade (Chart II-1). Judgment on Turkish markets is contingent on three questions: Has the lira become cheap? Are real interest rates sufficiently high to depress domestic demand and reduce inflationary pressures? Are equity valuations cheap enough to warrant buying despite the poor cyclical profit outlook? First, the lira needs to get cheaper. Our favorite measure of currency valuation is the real effective exchange rate based on unit labor costs. This takes into account both wages and productivity. Hence, it gauges competitiveness much better than the measures of real effective exchange rate based on consumer and producer prices. Using this measure, as of May 23 the lira is one standard deviations below its historical mean (Chart II-2). For it to reach one-and-half or two standard deviations below its fair value, it would roughly take another 10%-20% depreciation, versus an equal-weighted basket of the dollar and euro. Chart II-1Turkish Financial Markets ##br##Have More Downside
Turkish Financial Markets Have More Downside
Turkish Financial Markets Have More Downside
Chart II-2The Turkish Lira Is Not That Cheap
The Turkish Lira Is Not That Cheap
The Turkish Lira Is Not That Cheap
Second, in regard to monetary policy, our view is that it would take an increase of around 200-250bps in the policy rate in addition to yesterday's hike of 300bps to stabilize financial markets. Core inflation will likely rise to at least 14-15% from the current level of 12% in response to the ongoing currency depreciation. With the effective policy rate (the late liquidity window rate) now at 16.5%, another 200-250 basis points hike would push the nominal rates to 18.5-19% and real policy rate to 3.5-4%, a minimum level that is likely required to depress excessive domestic demand growth. Finally, equity valuations are reasonably appealing but not cheap enough to put a floor under share prices given the outlook for contracting corporate and bank profits. Chart II-3 demonstrates that the cyclically-adjusted P/E (CAPE) ratio for Turkish stocks is now about 6, compared with the historical average of 8. Although this bourse is already one standard deviation cheap, the outlook for profit recession likely warrants even lower valuation to justify buying. Chart II-3Turkish Equities Could Get Cheaper
Turkish Equities Could Get Cheaper
Turkish Equities Could Get Cheaper
An approximate 20% drop in share prices in local currency terms will bring the CAPE to 4.8, one-and-half standard deviation below the fair value. On the whole, an additional 15% depreciation in the lira versus an equal-weighted basket of the dollar and euro, in combination with 200-250 basis points hike in the policy rate, and a 20% drop in share prices in local currency terms will likely create a buying opportunity in Turkish financial markets. That said, it is doubtful whether there is the political will - to tolerate another 15% drop in the currency from current levels or more tightening in monetary conditions in the very near run ahead of the upcoming June parliamentary elections. Given the authorities' tolerance for higher borrowing costs is low, investors should not rule out the potential for capital controls to be imposed. In fact, to protect assets against possible capital control, we would recommend investors who are short to consider booking profits if the exchange rate surpasses 5 USDTRY in a rapid manner. Our open directional trades at the moment remain: Short Turkish bank stocks Short TRY / long USD Non-dedicated long-only investors should for now stay clear of Turkish financial markets. As to dedicated EM equity and fixed income portfolios (both credit and local currency bonds), we continue recommending underweight positions in Turkey. Stephan Gabillard, Senior Analyst stephang@bcaresearch.com 1 We discussed EM currencies and bonds in details in May 10, 2018; the link is available on page 19. Equity Recommendations Fixed-Income, Credit And Currency Recommendations
Telecom services stocks rallied Tuesday, following positive news coming out of VZ's sellside analyst presentation. The mood was generous enough that our high-conviction underweight recommendation was stopped out at a 10% relative return.1 We are accordingly compelled to remove the S&P telecom services index from our high-conviction list for an impressive relative gain of 10% in the three months since we initiated the trade.2 Still, our bearish thesis remains unchanged: A combination of still-contracting pricing power weighing on earnings (second panel) and higher Treasury yields (which are negatively correlated with high-dividend yielding telecom services stocks, top panel) should keep relative performance suppressed. Valuations have fallen significantly (the reason we added the stop in the first place, bottom panel) but we think the industry is in a de-rating phase, implying the new valuation paradigm has a degree of permanence. Bottom Line: Stay underweight the telecom services index but remove it from the high-conviction list. The ticker symbols for the stocks in this index are: BLBG: S5TELS - T, VZ, CTL.
A Telco Rally Ends Our Trade
A Telco Rally Ends Our Trade
1 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Insight Report, "Merger Mania Keeps The Telco Bears Happy," dated May 11, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com. 2 Please see BCA U.S. Equity Strategy Weekly Report, "Manic-Depressive?" dated February 12, 2018, available at uses.bcaresearch.com.