United States
BCA Research’s time-tested indicators are sending bearish warnings for bonds. The BCA Cyclical Bond Indicator is rising quickly and has crossed over the signal line, which indicates that yields have significantly more upside over the coming 9 to 12 months. We…
The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index dropped to 95.9 in December from 101.4, disappointing expectations of a smaller decline to 100.2. The deterioration was broad-based with nine out of the ten components falling and only the current inventory index rising.…
Consistent with the previous Insight’s cautionary tone, we recommend investors book gains of 16% on the small size bias that we have been exploring since the October 26, 2020 inception (top panel) and 6% since the high-conviction calls report on December 7, 2020. Small caps have gone parabolic since late October and the small/large 13-week rate of change annualized momentum is at the highest print since the dotcom bubble era breaching 100%/annum recently (second panel), and second largest ever in the history of our data set (not shown). The top 10 constituents of small cap indexes are now populated by highly speculative names (see here and here) and in the Russell 2000 specifically the weights of some of the top 10 constituents have jumped to more than 10 fold from the 0.05% median weight to over 0.5% weight. In other words, elements of frothiness are also evident in small cap indexes. At least a pause for breath is likely in the next three months and we opt to move to the sidelines and downgrade the size bias back down to neutral. Finally, we are also shifting the 10% stop in our long “Back-To Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade baskets to a 5% rolling stop in order to protect gains of over 25% since the September 8, 2020 inception (bottom panel). Bottom Line: The easy money has been made in the small/large ratio, lock in gains and step aside. Today we also switch our trailing 10% stop to a rolling 5% stop in the long “Back-To Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” pair trade baskets. Stay tuned.
The previous Insight highlighted the similarities between the 2009/10 episode and today, when the SPX troughed in March 2009 similar to the recent recessionary trough in March 2020. Our biggest worry is the reflex rebound in the dollar. Everyone is short dollars and this one-sided bet is at risk of capsizing the ship. Importantly, interest rate differentials will likely start to push the greenback higher. The bottom panel of the chart shows that since the August trough, 10-year US Treasury yields have more than doubled to over 1.1%, whereas the 10-year bund yield has stayed muted at -0.5%. Additional US fiscal easing along with the sustained rebound in the US economy should continue to weigh on bond prices and further push interest rates higher and eventually stock valuations lower. This accumulated interest rate pressure will at the margin start to weigh on EUR / USD. As a result, the near parabolic move in cyclicals versus defensives will at least go on hiatus. We are putting the S&P utilities sector on upgrade alert and the S&P materials sector on downgrade alert and once we execute these moves our portfolio will hopefully monetize double digit gains since the July 27, 2020 inception, and will push our cyclicals/defensives portfolio bent back to even keel. Bottom Line: Prepare to lock in gains in the cyclicals versus defensives portfolio bent (via downgrading materials and upgrading utilities), this ratio is now on our downgrade watch list (please see the next Insight).
Last autumn during the 10% SPX correction, we started to reposition the portfolio to benefit from the reopening trade and initiated our long “Back-To-Work”/short “COVID-19 Winners” trade, implemented a small cap size bias, reiterated our cyclicals / defensives portfolio bent by downgrading the S&P pharma index to underweight (which pushed the S&P health care to neutral) and crystalized handsome gains in our VIX futures trade. We were arguing that stocks would glide lower into the election and then take off as geopolitical in general and election in particular uncertainty would subside and also seasonality would switch from a headwind to a powerful tailwind for stocks. One week following the election we updated our three EPS scenarios for 2021 and also upped our calendar 2021 EPS estimate to $168, from $162 previously, and lifted our SPX target for end-2021 to 4,000. Since then, the SPX is up nearly 600 points and we are now compelled to turn wary. Keep in mind that the S&P 500 has fully discounted the 24% EPS growth for calendar 2021 and now that we are in early 2021 and the market will soon look into calendar 2022 EPS, we doubt that the sell side’s $196 EPS level which translates into 17% EPS growth rate is attainable, especially given the specter of rising corporate taxes. The higher the SPX will rise in the near-term the more it will eat into future returns and thus push down the expected return. Equity flows are very powerful both from sidelined cash coffers, which are getting replenished from fiscal easing packages and from investors fleeing bonds. The implication is that timing the exact turn is difficult. The chart (on the previous page) shows that 2009/10 is an interesting parallel to draw, which we used recently when we initiated a VIX futures hedge to our high-conviction calls for the June 2021 expiry, as a number of asset classes signal that it is prudent to be cautious especially on the prospects of the broad equity market. Applying the SPX return from the 2009 trough to the 2010 peak, implies that the SPX can rise to 4,010 if history at least rhymes. Given recent bubble talk in the media, using the October 1998 to March 2000 parallel and applying that SPX return would imply an SPX level of 3,687 (see table). Our sense is that the further we rise the bigger the snapback will be and a retest of the October 2020 lows is a high probability event. Thus, from a tactical perspective we are not willing to risk 100-200 points of upside for a potential 800-point drawdown. One enticing synthetic long trade recommendation we are initiating is to buy a $390/$410 call spread on the SPY ETF and sell a $340 put for March 19 expiry for a modest cost of $0.67 per contract. The June expiry is a good alternative for more conservative investors with an actual $2.85 per contract cash inflow. This is not a speculative trade; it is a way to deploy fresh capital (i.e. covered position) at a much lower S&P 500 level given our still sanguine broad equity market view on a cyclical 9-12 month time horizon. This way we can partially participate (as we cap our gains) in the unfolding mania, and if markets turn around, as we expect on a near-term tactical basis, this trade goes long the SPY at a much lower level. Bottom Line: The board equity market risk/reward tradeoff is to the downside for the next three months on a tactical basis (please see the next Insight).
Highlights Rates: The Democratic sweep of the election has caused the uptrend in bond yields to accelerate and has benefited our recommended rates positions (below-benchmark duration, nominal and real curve steepeners, inflation curve flatteners). We aren’t yet ready to exit any of these positions, and our medium-term target of 2% - 2.25% for the 5-year/5-year forward nominal Treasury yield remains unchanged. Municipal Bonds: Though valuation has become more expensive, we continue to recommend a maximum overweight allocation to municipal bonds. In particular, investors should favor municipal bonds over investment grade corporate bonds with equivalent credit rating and duration. Economy: December’s employment report showed the first monthly contraction in nonfarm payrolls since April. However, this negative headline reflects the transitory impact of the latest COVID wave. It does not signal renewed weakness in the pace of economic recovery. Feature A Politically Driven Bond Rout In a Special Report last October, we argued that the bond market was vulnerable in a scenario where the November 3rd election resulted in the Democratic party winning the House, Senate and White House.1 It took some time, but after Democrats won both of Georgia’s Senate seats in last week’s special election, we are finally seeing the impact on the bond market. Nominal Treasury Yields First, the 10-year nominal Treasury yield moved above 1% for the first time since March. It currently sits at 1.13% (Chart 1). Meanwhile, the front-end of the Treasury curve held steady as the Fed continued to signal that liftoff is unlikely to occur within the next two years. The result has been a persistent steepening of the nominal curve (Chart 1, bottom panel). The 10-year nominal Treasury yield moved above 1% for the first time since March. We are positioned for a bear-steepening of the nominal Treasury curve, but the speed of this most recent move raises the question of how much further the bond sell-off can run. As we wrote in our year-end Special Report, we see yields continuing to rise until the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield reaches levels consistent with survey estimates of the long-run equilibrium fed funds rate (Chart 2).2 This would be in line with where yields peaked during the prior two global growth recoveries (2013/14 and 2017/18). At present, survey responses put our target for the 5-year/5-year forward Treasury yield at roughly 2% to 2.25%, still 18 to 43 bps above current levels. Chart 1Nominal Curve Bear-Steepening Chart 2How Much Upside For Yields? The prospect of greater fiscal stimulus under a Democratic government doesn’t necessarily translate into a higher ceiling for Treasury yields, but it does increase the speed with which yields will reach our target. All in all, we remain positioned for a bear-steepening of the nominal Treasury curve but will re-consider this stance if the 5-year/5-year forward yield reaches a range of 2% to 2.25%. Inflation Compensation Chart 3Stay Overweight TIPS For Now The recent 20 bps jump in the 10-year nominal Treasury yield was driven by a 15 bps increase in the 10-year TIPS yield and a 5 bps increase in the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate. Notably, the 10-year and 5-year/5-year forward TIPS breakeven inflation rates have both pushed above 2% and are sitting at 2.08% and 2.06%, respectively. While these long-maturity TIPS breakevens have recovered nicely, the Fed won’t be tempted to adopt a more hawkish policy stance until they reach a range of 2.3 – 2.5 percent, a range that has been consistent with “well-anchored” inflation expectations in the past (Chart 3).. While TIPS breakeven inflation rates aren’t yet high enough to worry the Fed, they are starting to look elevated compared to actual inflation. At 2.08%, the 10-year TIPS breakeven inflation rate is 27 bps above the fair value reading from our Adaptive Expectations Model (Chart 3, panel 3).3 Given this expensive valuation, we are currently looking for an opportunity to tactically reduce our allocation to TIPS. We expect that opportunity will come when the 12-month core and trimmed mean inflation rates re-converge (Chart 3, bottom panel). The low level of core CPI inflation relative to the trimmed mean suggests that inflation has near-term upside as some downtrodden sectors that are excluded from the trimmed mean recover from the pandemic. But inflation will moderate once that “snapback phase” is over, and we should get an opportunity to reduce our TIPS allocation.4 Along with an overweight allocation to TIPS versus nominal Treasuries, we also recommend owning inflation curve flatteners. The inflation curve tends to flatten when the cost of inflation protection rises, and this has indeed been the case during the past few weeks (Chart 4). It will make sense to exit this flattener when we tactically reduce our TIPS allocation, but this will only be a temporary move. In the long run, the inflation curve will eventually invert and then remain in negative territory for an extended period. This is the result of the Fed’s plan to engineer an overshoot of its 2% inflation target. If the Fed is successful, it means that it will be attacking its inflation target from above for the first time since the 1980s. In such an environment, it makes sense for the inflation curve to be inverted. Chart 4Inflation Curve Flattening Real Yield Curve Chart 5Real Curve Steepening Our final rates curve recommendation is a real yield curve steepener. This position has also performed well during the recent bond rout, as a 14 bps increase in the 10-year real yield occurred alongside a 13 bps drop in the 2-year real yield (Chart 5). As with our other rates positions, we are inclined to stay the course. A 2/10 real yield curve steepener can be thought of as the combination of a 2/10 nominal curve steepener and a 2/10 inflation curve flattener. During the recent bond sell-off, the 2/10 real curve has steepened by 27 bps, split between 17 bps of nominal curve steepening and 10 bps of inflation curve flattening. We will likely maintain our real yield curve steepener as a core portfolio position even if we eventually close our inflation curve flattener. Gradual progress toward fed funds liftoff and the resulting steepening of the nominal curve should be sufficient to steepen the real yield curve, even if inflation takes a pause. Corporate Credit Chart 6Move Down In Quality Corporate spreads have reacted well to the news of a Democratic sweep, even though it means that a corporate tax hike is coming in 2021. All else equal, the one-time hit to profits from a tax hike is negative for corporate balance sheets, but this is a minor consideration when the macro back-drop remains so positive for spread product. The combination of above-trend economic growth and highly accommodative monetary policy will encourage investors to keep adding credit risk, and the average investment grade and high-yield index spreads have still not quite recovered to their pre-COVID tights (Chart 6). We continue to view the Ba credit tier as the most attractive from a risk/reward perspective, as the incremental spread pick-up in Ba compared to Baa is elevated compared to what we’ve seen in recent years (Chart 6, panel 3). Bottom Line: The Democratic sweep of the election has caused the uptrend in bond yields to accelerate and has benefited our recommended rates positions (below-benchmark duration, nominal and real curve steepeners, inflation curve flatteners). We aren’t yet ready to exit any of these positions, and our medium-term target of 2% - 2.25% for the 5-year/5-year forward nominal Treasury yield remains unchanged. Fiscal Policy In 2021 Chart 7Organic Household Income Has Recovered Our US Political Strategy service debuted last week with a report that considers the outlook for fiscal policy in 2021 given that Democrats now have control of the House, Senate and White House.5 In short, the Democrats now have complete control of the government but their majorities in the House and Senate are thin. This means that the most radical parts of the Democratic agenda, like the Green New Deal, will be hard to pass. However, the Democrats will be able to deliver two reconciliation bills in 2021. The first bill could come soon and will likely focus on additional COVID relief and social support, such as $2000 checks to individuals instead of $600 ones. After that, the Democrats will focus on expanding and entrenching the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). They will partially repeal the Trump tax cuts to help finance these priorities. On the issue of COVID relief, we are no longer concerned about the US economy receiving enough stimulus to avoid a double-dip recession. We had previously estimated that a further $600 billion to $1 trillion of income support for households would be required to support consumer spending at reasonable levels.6 This estimate now looks too high because non-CARES act household income has recovered much more quickly than we had anticipated. Non-CARES act household income is already back to pre-COVID levels (Chart 7). In our prior research, we assumed this wouldn’t happen until July 2021. In any event, another round of $2000 checks will provide more than enough income support to sustain a recovery in consumer spending. A Democratic sweep suggests big fiscal thrust in 2021 and less contraction in 2022. More generally, our US Political Strategy team has estimated the medium-term path for the US deficit under a “Democratic Status Quo” scenario that assumes another round of $2000 checks and that the remaining $2.5 trillion of the proposed HEROES Act will be enacted. It also considers a “Democratic High” scenario that adds Joe Biden’s $5.6 trillion policy agenda on top of the Democratic Status Quo (Chart 8). Biden will not achieve all of his agenda, so the reality will lie somewhere between the Democratic Status Quo and Democratic High scenarios. In either case, we will see considerably more fiscal thrust compared to the Republican Status Quo and Baseline scenarios. Chart 8Democratic Sweep Suggests Big Fiscal Thrust In FY2021 And Less Contraction FY2022 Municipal Bonds The prospect of federal government aid for challenged state & local governments is a crucial issue for municipal bond investors. Fortunately, the Democratic party’s HEROES act contains more than $1 trillion of aid to state & local governments and this will likely form the basis of the next COVID relief package. On top of that, further support for household incomes will also help support state & local tax revenues that are already recovering (Chart 9). Chart 9State & Local Austerity Will Continue That said, we are likely still in for a considerable period of state & local austerity given the large budget gaps that have opened during the past nine months. However, the expectation of help from the federal government makes us even more confident that state & local governments will muddle through without a spate of muni downgrades or defaults. We maintain our “maximum overweight” recommendation for tax-exempt municipal bonds, though valuation is turning more expensive by the day. Muni yield spreads versus Treasuries are contracting, particularly at the long end of the curve (Chart 10A) and valuations appear more expensive if we look at yield ratios instead of spreads (Chart 10B). In both cases, value looks better at the front end of the curve than at the long end. Chart 10AMuni / Treasury Yield Ratios Chart 10BMuni / Treasury Yield Ratios Bottom Line: The new Democratic government will deliver more than enough income support to sustain the recovery in consumer spending. Aid for state & local governments is also forthcoming and it will help sustain municipal bond outperformance versus both Treasuries and investment grade corporates. Though valuation has become more expensive, we continue to recommend a maximum overweight allocation to municipal bonds. In particular, investors should favor municipal bonds over investment grade corporate bonds with equivalent credit rating and duration. December Payrolls Only A Temporary Setback At first blush, last week’s December employment report looks disastrous. Nonfarm payrolls fell by 140 thousand, the first monthly contraction since April. The contraction looks especially worrying when you consider that payrolls remain almost 10 million below pre-COVID levels and should be rising quickly at this stage of the economic recovery (Chart 11). Chart 11Payrolls Contracted In December Chart 12Permanent Unemployment Fell In December The grim headline numbers, however, severely overstate the magnitude of the problem. Rather than implying underlying economic weakness, the drop in payrolls reflects the transitory impact of the pandemic’s latest violent wave. December’s job losses came from the Leisure and Hospitality sector (-498k), the sector most impacted by the virus. Job gains remained solid elsewhere in the economy (+358k). The unemployment rate held flat at 6.7% in December, but encouragingly, this stable number masks both an increase in the number of temporarily unemployed (or furloughed) workers and a drop in the number of permanently unemployed workers (Chart 12). Those furloughed workers will return to work once the virus is better contained. Meanwhile, the drop in the number of permanently unemployed suggests that the economic recovery is taking hold. It will only gain momentum as the COVID vaccine is rolled out and additional fiscal stimulus is delivered in 2021. Ryan Swift US Bond Strategist rswift@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1 Please see US Bond Strategy / Global Fixed Income Strategy Special Report, “Beware The Bond-Bearish Blue Sweep”, dated October 20, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 2 Please see US Bond Strategy Special Report, “2021 Key Views: US Fixed Income”, dated December 15, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 3 For more details on our model please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “How Are Inflation Expectations Adapting?”, dated February 11, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 4 For more details on inflation’s “snapback phase” please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “More Stimulus Needed”, dated September 15, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com 5 Please see US Political Strategy Weekly Report, “Buy Reflation Plays On Georgia’s Blue Sweep”, dated January 6, 2021, available at usps.bcaresearch.com 6 Please see US Bond Strategy Weekly Report, “More Stimulus Needed”, dated September 15, 2020, available at usbs.bcaresearch.com Fixed Income Sector Performance Recommended Portfolio Specification
According to BCA Research’s Foreign Exchange Strategy service, a blue wave will likely supercharge the dollar’s downtrend in 2021. The US political landscape is becoming more dollar bearish. This is because a blue wave will likely supercharge fiscal…
Highlights We remain constructive on the economy and financial markets, … : US households have stored up a great deal of dry powder for consumption once the economy fully reopens, last month’s stopgap fiscal measures will help relieve pressure on the most vulnerable households, and the Georgia Senate results ensure that even more fiscal transfers are in store. … but there is a non-negligible risk that investors will get too excited about the positive backdrop: The exceedingly supportive policy backdrop could easily help the S&P 500 push into the low 4,000s, but it’s not clear what investors will have to look forward to for the rest of 2021 if it ascends to that level early in the year. We do not share the bubble-spotters’ alarm, but we are willing to study their arguments: We like to test our convictions by seeking out opposing views and we therefore read Jeremy Grantham’s bubble essay with great interest. We do not share his urgent concern, and our recommended asset allocations are nearly the mirror image of his, but we are taking a deep dive into his view and its implications. Feature As a grad student on the South Side of Chicago, I used to run on the bike path along the lake. On windless days, the three or four miles north from Hyde Park Boulevard felt especially easy, and I would think, “this is what it’s like when there’s no wind.” Then I’d head for home and discover there’d been a breeze behind me all along. A mile or two in, I’d realize it was no breeze and marvel at how I hadn’t noticed it on the way out. The moral of the story, as I told it then, is that if you think it’s not windy in Chicago, just turn around. Now it seems that it has a broader, weightier lesson: it can be easy to miss the wind when it’s behind you. Jeremy Grantham’s carefully reasoned bubble warning, posted online last Tuesday,1 has inspired us to re-examine our outlook and how widely it’s shared. We are not changing our view – we remain vigilantly bullish – but it is worth devoting ample time to consider the risks to it. This week, we highlight the elements of Grantham’s piece that most caught our attention; next week, we will discuss strategies to try to reduce an investor’s vulnerability to them. The Belated Blue Wave Grantham’s essay highlights vulnerabilities that could come to the fore sometime in the near future, but the Democratic sweep of Georgia’s Senate seats has immediate market implications. By virtue of Vice President-elect Harris’s tie-breaking vote, the Democrats will hold a majority in the 50-50 chamber beginning January 20th. The outcome ensures that the Biden administration will have slim majorities in both houses of Congress for its first two years (pending appointments and special elections). Although a five-seat House majority and the slimmest possible Senate majority will not give the incoming administration carte blanche to enact sweeping legislative changes, it will have an easier time pursuing its agenda than it would have had the Republicans held on to just one of the Georgia Senate seats. Item number one on that agenda is likely to be bulked-up fiscal aid for struggling households, states and municipalities. The economic and market significance of the blue wave is that Congress can now become a full partner supporting the monetary policy aim of erring to the side of providing too much accommodation. With the Fed pledging that it won’t take its foot off the gas any time soon, revived fiscal spending will provide the economy with an incremental reflationary boost that should benefit risk assets. Fiscal transfers will be at least partially funded with increased taxes on corporations and high-earning individuals. Profit margins will narrow, but empirical evidence of a relationship between tax rates and economic growth is elusive (Chart 1). Economic growth is largely a function of growth in the size of the working-age population and growth in productivity. Investment leads productivity – workers become more productive when endowed with more and better tools – but history suggests that investment spending is indifferent to corporate tax rates (Chart 2), as is productivity (Chart 3). Chart 1We Don't Like Taxes, Either ... Chart 2... But They Do Not Seem To Impact Investment ... Chart 3... Or Productivity Growth We are disposed to agree with the idea that higher taxes are a drag on growth. Transferring spending power from the private sector to government apparatchiks is not likely to improve efficiency. Business executives are as fallible as any other experts, however, and changes in tax rates have a smaller multiplier effect than the proposed spending measures. Net-net, we expect that the outcome of the Georgia run-offs will lead to slightly higher interest rates, a steeper yield curve, increased consumption and fewer defaults, a welcome mélange for credit performance and the equities that were left behind as investors flocked to COVID winners. A Slippery Slope Chart 4Bull Markets Tend To Go Out With A Bang [G]reat bubbles are where fortunes are made and lost – and where investors truly prove their mettle. For positioning a portfolio to avoid the worst pain of a major bubble breaking is likely the most difficult part. Every career incentive in the industry and every fault of individual human psychology will work toward sucking investors in. [Emphasis added.] As Jeremy Grantham lays it out, the latter stages of a bull market are especially perilous. Given that bull markets run hot before they end (Chart 4), it becomes fiendishly difficult to resist their pull. The recency bias drives an investor to focus on the most recent data points to the exclusion of older ones, pointing to higher expected returns than might be inferred from a more comprehensive sample. The phenomenon encourages equity overexposure at inopportune times if returns are mean-reverting. Professional investors are as susceptible to recency bias and overconfidence (fueled by having had the wind at their back) as non-professionals, and their judgment can be additionally clouded by career pressures. Those who achieve the longest tenures are at least subconsciously attuned to Keynes’ dictum that it is better to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally. Staying at the party too long with lots of others may hold far less risk than staking out a solitary position. The bottom line is that asset management incentives encourage groupthink, especially as late-stage bull markets go into overdrive. Dizzying Heights The long, long bull market since 2009 has finally matured into a fully-fledged epic bubble. Featuring extreme overvaluation, explosive price increases, frenzied issuance, and hysterically speculative investor behavior, I believe this event will be recorded as one of the great bubbles of financial history[.] Bubbles are only identifiable in retrospect, but several aspects that financial historian Charles Kindleberger associated with manias are evident. Money is cheap and readily available and valuations are quite high. One could argue that anticipation of short-term capital gains is drowning consideration of future earnings for at least some equity investors or, as Grantham puts it, “stocks [are] rising … simply because they are rising.” Make no mistake: Equity valuations are demanding and de-rating appears more likely than continued re-rating. The main valuation metrics clearly indicate that equities are richly priced. The S&P 500’s forward earnings multiple is hovering around two standard deviations above the mean, at heights previously reached only in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s (Chart 5). Price-to-sales is at an all-time high, three standard deviations above the mean (Chart 6, top panel), while book (Chart 6, middle panel) and cash flow multiples (Chart 6, bottom panel) are elevated but not yet extreme. Price-to-sales should rise if markets believe pandemic-induced margin pressure is temporary and will reverse once the country is vaccinated, but the one-plus-sigma surge above pre-COVID levels would seem to be a bit much. Chart 5Equity Valuations Are Pushing The Envelope Chart 6Making A Run At '99-'00 Equity option and IPO activity is redolent of euphoria and overtrading. Equity call option volume has surged to record levels (Chart 7, top panel), reportedly on the back of an explosion in small retail activity, and the put-call ratio has fallen to dot-com-bubble levels as demand for exposure has swamped demand for protection (Chart 7, bottom panel). New IPOs have been coming fast and furious (Chart 8, top panel) at a relatively tender average age (Chart 8, bottom panel). Sponsors’ shift away from hoarding early- and middle-stage returns to inviting the public to share them may prove to be telling. There are many reasons to sell equity interests, but expecting them to blast higher isn’t typically one of them. Chart 7The Merry Men Of Sherwood Forest Have Discovered Options Are A Gas, Too Chart 8Take The Money And Run The Legend Who Cried Wolf This isn’t the first time Grantham or one of his colleagues has expressed concern about rising stock prices. It may be unduly harsh to call him a perma-bear, but GMO has consistently underestimated equities and the firm has seen its assets under management (AUM) cut in half over the last five years, to $60 billion, while its flagship asset allocation fund has lost over 60% of AUM. As an RIA firm executive told a Bloomberg reporter, “I can see how clients lose patience with them. They get defensive way before anybody else.2” It’s important to recognize different commentators’ biases/agendas when evaluating their arguments. Grantham calls out the broker-dealers as perpetual market cheerleaders, but he has a stake in convincing GMO clients and prospects that value investing principles are still relevant. BCA’s business model is far more insulated from markets’ direction, but our research services have a bias to fit inherently unruly markets into tidy narratives. Disclosing the risks to our views is an essential part of our process, but the hypotheses we reject will always get less of an airing than the ones we embrace – no investor has time to read weekly 50-page deliberations. Why Now? The canonical BCA question – So What? – is meant to keep researchers focused on the market relevance of their inquiries. But we have long advocated for a second question – Why Now? – to keep our focus on timeliness. Spotting imbalances, which can take a maddeningly long time to reverse, isn’t enough to earn alpha. To translate macro analysis into promising investment ideas, an investor also needs to identify potential catalysts that might unwind the imbalance. Bull markets become exhausted once so much capital is invested in them that there is no one left to keep buying, just as bear markets end when the urgency to sell dissipates. Sentiment can offer clues into remaining buying or selling power, and the day before the Grantham piece appeared, an experienced financial advisor with a stellar portfolio management record emailed that, “This is one of the few times in my career where I feel like the market is simple and the consensus is right. It almost always feels like there is something obviously bad on the horizon but this market feels like there is really good news on the horizon.” I have known him for over 30 years and can attest to his intelligence, diligence and savvy. His clients are in excellent hands and his constructive take may well be spot on. Indeed, we hope so, since it dovetails with ours, but his assurance gave us pause. For now, it doesn't seem to be universal, as it contrasted starkly with this musing from another trusted confidante (a family office CIO) as 2020 was winding down, “What can be said about work other than make certain we don’t mistake this bull market for brilliance.” Valuation is a notoriously lousy timing indicator and sentiment is a squishy concept that is hard to pin down. Both can remain stretched for a long period of time. An investor shouldn't bet against them unless s/he has a good reason for believing they are on the verge of reversing. Perhaps not having to run on the relative performance hamster wheel like most professional investors gives the family office CIO, who also has a great track record, a little broader perspective, but every investor could use a dose of humility. Skepticism is an essential component of successful investing as well, especially as stocks are making new highs. If you think it’s not windy … Investment Implications We respect Jeremy Grantham’s experience and formidable accomplishments and listen closely to any insights he’s willing to share. We acknowledge that there are many signs of froth across financial markets and that the Kindleberger red line of purchasing assets without regard to their intrinsic merit could be crossed in the not-too-distant future. We echo the sentiment that central bankers are not omnipotent and that easy monetary policy is not a magical elixir. We do, however, assert that the combination of extremely easy monetary policy and a new round of fiscal aid offers equities and spread product a supportive backdrop that should be expected to hold throughout the year provided that markets don’t get over their skis by bidding up asset prices too far. The bottom line is that market vulnerabilities are cropping up but we disagree with the view that they are about to bring an end to risk asset outperform-ance. We remain overweight equities and spread product while keeping an eye out for anything untoward. As we have been saying for several weeks, we are bullish, albeit vigilantly so. One of our roles is to worry for our clients, and we are scanning the horizon for signs of trouble even more thoroughly than normal. Until we see those signs, or until risk asset prices rise so much that they sour their risk-reward prospects, we will stick with our call. On the last point, we are in complete agreement with Grantham: The one reality that you can never change is that a higher-priced asset will produce a lower return than a lower-priced asset. You can’t have your cake and eat it. You can enjoy it now, or you can enjoy it steadily in the distant future, but not both – and the price we pay for having this market go higher and higher is a lower 10-year return from the peak. Doug Peta, CFA Chief US Investment Strategist dougp@bcaresearch.com Footnotes 1https://www.gmo.com/americas/research-library/waiting-for-the-last-dance/ Accessed January 5, 2021. Grantham is the octogenarian co-founder of Grantham, Mayo and van Otterloo (GMO), a value-oriented asset manager for institutional investors. 2 McDonald, Michael. "Grantham’s Bear Market Call Tests Patience of GMO Fund Investors," Bloomberg, November 24, 2020.
Total US nonfarm payrolls were a major disappointment, falling by 140 thousand in December, after rising in the previous 7 months. But the contents of the report are not nearly as negative for markets as the headline number suggests. Rather than implying…
Markets have rallied on the back of easy fiscal and monetary conditions, both of which will boost growth this year, especially now that vaccines will allow for a more permanent softening of rolling lockdowns in the second half of 2021. However, a virtuous…