MARKET UPDATE – 2 February 2020
Economy
- There is a fair chance that US Inflation will become a concern this year given that the US Economy is operating above potential, wage growth has been strong with labor markets tightening and the Fed is likely to maintain easy monetary policy if not cut rates further
- US Employment continues to be strong as the simple unemployment based SAHM Recession Indicator is at a low 0.03 (a reading of 0.5 or above implies a Recession is expected)
- US Consumption continues to be strong as well:
- Real Earning Power is at 15-year highsConsumption Growth has been between 2-3% year-over-year since 2016Personal Savings Rate is at multi-year highsFinancial Obligations as a percentage of Disposable Income remains very lowThe US is also currently undergoing a strong Housing boom, though the possibility of a choke collar (i.e. prices rising so much that low interest rates become less important in making homes affordable) putting a halt to it is become more likelyAll in all, while there is a Manufacturing Recession in the US, there is clearly scarce evidence of it spreading to other sectors of the economy. This makes sense given that Manufacturing is only roughly 10% of the Economy while consumption is around 70%US, Eurozone and China Citi Economic Surprise indices continue their rebound, but Business Confidence will remain a challengeGermany Manufacturing recovering as EU Economic Activity rebounds as the ECB downgraded inflation forecasts giving it the scape goat to continue easy monetary policy while inciting governments to loosen fiscal policyJapan manufacturing shows a modest improvement while services show a sharp improvement. However, the leading index continues to deteriorateAustralia manufacturing and services PMIs continue to deteriorate, but new orders improvedChina Consumption is vulnerable to a Coronavirus shock though easy monetary policy in EM (including China) is set to boost the EconomyDry Bulk Shipping costs are at their lowest since 2016Evidence suggests that the Economy is undergoing a passing Slowdown and that Recession is unlikely; Corporate Bond Yields just hitting all-time lows is an extremely bullish sign into 2H2020Economic booms typically end with too tight Monetary Policy, or with Credit problems. We are nowhere close to either of these situations
Markets
- Coronavirus will likely shakeout bulls. Ahead of the dip in markets risk parity funds carried 65% US Equity exposure. Moreover, there were aggressive longs with a 1.0 Z-score
- It is difficult to envision a recovery in the bull market without China participating given how important its Economy has become to the rest of the world, though money managers rushing for the exits is bound to create solid opportunities
- Jay Powell will likely not have the courage to hike interest rates in 2020, in fact, should the Coronavirus pandemic continue to roil markets, given the US Yield Curve inversion, he may be force to 1 or 2 rate cuts of 25 basis point each. The fear of a significant and extended global health emergency, easy monetary policy looks set to remain for even longer than originally planned
- However, by keeping monetary policy so loose the Fed runs multiple risks involving potential bubbles due to misallocation of resources. Deflation worries seem misplaced as innovation-led deflation has shown no evidence of leading to postponed consumption
- UK is set to do well post Brexit as money managers close their underweights/shorts and reposition and low expectations are dashed
- Base Case: markets will be dominated by low cost of capital, economic growth will be at or below potential, and there will be heightened geopolitical concerns, though there is a fair chance they won’t matter much
- On the other hand, the more likely factors to trigger a bear market are:
- Election of an anti-capitalist (e.g. Sanders, Warren; the hedge would be to short US Equities and USD)Unexpected surge in Inflation that will force the Fed to tighten monetary policyCredit event; there are many “bad apples” that were able to over-lever at low costBubble collapses on itself because valuations have become ludicrously high, though this is not likely to happen in the near/medium-termOverall, it is difficult to not be bullish risk assets when the Economy is strong and there is so much Monetary Stimulus coming from Central Banks around the world, but the current US administration makes it difficult to be too bullish given the harmful policies it seems willing to adopt. The election this year should offer some (temporary) relief on that front
Fixed Income and Currency
- US Yields (10Y) will likely remain rangebound between 1.50% and 2.00% as the upside will be capped by inflows from Europe and Japan
- Nonetheless, DM fixed income remains expensive as bond ETFs approach a grand total $1.2 trillion in AUM
- US Yield Curve is likely to steepen as the Global Economy continues to improve
- FX Vol has remained subdued since 4Q2018 as GBP traders turn upbeat
Equity
- Ahead of the correction due to the Coronavirus, US Equities were trading above bull channels with institutional cash near lows, though on strong breadth
- However, there are unrealistic earnings growth expectations for US Equities:
- -2%, 4Q20195%, 1Q20207%, 2Q202010%, 3Q202015%, 4Q2020Hedge funds are currently underexposed to Value and Small Caps; Tech is overbought vs FinancialsShare buybacks, which have helped buoy US Equities, are now fadingEuropean companies face materially higher cost of equity financing vs debt financing – bullish equities as leverage increasesJapan Equities entering the buyback game, set to be a key consideration in asset allocationWith Defensive assets extremely expensive, EM is more likely to lead Global reboundEM ex-Tech has maintained resilient earnings with improving momentum
Commodities
- Slump in Crude will lead to underinvestment compounded by imposed capital discipline
- Shale well productivity is declining as Permian Shale production seems to be peaking. At the same time, OPEC is running low on spare capacity
- Natural Gas net short positioning is at extremes, reaching all-time lows
- As New Energy Vehicles (NEVs) gain traction as well as electrification overall, storage capacity will gain importance creating a backdrop that is bullish Lithium
Portfolio Strategy
- Various opportunities are apparent in markets:
- Value vs Growth EquitiesUS and European FinancialsNon-US EquitiesUS Small and Mid-CapsEM Equities, especially EM AsiaCrude Oil and CopperNatural Gas on a tactical exposure basisOn the other hand, there are also plenty of crowded trades:
- DM Gov’t BondsHigh YieldBond substitutes such as Utilities Stocks, REITs, etcFAANG StocksAsia Tech Stocks, especially those exposed to DRAM production are attractive with the Capex cycle turning, and Sony and Microsoft launching next-gen videogame consoles late 2020
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