My Diary 603 --- Santa Is Not Coming, Bonds Don’t Buy Optimism, What to Expect from
September 6, 2009
[Note: I have not put down any inks during the past two weeks when my parents have their first visit to HK. Remember, family is always the first priority. Paul Thomas, the former President of Merrill Lynch
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“The September Myth: Bear Fears vs. Better Economics” --- Obviously, bulls won the Friday, but not yet the month. Based on the data of S&P from 1957 to 2008, the worst sell-offs usually happen in Sept/Oct, making this the time of fear. In other words, the seasonality studies show that September is a down month. But similarly many incredible rallies have started in the fall as well. Before I step into my birth month, let us have a review of market performance in August as the seed of a lost month must be laid ahead of time.
The month of August saw DMs (+4.2%) outperformed
Entering into September, markets and risk appetite have stalled in the last week or two as investors fret over whether they have got ahead of the recovery. In particular, US banking sector appears the most vulnerable (-4.78% wow), even as major banks contemplate repaying government funds. Interestingly, liquidity measures, such as LIBOR-OIS spread, continue to grind lower. I think what caused the correction of equities is mainly about China as nearly everyone now wants to know what is going on here. Some fear that A-share has shifted from bubble to burst as SHCOMP dips 22% in August into bear markets technicals. The magnitude of such a fall was enough to panic the govt which then got NDRC to clarify that they weren't backing away from oil price reforms, Premier Wen to call for sticking into the supportive policies, and CSRC to raise the QFII quota by another USD1bn. Put it together, it’s clear that market optimism has begun to wane, signalled by 1) A-shares off 20%; 2) JPY-crosses strength and 3) the stickiness of SPX at 1000 level. But the fear factors seem to be less popular as global economic data continues to improve, if compared with the dramatic slump in last winter and spring. That said, the econ data were mixed last week while Chicago PMI, ISM manufacturing, pending home sales, chain store sales, non-farm productivity, NFPs were all BTE, while ADP, factory orders, jobless claims and UNE were all disappointing. And in particular, pending home sale (+3.2%) jumped suggested more strength in housing sectors may be seen going ahead. However, risk ahead is that the recovery remains BTE but insufficient to restart jobs hiring, so markets and moods bounce around without direction. Historically, the last time when US UNE rate >10% was in 1983, following the recession of 1981-82. Cuts in the FFTR from 20% to 8.5%, combined with deficit spending by the Reagan administration helped push the jobless rate down to 7% by the end of 1985. The problem this time is that the target rate is near zero already.
X-Asset Market Thoughts
On the weekly basis, global equities were 1.5% lower with -3.3% in
Looking forward, I notice that the recovery has started, but the current global recession is far from normal. In DMs, their financial systems are still partially dysfunctional. It will take a long time to form a new balanced system, along with regulatory reform. In
The implication to equities is that the overall backdrop in the near term remains favourable --- 1) recent economic data and earnings releases have beaten expectations; 2) Fed has reinforced that it will not rush to implement its exit strategy because 9.7% UNE rate represents a significant output gap that should help limit inflation pressure over the foreseeable future. Federal funds futures are pricing in < 50% chance of a rate hike before March2010; and 3) 10yr UST remains well below 4%, despite mushrooming issuance and a clear improvement in consensus estimates of global growth. That being said, these are not enough to ignite a sustainable rally of equities until some signs that corporate sales are improving or consumer spendings are warming up. In US, the latest report revealed that US consumers continued to sit on their hands in July as wages and salaries lost 4.7% yoy, the biggest drop since 1960. In
Santa is not coming
Several macro trends worth for a note based on August macro data. First of all, the global PMI clearly said that growth is strengthening, although perhaps LTE. While manufacturing output index reached 57.5 last month, the level of service output remains a relatively low 50.5. These index points to a sluggish expansion in the rest of the economy, while many broker houses are looking for a 4% growth in 3Q09. Secondly, it is about US housing market. While Case-Shiller index bottoming out in the last two months, I am sceptical that any significant recovery can take place due to 1) UNE is rising (NFP still weak, ADP indicating layoffs and initial claims at 570K and continuing claims rose); 2) the delinquency rate are still rising with prime mortgage delinquency rising from 6.06% in 1Q09 to 6.41% in 2Q09; and 3) sales volume surge is mostly stimulated by the USD8000 Federal housing tax credit…You can call me bearish, but this is the fact, not my opinion…As for CRE, it is worth reminding that the earnings season saw numerous large regional banks in US posting further losses, many due to CRE exposure. The real estate problem is not over yet. A new loss of confidence in these sectors (CRE & Bank) could generate a fresh wave of risk aversion and volatility in the markets.
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Bonds don’t buy optimism
UST market continued its rally with 10yr yields once touched a low of 3.28%. Catalysts for lower yields were weaker ADP and Factory Order reports along with a more dovish read on FOMC minutes released which showed policy makers concerned by the still weak labour market and "sizable risks" remaining for bank credit losses. As well "most anticipated that substantial slack in resource utilization would lead to subdued and potentially declining wage and price inflation over next few years; a few saw a risk of substantial disinflation". In short, the bond market isn’t buying all the optimism over the end of the global recession. According to the Merrill Lynch, yields on global GBs of all maturities average 2.27%, compared with YTD peak of 2.62% on 08June. As a result, bond investors profit 2.14% since the start of June. But looking ahead, I believe that the bond market is due for a mini-bear run as 1) incoming economic data was trending upwards and 2) a supply of UST is heavy with $38bn 3yr, $20bn 10yr and $12bn re-open bonds over the next two weeks.
Another point worth for a note is the real ST rate. Over the 3-year period before the crisis, the average nominal T-bill rate was 4% and inflation was 3%. That resulted in a real rate of 1%. Today, T-bill rate is roughly zero and inflation expectations appear anchored around 2%. That implies a real rate of around –2%, or 3ppts below its pre-crisis level. Negative real rate is likely to remain on the course as Fed can leave the policy rate at zero if it needs to and inflation expectations are more likely to increase than to decrease. An old rule of thumb is that a 1% lower real rate leads to roughly 1% increase in aggregate demand. Thus, the 3% decrease in the real rate may seem sufficient to sustain the current recovery. This may not be true in this cycle, as what matters for demand is the rate at which consumers and firms can borrow, not the policy rate itself. As of today, risk premiums on US BBB bonds are nearly 3% higher than before the crisis. Higher risk premiums could offset, at least in part, lower policy rates that
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What to expect from
According to David Cui’s (ML China Strategist) analysis, A-shares 2Q09 results shows that earnings are recovering, with REV growth at -8.5% yoy (vs. -11.9% in 1Q09), OPM 10% (vs. 9.3% in 1Q09) and NP growth at -2.4% Yoy (vs. -24.8% in 1Q09). CFO was healthy with 1Q09 and 2Q09 saw operating cash flow of RMB316bn and RMB352bn respectively, vs. 3-yr average of RMB248bn. However, Capex remained weak at -9.6% yoy vs. +4.3% in 1Q09 and +46% in 2Q08, indicating a continued weak private sector investment appetite. Earning wise, the sector mix changed significantly with materials’ profits down to near neglectable, while major contributions are from banks (45.9%), energy (24.1%), consumers (6.8%), capital goods (6.4%), insurance (4.3%), and others (12.6%). Valuation wise, SHCOMP is trading at consensus 18.5X 12M FRD PE (24% EPSG) vs. 23X average since 2005.
Having discussed so, given the on-going market concerns about potential aggressive policy tightening, Chinese policymakers have reiterated that any change in policies will be fine-tuning rather than a major shift to tightening. Looking ahead, the macro development in
Sector side, PBOC said it will take years to implement stricter capital requirements for banks, through reduction of sub-debt. I think the next loan data would still likely be negative for asset markets as some believe that as much as 30% of the DBs found its way into stock markets. I think the market has priced in a lower loan growth. It is the indirect impact on sentiment has been significant so far. In addition, I would expect more targeted/sector-specific measures could be employed to curb inflation expectation and prevent a potential asset bubble. According to E-House data, SH/SZ/BJ property price hit record high in August with ASP in SH at Rmb18500/sqm & SZ at Rmb18380/sqm…Lastly, valuation wise, MSCI China is now traded at 15.9XPE09 and 12.5% EPSG, CSI 300 at 22.8XPE09 and 18.6% EPSG, and Hang Seng at 16.5XPE09 and -9.9% EPSG, while AxJ region is traded at 17.3XPE09 and +11.9% EPSG.
USD at 3500 metres height
USD fell over the week with DXY down 0.3%. The weakness in USD did not help commodity space (CRB -3.97% and WTI -6.49%) as the force of worry on
Personally, I am inline with the veiw that weak USD is the main driver of gold strength going into 2010. In an interesting footnote to the Thunder Road Report written by Paul Mylchreest, he comments that in Latin America, where he has been living for 25 years, for the first time he can remember, locals are now preferring their own currency to USD. He goes on to finish with this comment: "If a fellow with no education, a poor diet, and inadequate medical treatment living at 3,500 metres above sea level can figure out that USD is undesirable as a store of wealth, how much longer do you think it can last as the world's reserve currency"…Think about that point, my fellows.
Good night, my dear friends!