eye on the market outlook 2017 - j.p. morgan · eye on the market outlook 2017 j.p. morgan...
TRANSCRIPT
True Believers. Two groups of true believers are driving changes in the developed world. The first: single-minded central bankers who spent trillions of dollars pushing government bond yields close to zero (and below). While this unprecedented monetary experiment helped owners of stocks and real estate, its regressive nature did little to satisfy the second group: voters who are disenfranchised by globalization and automation, and who are on the march. What next? The fiscal experiments now begin (again). Prepare for another single digit portfolio return year in 2017.
Eye on the Market Outlook 2017J.P. MORGAN SECURITIES
Cover art by Robin Mork.
Click on the video to watch Michael Cembalest, Chairman of Market and Investment Strategy, as he discusses how the themes he covers in True Believers shape his outlook for 2017.
How do you summarize a year that was in many respects indefinable? On one hand, the European sovereign debt crisis, contracting housing markets and high unemployment weighed heavy on all of our minds. But at the same time, record corporate profits and strong emerging markets growth left reason for optimism.
So rather than look back, we’d like to look ahead. Because if there’s one thing that we’ve learned from the past few years, it’s that while we can’t predict the future, we can certainly help you prepare for it.
To help guide you in the coming year, our Chief Investment Officer Michael Cembalest has spent the past several months working with our investment leadership across Asset Management worldwide to build a comprehensive view of the macroeconomic landscape. In doing so, we’ve uncovered some potentially exciting investment opportunities, as well as some areas where we see reason to proceed with caution.
Sharing these perspectives and opportunities is part of our deep commitment to you and what we focus on each and every day. We are grateful for your continued trust and confidence, and look forward to working with you in 2011.
Most sincerely,
MARY CALLAHAN ERDOESChief Executive Officer
J.P. Morgan Asset Management
Expect the unexpected—that was the world’s lesson from 2016. From the U.K.’s decision to
leave the European Union to the U.S. presidential election’s surprising results, citizens of the
world voiced their desire for change. As investors, such major shifts require our reassessment
of almost every assumption, from tax rates to inflation, to global trade, and all the subsequent
spillover effects. Thinking through portfolios and any associated balance sheet borrowings are
more important now than in many years past.
To that end, I’m pleased to share with you our ever thought-provoking 2017 Outlook. As
depicted on the cover, Michael Cembalest and his team analyze the duality of pitchfork
problems: the rise of anti-establishment parties around the world and the continued central
bank attempts to shovel money at the problems of anemic growth. Both cause the need for
a comprehensive portfolio review to ensure your assets are headed in the right direction.
We thank you for your continued trust and confidence in all of us at JPMorgan Chase.
Most sincerely,
EYE ON THE MARKET • MICHAEL CEMBALEST • OUTLOOK 2017 JANUARY 1, 2017
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Investment products: Not FDIC insured • No bank guarantee • May lose value
Executive Summary: True Believers Political upheavals and unorthodox central bank actions persist, but it looks like more of the same in 2017: single digit returns on diversified investment portfolios as the global economic expansion bumps along for another year.
How we got here. By the end of 2014, central bank stimulus lost its levitating impact on markets, GDP and corporate profits, all of which have been growing below trend. Proxies for diversified investment portfolios1 generated returns of just 1%-3% in 2015 and 6%-7% in 2016.
The biggest experiment in central bank history ($11 trillion and counting as of November 2016) helped employment recover in the US and UK, and more recently in Europe and Japan. Across all regions, however, too many of the benefits from this experiment accrued to holders of financial assets rather than to the average citizen. As a result, the political center of a slow-growth world has begun to erode, culminating with the election of a non-establishment US President with no prior political experience, and the UK electorate’s decision to leave the European Union. The market response to Trump’s election has been positive as investors factor in the benefits of tax cuts, deregulation and fiscal stimulus and ignore for now potential consequences for the dollar, deficits, interest rates, trade and inflation (see US section on the “American Enterprise Institute Presidency”).
1 Weights and indices used for diversified portfolio proxies: 60% equities (using the MSCI All-Country World Equity Index, including emerging markets), and 40% fixed income (using the Barclays US Aggregate for US$ investors, and the Barclays Global Aggregate hedged into Euros for Euro investors).
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
220
30%
32%
34%
36%
38%
40%
42%
44%
46%
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: National stats offices, Haver, MSCI, Bloomberg, JPMAM. Dec. 2016.
The fading impact of central bank government bond purchases on global equity returns
% of developed world gov't bond market owned
by all central banks
MSCI Developed World Equity Index level
-40%
-20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
7%
8%
9%
'98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16
Hun
dred
s
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. Q3 2016.
A slow growth worldY/Y % change (both axes)
Global nominal
GDPGlobal
corporate profits
94
96
98
100
102
104
106
108
110
2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016
Source: National statistics offices, Haver Analytics. Q3 2016.
Employment growth in the developed worldIndex (Q1 2006 = 100)
United States
Japan
Eurozone
United Kingdom
24%
26%
28%
30%
32%
34%
36%
38%
'71 '74 '77 '80 '83 '86 '89 '92 '95 '98 '01 '04 '07 '10 '13 '16
Source: Barclays Research. October 2016.
Erosion of the political centerVote share, average of developed world countries
Center right
Center left
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“True Believer” central banks have created unprecedented distortions in government bond markets. Bond purchases and negative policy rates by the ECB and Bank of Japan led to negative government bond yields. Whatever their benefits may be, they also resulted in profit weakness and stock price underperformance of European and Japanese banks. The poor performance of European and Japanese financials was a driver of lower relative equity returns in both regions in 2015/20162.
For the last few years, I have written about a preference for an equity portfolio that’s overweight the US and Emerging Markets, and underweight Europe and Japan3. This has been one of the most consistently beneficial investment strategies I’ve seen since joining J.P. Morgan in 1987 (see chart below, right). It worked again in 2016, and despite the negative consequences of rising interest rates and a rising dollar for US and EM assets, I think it makes sense to maintain this regional barbell for another year as Europe and Japan once again snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
2 Eurozone and Japanese bank stocks rallied sharply in Q3 2016, mostly a reflection of steepening yield curves which portend improved bank profitability. As the ECB gradually slows bond purchases in 2017, Eurozone bank stocks could rise further. However, the rest of the Eurozone markets might suffer with less stimulative conditions.
3 Computations are based on an all-equity portfolio that is overweight the US by 10%, underweight Europe by 10%, overweight EM by 5% and underweight Japan by 5%. All overweights and underweights are expressed relative to prevailing MSCI index weights.
Ger
man
y
Net
herla
nds
Swed
en
Finl
and
Aust
ria
Irela
nd
Fran
ce
Belg
ium
Den
mar
k
Spai
n
Italy
Portu
gal
Euro
zone
cou
ntrie
s
Japa
n0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, JPMAM. December 15, 2016.
Government bonds trading below 0% yield% of total government bonds by market value
-0.5%
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: Bloomberg, JPMAM. Q3 2016.
Bank earnings in the developed worldTrailing 12-month earnings as a % of risk-weighted assets
Non-Eurozone Europe
US
Japan
Eurozone
-40%
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
10%
20%
Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16
Source: Bloomberg, MSCI. December 28, 2016.
Eurozone and Japanese banks have underperformedCumulative total return, US$
MSCI World
MSCI Eurozone banks
MSCI Japan banks
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015Source: Bloomberg, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Dec. 15, 2016. Portfolio is quarterly rebalanced and assumes no currency hedging.
Benefits of overweighting US/EM, underweighting Europe/Japan, 3-year rolling out (under) performance
INT
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We had a single digit portfolio return view for 2015 and 2016 (which is how things turned out), and we’re extending that view to 2017 as well. There are some positive leading indicators which I will get to in a minute, but first, the headwinds:
While global consumer spending has held up, global business fixed investment remains weak, in part a consequence of the end of the commodity super-cycle and slower Chinese growth
We expect the emerging market recovery to be gradual, particularly if Trump policies lead to substantially higher interest rates and a higher US dollar
We expect a near-term US growth boost (amount to be determined based on the composition of tax cuts, infrastructure spending and deregulation), but trend growth still looks to be just 1.0% in Japan and 2.0% in Europe
The global productivity conundrum continues, leaving many unanswered questions in its wake4
Even though private sector debt service levels are low, high absolute amounts of debt may constrain the strength of any business or consumer-led recovery
4 Is productivity mis-measured since economists can’t measure benefits of new technology? This is a complicated question, but the short answer is “I don’t think so”. I read two papers on the subject in 2016, one from the Fed/IMF and the second from the University of Chicago. In the first paper, the authors state that “we find little evidence that the [productivity] slowdown arises from growing mismeasurement of the gains from innovation in IT-related goods and services”. And in the second, the authors conclude as follows: “evidence suggests that the case for the mismeasurement hypothesis faces real hurdles when confronted with the data”. One smoking gun: the productivity slowdown is similar across countries regardless of the level of their ICT penetration (information and communication technology).
0.0%
0.2%
0.4%
0.6%
0.8%
1.0%
1.2%
1.4%
1.6%
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Hun
dred
s
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. Q3 2016.
Components of global real GDPPercentage point contribution to Y/Y real GDP growth
Consumer spending
Fixed investment
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. Q3 2016. Dotted lines show GDP growth estimates through Q4 2017.
Stable, slow global growthY/Y real GDP growth
Emerging markets
Developed markets
-4%-3%-2%-1%0%1%2%3%4%5%
'02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC. Q3 2016. EM excludes India and China.
The global productivity slowdownProductivity proxy (change in output per unit of employment)
DM
EM
15.0%
15.5%
16.0%
16.5%
17.0%
17.5%
18.0%
130%
140%
150%
160%
170%
180%
1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015
Hun
dred
s
Hun
dred
s
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, BIS, IMF. Q2 2016.
Developed world private sector debtDebt to GDP Debt service to income
Debt to GDP
Debt service ratio
INT
RO
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And finally, even before Trump takes office, we’re already seeing a rise in protectionism as globaltrade stagnates. The degree to which Trump follows through on campaign proposals on trade is amajor question mark for 2017
So, with all of that, why do we see 2017 as another year of modest portfolio gains despite the length of the current global expansion, one of the longest in history? As 2016 came to a close, global business surveys improved to levels consistent with 3% global GDP growth, suggesting that corporate profits will start growing at around 10% again after a weak 2016. More positive news: a rise in industrial metals prices, which is helpful in spotting turns in the business cycle (see Special Topic #8).
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015Source: Center for Economic and Policy Research. July 2016.
Global rise in trade protectionism# of discriminatory trade measures
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%
60%
'60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15
Source: World Bank. 2015.
Global trade stagnant for the last decade% of world GDP
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
4.0%
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Haver Analytics. November 2016.
Global business surveys (PMI) point to higher growthOutput PMI, 50+ = expansion Q/Q % change, annualized
PMI survey
GDP growth
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016Source: Bloomberg. December 15, 2016. Index tracks aluminum, copper, zinc, nickel and lead.
Industrial metals prices are stabilizingIndex level
INT
RO
DU
CT
ION
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Furthermore (and I understand that there’s plenty of disagreement on the benefits of this), many developed countries are transitioning from “monetary stimulus only” to expansionary fiscal policy as well. Political establishments are aware of mortal threats to their existence, and are looking to fiscal stimulus (or at least, less austerity) as a means of getting people back to work. The problem: given low productivity growth and low growth in labor supply, many countries are closer to full capacity than you might think. If so, too much fiscal stimulus could result in wage inflation and higher interest rates faster than you might think as well. That is certainly one of the bigger risks for the US.
So, to sum up, here’s what we think 2017 looks like:
• A modest growth bounce in the US from somepersonal and corporate tax cuts, deregulationand infrastructure spending, with tighter labormarkets, rising interest rates and a strongerdollar eventually taking some wind out of theUS economy’s sails. If I’m underestimatingsomething, it might be the potential increase inconfidence, spending and business activityresulting from a slowdown in the pace ofgovernment regulation (see chart, right, andpage 13)
• A little better in Europe and Japan in 2017, but no major breakout from recent growth trends
• China grows close to stated goals, supported by multiple government bazookas firing at once
• Emerging markets ex-China continue recovering after balance of payments adjustments; whilecountries with high exposure to dollar financing will struggle, overall risks around a rising dollar havefallen markedly since 2011
• The world grows a little faster in 2017 than in 2016, but as shown above, a lot of that is already inthe price of developed market equities. So, another single digit portfolio year ahead
Michael Cembalest J.P. Morgan Asset Management
-0.75%
-0.50%
-0.25%
0.00%
0.25%
0.50%
Japan Eurozone US UK Canada Australia China
2010-16 average Forward estimate
Source: Bridgewater Associates. August 2016.
Fiscal policy projected to easeGovernment impact on growth
0.6x
0.8x
1.0x
1.2x
1.4x
1.6x
'04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16 '17
Forward 12 months Trailing 12 months
Source: IBES, Datastream, Bloomberg, JPMAM. December 15, 2016.
US, Europe and Japan equity valuationsCombined price-to-sales ratio on MSCI US, Europe and Japan equities, ex-financials and energy
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16 '17
Source: World Bank Doing Business, JPMAM. October 2016. N = 189.
"Ease of starting a new business": in the US, getting less easy, US percentile rank relative to world and OECD
US vs. World
US vs. OECD
Easier
Harder
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1Investment products: Not FDIC insured • No bank guarantee • May lose value
2017 Eye on the Market Outlook: Table of Contents Chapter links
Executive Summary: True Believers Page 1
United States: what will Trumpism look like in practice? Page 7
A modest growth boost from corporate tax cuts and deregulation, as Trump is only able to deliver on parts of his proposed agenda; tighter labor markets, a stronger dollar and higher interest rates cool things off in the latter half of the year
Europe: modest recovery, underperforming corporate sector and a heavy political calendar Page 14
Ignore the politics for now, it’s the growth dynamics that constrain upside for investors; Europe should muddle along at 2% growth for another year, but is fundamentally changed compared to its pre-crisis self
Japan: delusions of inflationary grandeur Page 20
Much ado about nothing: Abenomics is not delivering the goods. Japanese equities remain a one-trick pony linked to the fortunes of the Yen
China: stabilization, courtesy of coordinated stimulus Page 21
After a blizzard of stimulus from multiple sources in 2015, China stabilized last year after consecutive years of weakening data. Markets are getting closer to pricing in the realities and constraints China now faces
Emerging markets ex-China: recovering from balance of payment adjustments Page 24
Concerns about a rising dollar and protectionism are justified, but the sensitivity to a rising dollar has declined sharply since 2010 through restructuring and capital spending adjustments; buy on weakness in 2017
Special topics Page 26
Leverage What amount of leverage can survive a world of volatile markets? Now that the window for low-cost borrowing may be closing, we look at history and the future
Active management The end of “peak central bank intervention” may reduce distortions and help active managers
LNG Rising US natural gas prices due to large-scale US LNG exports? Unlikely on both counts. What Dep’t of Energy LNG export approvals mean, and what they don’t
Tax efficient investing How to simultaneously employ tax loss harvesting and generate market returns
Infrastructure The role for public-private partnerships: PPPs have their critics, but the Obama administration is not among them. When should investors participate?
Clean coal/CCS The biggest problem with “clean coal”: scope. Infrastructure required to make carbon capture and storage a meaningful contributor is vastly underestimated
Internet-based business models
How helpful have user growth metrics been in assessing new internet-based business models? Not very
Commodity prices Markets are looking past inventory gluts given huge declines in capex; remembering the commodity surge of the 1970s and Richard Nixon
Sources and acronyms Page 40
Brief videos of Michael discussing each of these special topics are available on the True Believers webpage.
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United States: what will Trumpism look like in practice?
While S&P 500 EPS growth was up 4% in Q3 2016 (8% ex-energy), some of that growth was driven by debt-fueled stock buybacks as companies re-engineered balance sheets rather than upgrading fixed assets. Q3 2016 revenue growth was lower: 2%, and 4% ex-energy.
A healthier labor market is good news, but rising wage inflation may create pressure on the Fed to normalize rates faster than markets expect. There’s rising pressure on profit margins, since pricing power is still weak; higher wages need to translate into spending gains for equities to sustain end-of-year gains.
50%
75%
100%
125%
150%
'09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16*
Source: Goldman Sachs Research. Q3 2016.
Dividends and buybacks increasing...% of net income
5.5
6.0
6.5
7.0
7.5
'09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16*
...and age of company assetsMedian asset age, # of years
*Trailing 12-months through Q3 2016.
1.10x
1.20x
1.30x
1.40x
1.50x
1.60x
1.70x
1.80x
'09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16*
...along with leverage...Net debt to EBITDA multiple
Universe for all charts: Russell 1000 ex-financials.
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015Source: BLS, BEA, FRB Atlanta, JPMAM. Note: prior to 2010, average hourly earnings are only for production and nonsupervisory workers. Nov 2016.
Measures of US inflationY/Y % change, 3-month average
Average hourly earningsMedian wages
Employment cost index
Core CPI & Core PCE1.0%
1.1%
1.2%
1.3%
1.4%
1.5%1.6%
1.7%
1.8%
1.9%
1.3%
1.5%
1.8%
2.0%
2.3%
2.5%
2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015
Hun
dred
s
Hun
dred
s
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Haver Analytics. October 2016.
Signs of a healthy US labor market% of labor force, 3-month average
Firing rate
Voluntary quit rate
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 2016
Hun
dred
s
Source: NFIB, Cornerstone Macro, Haver Analytics. November 2016.
Margin pressure building for US small businesses3-month average
Net % raising prices
Net % raising wages
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019
Source: Bloomberg, Federal Reserve, JPMAM. December 16, 2016.
Market currently expecting a slower rate hike cycle than the median FOMC member, Fed funds target rate
Market
Median FOMC member
UN
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D
ST
AT
ES
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Here’s another way to look at it: employment, housing and consumer activity are doing OK, but businesses remain cautious, even with all-time lows in real interest rates. That yields trend GDP growth of around 2.5%. Fiscal multipliers from government spending are much higher than for tax cuts, so we will have to see what policy mix emerges before making substantial changes to our US growth expectations. The outcome of the infrastructure debate (direct government spending financed through taxes on offshore profits vs. public-private partnerships; see Special Topic #5) will affect our answer.
-20%
-15%
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
-5%-4%-3%-2%-1%0%1%2%3%4%5%
'60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15
Source: BLS, BEA, Haver Analytics. November 2016.
Divergence between employment and investmentY/Y % change (both axes)
Employment
Real business fixed investment
-3%
-2%
-1%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
'96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16H
undr
eds
Source: BEA, Haver Analytics, JPMAM. Q3 2016.
US consumer activityPCE contribution to real GDP growth, 2-quarter average
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
7%
8%
'50 '55 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Haver Analytics. Q3 2016.
US private residential investment% of GDP
Fed gov goods/service purchasesDirect infrastructure
Transfers to state/local (non-infra)Transfer payments to individuals
One-time payments to retirees
2 yr tax cut lower/middle income
1 yr tax cut higher income
Homebuyer credit
Corporate tax cut
0.0x 0.5x 1.0x 1.5x 2.0x 2.5x
Source: Congressional Budget Office. February 2015.
What helps GDP growth the most?Estimated fiscal multiplier range
Tax cuts Spending
3%
4%
5%
6%
7%
8%
8090
100110120130140150160170180
'00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Hun
dred
s
Source: Natl Assoc. of Realtors, Bloomberg. December 28, 2016.
Risks for housing from higher ratesIndex (Jan. 2000 = 100) Mortgage rate
30-year mortgage rate
Housing affordability index
UN
ITE
D
S
TA
TE
S
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The big question for 2017: how will Trump policies affect this backdrop? Financial markets appear to be pricing in a benign “American Enterprise Institute Presidency”:
Plenty of deregulation (healthcare, energy, finance, internet5, etc)
Corporate tax cuts and little disruption from some very transformational tax proposals
A small amount of personal tax reform that creates a modestly larger budget deficit, but nota massive one
Limited (if any) action on trade, tariffs and deportations of undocumented workers
Large military expansion combined with an isolationist foreign policy
Infrastructure financed through taxes on offshore profits and public-private partnerships
Gradual, non-disruptive dismantling of the Affordable Care Act
Given all of the above, a modestly higher and steeper yield curve that’s great for banks, butnot high enough to derail the housing expansion or worsen corporate debtor solvency
Whether this benign view is accurate or not is the big question for 2017. The right mix could be stimulative, adding 0.2% to 0.4% to GDP growth without much damage. But too much emphasis on tax cuts, government spending or tariffs could result in large budget deficits, higher interest rates, a spike in the dollar, rising Federal debt ratios (and a possible ratings downgrade) and higher inflation. There are a lot of tea leaves to read, since the outcome depends on the President-elect’s intentions, the disposition of House/Senate majority leaders and the degree to which Democrats filibuster Trump policies.
The charts below show estimates of the deficit and debt consequences of Trump tax and spending plans assuming they’re enacted in full, but I don’t think that’s a good central scenario. I think we will end up somewhere in between, with a mix of infrastructure spending (in sizes way below figures Trump has cited), corporate tax cuts, small personal tax cuts (if any), some trade restrictions on Mexico, deregulation of healthcare/financials/energy, a modestly higher budget deficit and 3%+ on the 10-year Treasury by the end of 2017. Higher interest rates create risks for housing and P/E multiples more broadly, but the impact on corporate income statements should be gradual given the weighted average maturity of S&P debt at 10.4 years, only 14% of which is floating rate.
5 In November, we wrote about a potential shift at the Federal Communications Commission to end net neutrality, and its impact on content providers and cable companies/internet service providers. This ecosystem represents 12% of the stock market. Substantial changes could happen, and happen fast: https://www.jpmorgan.com/directdoc/eotmfccease.pdf.
-$7.0
-$6.0
-$5.0
-$4.0
-$3.0
-$2.0
-$1.0
$0.0
Tax Policy Center Tax Foundation
Static
Dynamic
Source: Tax Policy Center (October 2016), Tax Foundation (September 2016).Note: assumes income from pass-through entities is taxed at corporate rates.
Estimated impact of Trump tax plan on budget deficitTen-year cumulative revenue impact , USD trillions
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
120%
'40 '45 '50 '55 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15 '20 '25
Source: CBO, Tax Policy Center, Haver, JPMAM. October 2016.
Federal debt held by the public and the impact of the Trump tax plan, % of GDP
CBO baseline
TPC estimate based on Trump tax plan
Wh
at m
arke
ts a
re p
rici
ng
in
UN
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When combining our base case scenario with pre-existing conditions and current equity valuations, 2017 looks to me like a year of single digit profits growth and equity market returns (i.e., 6%-8%). However, there are substantial changes taking place underneath the hood. The second chart shows some of the changing fortunes in the US equity market since the election.
Some market factors have been improving since the US Presidential election:
Value stocks (with low P/E ratios), such as banks and industrials (presumed beneficiaries of a steeperyield curve, deregulation and greater infrastructure investment)
Companies with high tax rates (given the prospects for corporate tax reform)
Companies with high domestic sales (given the possibility of rising tariffs and trade disputesnegatively affecting multinational stocks; see next page)
Higher operating leverage (given the prospects for modestly higher economic growth)
Stocks with low dividends and higher volatility (since higher interest rates could reduce the frenzy forbond proxy stocks)
Many of these factors have further to run given how distorted market preferences had become due to zero interest rates and the scarcity of organic revenue growth. Once these market factors began to shift in Q3 2016, excess returns in actively managed large-cap, mid-cap and small-cap equity mutual funds improved6, a possible sign that Fed-induced distortions have been negatively impacting active manager performance (for more on active management prospects, see Special Topic #2).
While the markets look to us to have already priced in corporate tax reform, the details are not clear yet, and some proposals are quite transformational. While lower statutory rates are a commonly stated goal (a corporate tax rate of 25% could lift S&P earnings by 8%-10%), there are a lot of details to sort out. The House GOP proposal entails fairly radical changes in the corporate tax code. We wrote about it at the end of December in a detailed note; here’s a summary.
The elimination of interest deductibility, and the ability to immediately expense capital expenditures7
Imports would no longer be deductible, and exports would be exempt from taxation (a step whichwould raise revenue on a net basis and support a reduction in the statutory rate)
One-time tax of 10% or less applied to accumulated, non-repatriated offshore profits
6 J.P. Morgan Securities Equity Strategy and Quantitative Research, November 21, 2016. 7 Most versions of these proposals grandfather deductibility of existing debt, and create carve-outs for financial firms. But what does this mean for short-term obligations like commercial paper; would they no longer be deductible when rolled? Unclear. Note that immediate expensing of capital expenditures for tax purposes is only a timing benefit, and nothing more.
5x
10x
15x
20x
25x
30x
35x
40x
45x
'50 '55 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15
Source: Shiller, S&P, Haver, Bloomberg, JPMAM. December 15, 2016.
US equity valuation: cyclically adjusted P/E ratioPrice to 10-year trailing real earnings
-12%-10%-8%-6%-4%-2%0%2%4%6%8%
10%
Highvolatility
Value(Low P/E)
Highcorporate
taxes
Highoperatingleverage
Highdomestic
sales
Lowdividend
yield
Jan 2016 to electionSince election
Source: RBC Capital Markets. December 9, 2016. Universe: S&P 500.
Shift in the US equity market since the electionPerformance of top third vs. bottom third exposure to factor
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While in the long run these policies could eliminate distortions in the tax code, encourage capital spending, reduce excessive leverage and reduce incentives to shelter income or move HQ offshore through tax inversions, the adjustment period could be disruptive. There are likely to be winners and losers from such changes, particularly if the dollar does not rally as expected by some economists8.
On trade, domestically-oriented stocks should get the benefit of the doubt. The President has varying degrees of unilateral influence on trade policy. While campaign promises of across-the-board tariffs of 35% and 45% are unlikely, I believe Trump will take steps which raise tariffs on foreign goods. The risk: more expensive imports and a profit squeeze at import-dependent companies. The Peterson Institute modeled a “full trade war” by assuming that the US imposes 35% tariffs on Mexico and 45% on China, and that these countries retaliate in kind with similar tariffs. The result: roughly stagnant real US GDP for three years, from 2017-2020. The last time that happened: 1979-1982, a period of economic malaise, high unemployment and fragile financial markets. Again, I think the full trade war scenario is highly unlikely, even considering the unilateral power the President has to provoke one.
Rising interest rates should help banks, whose share prices have been negatively impacted by falling rates and a flatter yield curve since 2010. The perception of a changing regulatory environment is also contributing to rising bank valuations, which are still well below pre-crisis levels.
The technology sector outlook is mixed. While higher global growth should help, a higher dollar and trade barriers could hurt since the tech sector has the highest percentage of foreign sales. Tech also has the lowest effective tax rate, reducing relative benefits from any corporate tax reform. The underperformance of tech stocks vs. the market since the election may also reflect rotation out of heavily crowded positions into under-owned bank and industrial names.
8 The elimination of import deductibility is assumed by some economists to result in no disadvantages for importers, or material changes to trade flows, since the dollar is assumed to rally in such a scenario by an amount equal to the value of the foregone tax deductibility of imported goods. If the policy were adopted under a 20% corporate tax rate regime, it would require a roughly 25% appreciation (!!) of the US dollar, pushing it to its highest level since 1990. As I type this, I’m imagining all the ways that real life could intrude on this assumption. For example: will this work in a world of fixed and managed exchange rates of US trading partners? If for whatever reason, exchange rate adjustments do not work as planned, the following sectors have the highest degree of import content, and stand to be hurt the most: apparel, computers, autos and electrical equipment.
Another remarkable thing about destination-basis taxation: some people like it explicitly because they believe that it is protectionist, and other people like it because they resolutely believe that it’s not.
-80%
-60%
-40%
-20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
'30 '35 '40 '45 '50 '55 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15
Source: Empirical Research Partners. November 2016.
Since 2010, bank stocks hurt by lower ratesCorrelation of relative returns with the total return of treasuries
0.6x
0.8x
1.0x
1.2x
1.4x
1.6x
1.8x
2.0x
2.2x
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: MSCI, Datastream, JPMAM. December 15, 2016.
US bank valuationsPrice-to-book value ratio
SectorForeign
SalesEffective Tax Rate Sector
Foreign Sales
Effective Tax Rate
Tech 59% 21.2% Cons Disc 27% 28.5%Materials 49% 25.3% Health Care 20% 24.6%Energy 41% 25.9% Financials 18% 27.9%Industrials 36% 28.1% Utilities 6% 31.7%Staples 28% 29.5% Telecom 1% 28.0%Source: Compustat, Deutsche Bank. 2015.
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Policy changes are also afoot in healthcare. The internals of the Affordable Care Act are unstable (sharply rising premiums and deductibles, falling number of insurers on state exchanges), and remind me of the video of the undulation and ultimate collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in the 1940s. The GOP controls many of the legislative levers needed to change/repeal it. What might the future look like? As per Ryan’s plan, it could be composed of tax credits to purchase private health insurance, interstate competition and Medicaid grants. The proposal eliminates employer and individual mandates, and widens allowable premium variation based on age from 3:1 to 5:1 to encourage younger, healthier people to participate. Most likely timeline: implementation after the 2018 midterm elections.
Should the GOP make changes to the Affordable Care Act, insurers, biotech and large-cap pharma could benefit at the expense of hospitals and medical device companies. As shown below, on a broad sector basis, healthcare valuations are close to the lowest levels relative to the overall market since 1990.
Biotech stocks plummeted in 2015 when Clinton indicated that she would act on multiple fronts after Turing’s price increase on Daraprim. Her plan included (a) creation of a drug pricing oversight committee with the ability to impose fines, (b) acceleration of FDA generic approvals9 and (c) approval of emergency imports. Trump also commented on the need to rein in drug price increases, but if his solutions are focused on (b) and (c) and not (a), the market impact may be smaller. If so, biotech may recover some of what was lost in the prior couple of years when its valuations converged to large-cap pharma.
9 In 2015 and 2016, pending FDA approvals were 6x-8x the rate of actual FDA approvals.
0.7x
0.8x
0.9x
1.0x
1.1x
1.2x
1.3x
1.4x
1.5x
1.6x
'90 '92 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16
Source: Bloomberg, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. December 15, 2016.
Healthcare versus the marketPrice-to-forward earnings ratio relative to S&P 500, 3-month average
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
100
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Source: Bloomberg, Twitter, Time, JPMAM. December 28, 2016.
Nasdaq Biotech performance following Clinton and Trump comments, 100 = index level on day before comment
Clinton (September 21, 2015)
Trump (December 7, 2016)
Days after comment on drug prices5x
15x
25x
35x
45x
55x
65x
'88 '90 '92 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16
Source: Morgan Stanley Research. December 15, 2016.
Biotechnology and pharmaceutical stocks priced at similar levels, Price-to-forward earnings ratio
US pharmaceuticals
US biotechnology
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What about a Clinton Presidency?
There are multiple pathways by which Trump policies could result in adverse outcomes given deficit and tariff issues, and his lack of experience. Still, it’s also worth thinking about the counter-factual: how would a Clinton administration have delivered a positive jolt to an aging, highly indebted US economy that has lost its productivity mojo, and whose entitlement payments are increasingly crowding out discretionary spending that contributes to future growth10? Clinton’s agenda included high frequency trading fees and risk fees on banks; a drug pricing oversight committee with the ability to impose fines and penalties; regulations impeding corporate tax inversions11; regulations on a variety of niche for-profit industries; Federal support for labeling guidelines and soda/sugar taxes; further Medicaid expansion; new regulations on paid leave; revised energy efficiency standards; expansion of insurance coverage requirements; and policies Clinton described as effectively eliminating hydraulic fracturing, even though she also described natural gas as a bridge fuel to a renewable energy future in one of the debates.
While each proposal has its merits, they would have further expanded the regulatory footprint of the Federal Government. Compared to B. Clinton and G. W. Bush, the pace of Obama regulation was considerably faster, a trend which has been affecting small business sentiment. As the business cycle ages, productivity becomes more important as a means of preventing inflation. It’s unclear how Secretary Clinton’s regulatory agenda would have helped on this front.
10 Examples of discretionary spending: job training/worker dislocation programs; Federal spending on education; consumer and occupational health and safety; Federal law enforcement/judiciary; pollution control and abatement; air, ground, water infrastructure; US Army Corps of Engineers; science research, NASA; energy R&D demonstration projects; NIH/CDC spending on disease control and bioterrorism; international drug control and law enforcement. 11 See our December 20, 2016 Eye on the Market for more on corporate tax inversions, and the House GOP proposal for a destination-based cash flow corporate tax as a means of reducing the incentive to engineer them.
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
3.5x
4.0x
4.5x
5.0x
5.5x
6.0x
6.5x
'67 '70 '73 '76 '79 '82 '85 '88 '91 '94 '97 '00 '03 '06 '09 '12 '15
Hun
dred
s
Source: BLS, Social Security Administration, OMB, JPMAM. Nov. 2016.
Fewer active workers relative to retirees and rising debtRatio of active to retired workers Federal debt to GDP
Active to retired workers
Debt to GDP
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
14%
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025
Source: CBO, JPMAM. March 2016. Dotted lines are CBO projections.
Entitlement and non-defense discretionary spending% of GDP, with ratio of entitlement to non-defense spending
Non-defense discretionary spending
Entitlement spending
3.2x1.0x
Current
Budget Control Act
050
100150200250300350400450500
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Fall 2016 Unified AgendaPresident ObamaPresident BushPresident Clinton
Source: George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center. 2016.
Cumulative number of economically significant regulations published during equivalent periods in office
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
1986 1990 1994 1998 2002 2006 2010 2014
Hun
dred
s
Source: NFIB, Haver Analytics, JPMAM. November 2016.
What's the largest problem facing small business?% of respondents, 6-month average
Taxes Poor sales
Quality of labor
Regulation
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Europe: a modest recovery, an underperforming corporate sector and a heavy political calendar Europe’s economy is stable, but trend growth is still well below pre-crisis levels. While business surveys have been in expansion territory since the beginning of 2015 and consumer confidence has risen, all of this simply corresponds to GDP growth of around 2.0%. The growth news is better in Spain (3% in Q3 2016), but at just 10% of Eurozone profits, GDP and employment, let’s not get carried away with its overall importance. While Italy has its problems (see box) and 50% of Italian bank retail bonds mature in 2017, I expect Italy and the European Commission to find ways of avoiding an unwanted banking crisis by coming up with a variety of accommodations.
40
45
50
55
60
65
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: Markit, Haver Analytics. December 2016.
Eurozone business surveys: manufacturing/servicesComposite output PMI, Index (50+ = expansion), 3-month average
France
Italy Germany
Spain
-35%
-30%
-25%
-20%
-15%
-10%
-5%
0%
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: European Commission, Haver Analytics, JPMAM. December 2016.
Eurozone consumer confidenceNet balance of positive and negative response
Average since 1985
-6%
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
4%
6%
1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
Source: Eurostat, Bloomberg, J.P. Morgan Securities, Haver. Actual data through Q3 2016; dots are consensus estimates for Q1 and Q3 2017.
Eurozone real GDP growth: cresting at 2%?Y/Y % change, history extended from individual countries
La Forza del Destino. The Italian referendum “no” vote reduced the likelihood of Italy enacting structural reforms to close its productivity gap with Germany. A short list of Italy’s problems include the weakest growth and productivity trends in the region; slow uptake of information and communication technology (Italy ranks alongside Romania and Bulgaria); a high share of small and medium-size enterprises which limits economies of scale, particularly compared to the UK, Germany and France; labor market rigidities, low labor participation rates, inefficiency of public administration, archaic legal treatment of non-performing loans, etc, etc.
In last year’s Outlook, we showed some broad measures of economic vibrancy and competitiveness by country. The gap between Italy and Germany was around the same as the gap between Mexico and the US. Currency unions make strange bedfellows.
EU
RO
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Bank lending has picked up now that the ECB has provided banks with incentives to lend, but still, this is another Eurozone trend that’s growing at just 2%. The charts below on bank lending are perhaps the best way of understanding how the Eurozone is fundamentally changed compared to its pre-crisis self: much less reliance on explosive growth in household and corporate borrowing in the European periphery. When I look at Italy and Spain from 2005 to 2008, it brings to mind a sentiment attributed to Marcel Proust: “Remembrance of things past is not necessarily a remembrance of things as they were”12. The mid-decade surge in Southern European growth was never as real as it seemed, and was built on the faulty edifice of monetary union among countries with radically different growth and productivity characteristics.
Fiscal stimulus in Germany might help, but I’m not sure how much we will see. Germany’s Council of Economic Experts wrote in its annual report to Merkel that “the extent of monetary easing is no longer appropriate”, and that “additional fiscal stimulus is currently not appropriate” either. While German home prices are rising after a couple of decades of stability, German wage growth and other inflation measures are stable. As a result, when it chooses to, the ECB should be able to slowly step back from its stimulus campaign, rather than abruptly. Still, it’s striking to see the continued outperformance of Germany vs. France, which is not a healthy dynamic between the Eurozone’s two largest countries.
12 Proust was a Neuroscientist, J. Lehrer, 2007.
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: European Central Bank, Haver Analytics. October 2016.
Eurozone bank lending to householdsY/Y % change, adjusted for loan sales and securitizations
Germany
France
SpainItaly
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: European Central Bank, Haver Analytics. October 2016.
Eurozone bank lending to non-financial corporationsY/Y % change, adjusted for loan sales and securitizations
Germany
France
Spain
Italy
-2%
-1%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: Bundesbank, Statistisches Bundesamt, Haver, JPMAM. Q3 2016.
German inflation showing up in housing, but not in wages or prices, Y/Y % change
Unit labor cost
GDP deflator
House prices
Hourly wages
0.90
0.95
1.00
1.05
1.10
1.15
1.20
1.25
1850 1865 1880 1895 1910 1925 1940 1955 1970 1985 2000 2015Source: "Statistics on World Population, GDP and Per Capita GDP", University of Groningen, Conference Board, JPMAM. May 2016.
Germany vs. France real per capita GDP, 1850-2016Germany divided by France, ratio
EU
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European equities underperformed again in 2016, culminating in its worst decade of relative performance vs. the US since we can track both series in 1970. This outcome has tempted many strategists to recommend Europe as a non-consensus pick every year over the last few years. However, Europe’s underperformance is almost entirely explained by inferior corporate results, rather than by pessimistic pricing of European equities:
Earnings. Over the last 10 years, Europe posted its worst EPS growth vs. the US since the 1970s. Anillustrative data point: through November, European EPS was still 46% below its pre-crisis peak, whileUS EPS was 10% higher. Europe has lagged the US on every component of profitability since 2007,particularly stock buybacks
Return on equity. Europe’s relative return on equity is also close to the lowest levels since the 1970s.Currently, the ROE of the median European industry group is 4.4% lower than its US counterpart. Of24 industry groups, only 3 have ROEs which are higher in Europe than in the US (the largest positivedifference in favor of Europe is for a sector that only has a 0.5% index weight)
Multiples. Despite all of this, European P/E multiples are actually not trading at much of a discountvs. US equities (less than 1 P/E point lower during November and December 2016)
-50%
-25%
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
Source: MSCI, Datastream, JPMAM. December 15, 2016.
Europe vs. US: equity performance10-year rolling relative equity performance, local currency
Europe underperforms
Europe outperforms
-75%
-50%
-25%
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
125%
1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016
Source: MSCI, Datastream, JPMAM. November 2016.
Europe vs. US: earnings per share growth10-year rolling relative EPS growth
Europe underperforms
Europe outperforms
Com
m S
erv
Pha
rma
Insu
ranc
eE
nerg
yU
tiliti
esS
oftw
are
Hou
seh.
Pro
dH
ealth
care
Con
s D
urB
anks
Rea
l Est
ate
Cap
Goo
dsFo
od R
etai
lM
edia
Food
& B
evD
iv F
inM
ater
ials
Tele
com
ms
Ret
ailin
gS
emis
Tran
spor
tA
utos
Tech
Har
dwar
eC
ons
Ser
v
-20%
-15%
-10%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
Source: MSCI, Bloomberg, JPMAM. November 2016.
Europe vs. US: return on equityDifference in ROE by sector, Europe minus US
-30% -20% -10% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40%
Sales Growth
Operating Margins
Depreciation
Cost Of Debt
Amount Of Debt
Non-Operating Income
Effective Tax Rate
Buybacks
Source: MSCI, Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research. June 2016. Excluding commodities and financials.
Europe vs. US: profitability componentsContribution to earnings per share growth since 2007
USEurope
Cumulative EPS growth since 2007: US: 78%Europe: -27%
EU
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What about European politics?
For active readers of Eye on the Market, you’re probably aware of our research indicating that politics (whether local or global) tend not to have a large impact on markets. That’s why we generally pay more attention to the business cycle than to politics.
That said, half of the Eurozone’s population will vote in Presidential elections in 2017. If populist parties take control, it could result in heightened market volatility, since in addition to risks around Eurozone referendums, most European populist parties (unlike Trump) are generally not advocating deregulation, lower corporate tax rates and other pro-business policies as the core part of their agenda. To be clear, however, most of these parties are still in the minority and not on the cusp of being asked to be part of a majority government. Also, popular support for the Euro remains at 70%.
Why did anti-establishment parties emerge in Europe, despite recent economic improvements? First, the improvement is pretty modest if you look over a longer period. The chart (above, right) shows per capita GDP growth in France, Italy, Spain and Greece. The last few years have been terrible, similar to results seen during WWII, WWI, the Spanish Civil War (1930s), the Franco-Prussian War (1870s) and the Phylloxera epidemics in France (1880s) and Spain (1890s). Secondly, if we take Eurobarometer surveys at face value, Europeans are very concerned about immigration and the surge of asylum-seekers.
0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%35%40%45%50%
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Austria (Freedom Party)Netherlands (Party for Freedom)Italy (5-Star Movement)France (National Front)Spain (Podemos)Greece (Syriza)Germany (AfD)UK (UKIP)
Source: Various national polls. November 30, 2016.
Support for populist parties in Europe% of support in polls (3-month average)
-2%
-1%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
'55 '60 '65 '70 '75 '80 '85 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10 '15
Source: The Conference Board, JPMAM. May 2016.
French, Italian, Spanish, and Greek real GDP per capita7-year annualized % change, population-weighted
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Source: Eurobarometer. 2016.
What do you think are the two most important issues facing the EU?, % of respondents
ImmigrationEconomic situation
State of the memberstate's public
UnemploymentTerrorism
Crime0.00.20.40.60.81.01.21.41.61.82.0
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Source: Eurostat, Frontex, Pew. 2015.
Asylum-seekers and illegal migration to EuropeNumber of people, millions
EU ex-Germany asylum seekers
Asylum seekers in Germany
Illegal migration into the EU
EU
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At a client event we held in Paris last November, Henry Kissinger and I debated why Europe is doing little in the Middle East to slow the pace of asylum-seekers. We concluded that two factors help explain why: [1] gradual European disarmament (only 4 of 24 European countries are meeting NATO military spending targets), and [2] increasing European reliance on Russian oil and gas, which now accounts for almost as much energy as Europe produces for itself.
Bottom line on the Eurozone. 2% GDP growth, stable bank lending, a modestly steeper yield curve (which helps bank stocks), improved earnings at commodity companies and a weak Euro should deliver single digit earnings growth, and single digit growth in equities as well. If so, Europe should muddle through another year in 2017 without too much drama. The next big existential challenge for the Eurozone will probably be the Italian General election in late 2017/early 2018, assuming that the National Front13 does not win the French Presidential election in May 2017 (if it does, all bets are off). But to be clear, even if the Eurozone survives these challenges, it is fundamentally changed when compared to its pre-crisis self, a model which had relied on unsustainable leverage and consumption in the European periphery to drive growth and profitability.
13 For some French citizens, as my friend Louis Gave says, “the National Front is an intellectual descendant of Vichy France and not an acceptable option”. If Thatcherite candidate Francois Fillon is elected and is able to liberalize France’s labor laws (ending the 35-hour work week), cut corporate tax rates, reduce pension burdens on companies and abolish the wealth tax, there could be a positive market reaction.
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
2000 2013
Thou
sand
s
Manpower (mm)
0200400600800
1,0001,2001,4001,6001,8002,000
2000 2013
Combat aircraft
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
2000 2013
Warships
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
2000 2013
Battle tanksCombined forces: UK, Germany, Italy, France, Spain
Source: Roland Berger Strategy Consultants, Statista. 2013.
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
'80 '82 '84 '86 '88 '90 '92 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy, Gazprom, Eurostat, Perovic et al, JPMAM calculations. 2015.
European reliance on Russian oil and natural gasThousand barrels a day of oil equivalents
European oil and gas production
European oil and gas imports from Russia
EU
RO
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Brexit: the hard part lay ahead, but so far, UK economy holding up better than expected
It’s too soon to tell, but as I wrote before the vote, some commentary on Brexit seems overwrought. In much of the Brexit research I read, I can’t tell how much of the fears expressed by the authors are based on dispassionate assessments of the risks, and how much is based on their anger and frustration at the vote’s outcome.
After a prolonged period of de-industrialization, it will be hard for the UK to immediately reap the benefits of a weaker pound (which has further to fall in 2017, and which is already feeding into higher inflation). However, since Brexit, business surveys and commercial property enquiries bounced back from their initial swoon, retail sales are holding up and job listings reflect logical responses to a weaker pound. Measures of UK economic surprises rose sharply in November 2016, mostly since dire outcomes expected by many economists didn’t happen. Perhaps the most important thing to watch is business investment plans, which plummeted after the vote. More recently these plans have improved a little, as businesses wait and see what the deal with the EU will look like once Article 50 is triggered.
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
Source: Office for National Statistics, Haver Analytics, JPMAM. Q3 2016.
The gradual de-industrialization of the UKManufacturing as a % of total gross value added
UK ranks 30th out of 34 countries in
the OECD
45
50
55
60
65
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: Markit, Haver Analytics. November 2016.
UK business surveysPMI level, Index (50+ = expansion)
Services
Manufacturing
Construction Brexit
-2%
-1%
0%
1%
2%
3%4%
5%
6%
7%
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: UK Office for National Statistics, Haver Analytics. Nov. 2016.
UK retail sales volume growthY/Y % change, 3-month average
Brexit
Tota
l
Auto
mot
ive
Man
ufac
turin
g
Ret
ail
Bank
ing
-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%
10%15%20%25%30%
Source: Reed Job Index. Q3 2016.
Post-Brexit rebalancing in UK job market reflects impact of a weaker Pound, Y/Y growth in # of jobs advertised
EU
RO
PE
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Japan: delusions of inflationary grandeur
Abenomics was designed to reflate Japan. Inflation picked up in 2014, but then rolled over. While the Bank of Japan has been projecting higher inflation (brown dots, right chart), their forecasts have been way too optimistic. I’m not going to spend too much time this year dissecting all the Japanese data, since the core objective of Abenomics isn’t working.
For investors, I leave you with this. Where I grew up, every few years, insects called cicadas emerged after spending a decade or more underground, and then flew around for a few weeks before dying. In Japan, the cicada is known as the higurashi, and it’s a good metaphor for the Japanese equity market. The chart below (left) shows the benefits of overweighting Japanese equities and underweighting a mix of US, Europe and Emerging Markets equities14 since 1988. For a few short periods over the last 28 years, Japanese equities had their place in the sun, flying around for a while before submerging again. Otherwise, they weren’t really worth owning on a relative basis.
Renewed weakness in the Yen should help Japanese exporters in 2017, fiscal spending is rising, and investors may benefit from Japanese companies increasing buybacks and M&A (cash holdings in Japan are roughly 3x US levels as a % of market capitalization). I’d be comfortable with a neutral position in Japan in 2017 but not an overweight, since I don’t think 2017 will be the year of the higurashi, particularly if the Yen starts to rally again.
14 Computations are based on an all-equity portfolio that is overweight Japan by 7.5%, underweight the US by 3.5%, underweight Europe by 2.5% and underweight emerging markets by 1.5%. All overweights and underweights are expressed relative to prevailing MSCI index weights.
-1.5%
-1.0%
-0.5%
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
'10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: Japan MIC, Haver Analytics, JPMAM. November 2016.
Japanese core inflationY/Y % change, both adjusted for 2014 VAT
Ex-food and energy
Ex-fresh food
Prime Minister Abe elected
-1.5%
-1.0%
-0.5%
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
'10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16 '17 '18 '19
Source: Japan MIC, Bank of Japan, Haver Analytics, JPMAM. Nov. 2016.
Bank of Japan overestimated the inflationary benefits of quantitative easing, Y/Y % change, ex-fresh food
Adjusted for 2014 VAT
Prime Minister Abe elected
Forecast realizationYear forecast made
-14%
-12%
-10%
-8%
-6%
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 2015Source: Bloomberg, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Dec. 15, 2016. Portfolio is quarterly rebalanced and assumes no currency hedging.
Higurashi Moments: the benefits of overweighting Japan3-year rolling out (under) performance
Japan outperforms
Japan underperforms
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
¥75¥80¥85¥90¥95
¥100¥105¥110¥115¥120¥125
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: Bloomberg. December 16, 2016.
Japan equities and the Yen: a one-trick ponyExchange rate Index level
USD/Yen FX rate
MSCI Japan equities
JAP
AN
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CH
INA
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China: stabilization, courtesy of coordinated stimulus 2016 was a year of stabilization in China, and 2017 looks like it will be more of the same. As shown below (left), a massive, coordinated stimulus effort involving bank lending, government spending and fixed investment by state-owned enterprises took place towards the end of 2015. In response, the Chinese economy stabilized in 2016 (see 2nd chart on employment, exports, business surveys, corporate earnings, GDP, industrial production, retail sales, etc).
While stabilization is welcome, parts of China’s corporate sector are still highly indebted and suffering from both chronic overcapacity and an overvalued exchange rate. China’s corporate debt surge is now by some measures as large as the Japanese version of the 1980s. Some consequences: 25% of listed Chinese companies have cash flow that is less than the interest they owe to banks and bondholders15; and a meager 1.5% return on assets at state-owned enterprises. All things considered, and given the difficulties involved with running massive stimulus indefinitely, Chinese GDP growth is probably headed to 5.5%-6.0% by 2018.
15 “China – avoiding the Japanese sinkhole?”, Lombard Street Research, May 10, 2016.
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016Source: JPMS, PBOC, CNBS, Haver Analytics. March 2016.
Pump Up the VolumeY/Y % change
Government spending
Fixed asset investment: SOE
Total social financing
Mortgage lending
2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Source: CFLP, Markit, CC, PBOC, CNBS, MSCI, Haver, JPMAM. Nov 2016.
China: stabilization in 2016
Legend: employment surveys, exports, business conditions, GDP, corporate earnings, industrial production, retail sales, non-state owned enterprise fixed asset investment
70%80%90%
100%110%120%130%140%150%160%170%180%
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16
Source: Bank for Int'l Settlements, Haver, Gavekal, JPMAM. Q3 2016.
Corporate debt levels in ChinaNon-financial corporate debt, % of GDP
70
80
90
100
110
120
130
1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, Bloomberg. December 16, 2016.
Long-term appreciation of the Chinese RMBRMB real effective exchange rate index
Stronger
Weaker
REER: exchange rate index weighted by trading partner size, adjusted for inflation
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CH
INA
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The good news: markets have come closer to pricing in the realities of Chinese fundamentals. The premium for A shares (onshore stocks trading in Shanghai and Shenzhen) relative to H shares (Hong Kong-listed) has come down by half, indicating less of a frenzy in the local markets. Furthermore, margin balances declined sharply after the boom-bust fiasco in 2015, and institutional protections were put in place (higher reserve requirements, limits on structured finance vehicles). Finally, many of the circuit breakers and trading suspensions have been lifted. As a result, equity-raising has resumed in China, allowing many companies to recapitalize and pay down debt.
However, some remnants of China’s reaction to the 2015 equity market collapse remain: corruption investigations into “market manipulators” continue, regulators still tightly control the IPO market, and the government still appears to own a lot of the stock it bought as the equity market was declining. Eventually, the depth of the Chinese equity market should improve as domestic institutional investors such as pension funds increase their allocations. Currently, individuals still account for 80% of the trading and 70% of free float ownership.
Investors should also remember that the Chinese financial system is a work in progress, and that the government continues to clean up the shadow banking system. The government is currently imposing new capital charges and risk provisions on distributors of asset management products. Good news in the long run, but potentially destabilizing in the short run.
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
4,500
5,000
5,500
Jan-14 Jul-14 Jan-15 Jul-15 Jan-16 Jul-16
Source: National statistics offices, Bloomberg, JPMAM. December 16, 2016.
China: margin debt vs. onshore equity pricesPrice index level Outstanding margin debt, % of GDP
Margin debt
Index of onshore equity prices (CSI 300)
6x
10x
14x
18x
22x
26x
'04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: MSCI, Bloomberg, Datastream, JPMAM. December 16, 2016.
China price-to-earnings multiplesForward price-to-earnings ratio, equal weighted by sector
Offshore(H shares)
Onshore (A shares)
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CH
INA
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The gradual rebalancing of the Chinese economy should continue in 2017, with consumption growing relative to capital spending. Real incomes and real consumption are still growing at 6%-7% per year, and for investors, it’s worth paying attention to the continued rapid growth in the number of affluent Chinese households. One illustrative consequence: faster growth in SUV purchases than sedan purchases, faster growth in overseas travel, preference for fresh coffee (vs. instant) and maturation in the internet penetration rate at around 55%16.
For investors interested in China/Asia consumption, I always caution against looking to Chinese public equity markets as a way of expressing this view. In countries like China17, Taiwan and Hong Kong, the combined weight of consumer staple and consumer discretionary stocks is less than 10% of stock market capitalization. What makes more sense to me: a targeted strategy, either in public or private equity markets. As shown below, on an industry-wide basis, private equity and venture capital managers have outperformed public equity markets in Asia. Part of the explanation lay in manager decisions to overweight consumer-related companies and underweight state-owned enterprises, banks, heavy industry, airlines and utilities.
16 Gavekal Dragonomics Consumer Chartbook, November 2016. 17 This comment is based on the MSCI China Index, which includes H shares, B shares, Red chips and P chips.
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%
'00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15
Source: China National Bureau of Statistics. 2015.
Chinese household consumption expendituresShare of GDP & GDP growth, %
Share of GDP
Share of GDP growth0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
'95 '00 '05 '10 '15 '20 '25
Affluent (RMB136,000)
Established (RMB89,000)
Emerging (RMB54,000)
Below all 3 thresholds
Source: Gavekal Dragonomics Chinese Consumer Outlook, Nov. 2016.
Chinese households by wealth levelMillion households
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
14%
MSCIPacific
MSCIEM Asia
Asia DMPE & VC
Asia EMPE & VC
Source: Cambridge Associates LLC, MSCI, Bloomberg, JPMAM.
Private equity performance versus public equity in Asia 10-year annualized return through Q2 2016
China
China
India
India
South Korea
South Korea
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
Emerging MarketsPE/VC Index
MSCI Emerging Markets
Source: Cambridge Associates, MSCI, Bloomberg. December 2015.
China dominates emerging markets private investmentsIndex weight
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Emerging markets ex-China: recovering from balance of payment adjustments
Emerging market equities and currencies declined after the US election due to fears of a rising dollar and protectionism emanating from the US. These concerns are well-founded (particularly with respect to Mexico18), and I expect more weakness in EM FX rates in the next few months as markets price in implications of higher US interest rates as well. The reason a rising dollar worries investors is generally due to EM reliance on US dollar financing. However, as shown in the 2nd chart, EM and global reliance on foreign capital has declined over the last few years. So, a rising dollar may hurt EM borrowers, but not as much as it would have 3-4 years ago when balance of payments and balance sheet adjustments were just beginning. As a result, buying EM on any pronounced weakness seems like the best strategy for 2017.
How did sensitivity to dollar financing decline? Mostly via sharp capital spending cuts by EM commodity companies that are very large dollar borrowers, which in turn contributed to stabilization in commodity prices (see Special Topic #8). In aggregate, their free cash flow is now positive after being sharply negative in 2015. Signs of reduced stress are seen in the sharp declines in credit default swap rates for Petrobras, Pemex, Vale, Rosneft and Gazprom.
The chart below (left) is a rough measure of sensitivity to dollar financing conditions for EM countries. EM Asia is generally better positioned than Latin America to ride out another surge in the US dollar.
18 As of December 15, the MSCI EM equity index (in local currency terms) is roughly flat since the election. Mexico is a possible target for some of Trump’s trade agenda, which explains the 5% decline in the MSCI Mexico equity index and another 8.5% decline in the Peso. Russian equities, on the other hand, are up the most. Plenty of room for some interesting conclusions, should you want to draw them.
80
85
90
95
100
105
6061626364656667686970
Jan-16 Apr-16 Jul-16 Oct-16
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities, MSCI, Bloomberg. December 15, 2016.
Emerging markets foreign exchange and equities sell-off after the US election, Index level (both axes)
EM FX
EM equities(in LC terms)
US Election0102030405060708090100
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
Source: Bridgewater Associates. October 2016.
Declining sensitivity to dollar financing
% of EM countries significantly reliant on foreign capital
Global sensitivity to US$ liquidity
Chi
le
Mex
ico
Col
ombi
a
Sau
di A
rabi
a
Mal
aysi
a
Turk
ey
Per
u
Sou
th A
frica
Rus
sia
Indo
nesi
a
Bra
zil
Phi
lippi
nes
Arg
entin
a
Chi
na
Taiw
an
Indi
a
Thai
land
Sou
th K
orea
0102030405060708090
100
Source: Bridgewater Associates. October 2016.
Sensitivity to dollar financing by countryIndex, 100 = highest sensitivity
90
95
100
105
110
115
120
125
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, BIS, Bloomberg. December 15, 2016.
Sharp rise in the dollar parallels early 1980s riseReal effective US dollar exchange rate index
Stronger
Weaker
1980-1984
2012-2016
EM
ER
GIN
G M
AR
KE
TS
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In two prior cycles, after a sharp decline in EM currencies, EM equities outperformed the developed markets (shaded area in the first chart). Then, as EM exchange rates rose over the next few years, EM assets eventually underperformed again. In theory, structural reforms could reduce the magnitude of these cycles, but I don’t think we’re anywhere near that point. As a result, EM is best thought of as a value play that makes the most sense after a balance of payments crisis, when imports and unit labor costs have declined, and when competitiveness has been (temporarily) restored. Signals that indicate that this view is on track: the stabilization of portfolio inflows into EM countries, and a modest improvement in earnings estimates for the EM corporate sector. We will have to watch both closely now that the dollar has started rising again.
A good example of post-crisis deep value investing: Brazil. In last year’s Eye on the Market Outlook, we discussed how Brazil’s economy was as bad as anything I had seen since 1994 (growth, current account deficit, trade balance). Nevertheless, I wrote that the risk of Brazilian sovereign default on external debt was lower than in 2002, primarily due to a shift in sovereign financing from external to domestic debt. In other words, while Brazil has a lot of problems, unlike Greece (2009) and Argentina (2001), Brazilian sovereign external debt is NOT the core problem, and defaulting on it would probably not be a part of a solution. The chart above shows the rally in Brazilian sovereign external debt that began in January 2016.
80
85
90
95
100
105
110
115
120
'84 '86 '88 '90 '92 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16
Source: J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, JPMAM. November 30, 2016.
When EM exchange rates bottomed, EM equities improved, EM real exchange rate index vs. US$, 1991=100
Shaded area:outperformance of EM vs. DM equities
-3%
-2%
-1%
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015
Source: National statistics offices, IMF, Haver Analytics. Q2 2016.
EM portfolio inflows: stabilizing% of GDP, 2-quarter average, ex-China
-60%
-40%
-20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
'05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: IBES, JPMAM. December 9, 2016. Indexed to January 2016.
EM corporate earnings estimates: improving12-month forward consensus earnings, ex-China
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
550
Jan-15 Apr-15 Jul-15 Oct-15 Jan-16 Apr-16 Jul-16 Oct-16
Source: Bloomberg. December 28, 2016.
Brazil credit spread on external sovereign debt5-year credit default swap, basis points
EM
ER
GIN
G M
AR
KE
TS
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2017 Eye on the Market Outlook Special Topics
1 Leverage What amount of leverage can survive a world of volatile markets? Now that the window for low-cost borrowing may be closing, we look at history and the future
Page 27
2 Active management
The end of “peak central bank intervention” may reduce distortions and help active managers
Page 29
3 LNG Rising US natural gas prices due to large-scale US LNG exports? Unlikely on both counts. What Dep’t of Energy LNG export approvals mean, and what they don’t
Page 31
4 Tax efficient investing
How to simultaneously employ tax loss harvesting and generate market returns
Page 33
5 Infrastructure The role for public-private partnerships: PPPs have their critics, but the Obama administration is not among them. When should investors participate?
Page 34
6 Clean coal/CCS The biggest problem with “clean coal”: scope. Infrastructure required to make carbon capture and storage a meaningful contributor is vastly underestimated
Page 36
7 Internet-based business models
How helpful have user growth metrics been in assessing new internet-based business models? Not very
Page 37
8 Commodity prices Markets are looking past inventory gluts given huge declines in capex; remembering the commodity surge of the 1970s and Richard Nixon
Page 38
Chapter links
Brief videos of Michael discussing each of these special topics are available on the True Believers webpage.
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[1] What amount of portfolio leverage can survive a world of volatile markets?
In our study of state pension plans, we found that median expected long-term returns on plan assets were around 7.5%. While corporate plans discount liabilities at lower rates than state plans, Milliman cites a funding ratio of 76% for the 100 largest corporate plans, indicating that many may need higher returns. As a result, some pensions, endowments, foundations and individuals have contemplated leverage (in one form or another) to increase portfolio returns. Since the window of opportunity to borrow at historically low levels may be closing, we wanted to take a closer look at leverage this year.
How much leverage can a portfolio sustain in a world of volatile markets, particularly since correlations among asset classes can rise close to 1.0 during a crisis? For purposes of this analysis, we define successful use of leverage as a scenario in which a portfolio does not experience “failure” over a 10-year period. We also assume that leverage is implemented through long-term fixed rate borrowing, and that leverage proceeds are used to gross up existing portfolio holdings on a pro-rata basis.
We looked at leverage from two perspectives: historical, and forward-looking. Our definitions of failure differ in each approach. The goal: develop some rough estimates of how much leverage a portfolio could carry without causing regret and recriminations at some point down the road.
The empirical, historical analysis
In the first approach, we start with a representative diversified portfolio of marketable securities that is rebalanced quarterly. We then compute the following: over each ten-year period, using actual daily returns on each asset class, what is the maximum amount of leverage that the portfolio could have employed without experiencing failure? In this approach, failure is defined using a “margin call” concept, one which is imposed by the provider of the financing, and which is triggered when/if the portfolio declines to a 75% loan to value.
As shown in the chart, during the 1990s, our prototype portfolio could have employed 60%-70% leverage and not hit the margin call trigger19. However, as you might imagine, the tech collapse and the financial crisis then redefined the universe of bad market outcomes. In early 2008, based on this analysis, the diversified portfolio could not have taken on more than 40% leverage. To be clear, while the portfolio could have carried 40% leverage, that doesn’t mean that leverage would always have delivered positive returns. We are simply measuring the portfolio’s ability to sustain a market decline and keep going, without forced sales of assets along the way.
19 This is a theoretical exercise in portfolio leverage; rules around maximum allowable collateralized leverage differ by jurisdiction.
40%
45%
50%
55%
60%
65%
70%
75%
Jan-90 Jan-94 Jan-98 Jan-02 Jan-06
Source: JPMAM, Bloomberg. Assumes margin call at loan-to-value of 75%.
Maximum leverage possible to avoid margin callLeverage, defined as a % of the gross portfolio value
Ten-year period beginning in...
Asset class Index WeightLarge-cap US equities S&P 500 Total Return 30%Small-cap US equities Russell 2000 Total Return 5%International equities MSCI EAFE Total Return 10%Emerging mkt equities MSCI EM Total Return 10%Investment grade bonds US Aggregate Total Return 20%US high yield US Corp HY Total Return 10%Commodities S&P GSCI Total Return 5%Leveraged loans S&P/LSTA LL Total Return 5%Emerging mkt debt JPM EMBI Global Total Return 0%REITs DJ Equity REIT Total Return 5%Cost of debt 3.5%
SP
EC
IAL
TO
PIC
S
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Asset class WeightGlobal equities 40%US investment grade bonds 30%US high yield bonds 5%Diversified hedge funds 5%US private equity 5%Commodities 5%US real estate 10%Cash 0%Cost of debt 3.5%
Should the universe of bad market outcomes forever be impacted by the implosion in 2008, given increases in bank capitalization, the reduction in the shadow banking system, the migration of certain derivative contracts to centralized exchanges, the decline in non-conforming mortgages, etc? That is something that every portfolio manager, risk manager, chief investment officer and investor has to grapple with. If your answer is “yes”, then leverage of 40% would be as high as you would go based on the historical analysis.
The forward-looking analysis
In this approach, future returns are based on J.P. Morgan’s Long-Term Capital Markets Assumptions, and are subject to various “non-normal” and “fat left tail” shocks20. In this approach, financing is assumed to be non-recourse. As a result, failure is effectively defined by the CIO, who would have to decide if it was a good or bad idea in hindsight to have used leverage. This is obviously a subjective question, but we can try to put some parameters around it. We define failure as follows: when the portfolio’s value falls to the point where, given the time remaining and our expected returns, it would be very unlikely to earn its way back21.
The chart below shows the rising probability of failure at different levels of leverage. The bar is higher here since, unlike the prior analysis which simply has to avoid a margin call, this portfolio needs to generate a return at least equal to the cost of its leverage over the entire horizon. That’s one reason why the failure rate is never zero. Looking again at the 40% leverage case, is an incremental 15% failure rate “too high”? That’s a subjective determination that has to be considered against the consequences of unlevered portfolio returns that are below target levels, the ability to restructure pension obligations if needed, and the ability of the plan and/or its workers to make emergency contributions. Our Multi-Asset Solutions Quantitative Research and Strategies group looks closely at these questions on behalf of our institutional clients, and can go into greater detail regarding the calculations and assumptions used in this part of the analysis.
20 For more information on modeling such scenarios, see “Non-Normality of Market Returns: A Framework for Asset Allocation Decision-Making”, Abdullah Sheikh, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. 21 In each scenario, we assume a target return of at least the cost of the debt on the entire portfolio over the 10-year window. We then assume failure occurs when the investor has less than a 20% chance of achieving the stated goal based on the portfolio’s value at that point and future expected returns.
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70%Leverage, as a % of gross portfolio value
Source: J.P. Morgan Asset Management. December 2016.
Failure rate as a function of leverageChange in failure rate vs. 0% leverage baseline
SP
EC
IAL
TO
PIC
S
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[2] Prospects for improved active equity management performance
The last few years have been difficult for some large-cap US active equity managers. In my view, this outcome is partially explained by distortions resulting from the most extreme monetary policy experiment in history. Now that markets are beginning to price in gradual exits from these policies, prospects for active equity management may improve.
While it’s hard to generalize, the typical large-cap US active equity manager employs many of the following approaches:
Prefers low P/E stocks to high P/E stocks
Prefers to equal-weight portfolios rather than market-cap weight them
Underweights high-dividend, low-volatility stocks such as consumer staples, REITs, telecom andutilities (the “bond proxy” stocks)
Does not prefer stocks simply based on their positive price momentum
Holds some cash rather than being fully invested
Often has an out-of-index position in European, Asian or US mid-cap stocks
Prefers stocks with high degrees of idiosyncratic risk (i.e., stocks whose returns are not easilyexplained as a function of other factors)
The first chart shows how many of these 10 factors that “worked” over time (blue bars). There have been 3 swoons in factor performance since 2006. These swoons fit reasonably well with the percentage of large-cap US equity managers that outperformed on a net of fee basis (red line). With the US Federal Reserve moving slowly toward rate normalization, the ECB announcing its tapering plans and the BoJ moving to a yield targeting regime, I believe we are now past “peak monetary intervention”, which may explain improving factor performance since the middle of 2016. The second chart shows the return for each of the ten factors since June 30, 2016.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
0123456789
10
'96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16Source: JPMAM, Morningstar. November 2016. Performance net of fees.
US large-cap core equity manager outperformance closely related to factor performance# of factors % outperforming, 1-year basis
# of factors w/ positive rolling 12M return
% of managers outperforming
Low
vs.
Hig
h m
omen
tum
Hig
h vs
. Low
vol
atili
ty
Low
vs.
Hig
h P
/E
Equ
al v
s. m
kt-c
ap w
gt
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-cap
vs.
S&
P 5
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Meg
a-ca
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v yi
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EA
FE v
s. U
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Idio
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risk
Cas
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. S&
P 5
00
-6%
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
4%
6%
Source: JPMAM, Morningstar, Factset. November 30, 2016.
Factor returns since June 30, 2016%
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As additional signs that market conditions are changing in ways that may help active managers, consider the following charts on sector dispersion (rising), realized correlation amongst stocks (falling) and implied correlations between stocks (falling). These patterns may be signaling a return to a more normal stock-picking environment for active managers.
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'01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Hun
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Source: Bloomberg. November 14, 2016.
Sector dispersion is rising...4-day difference in top vs. bottom sector performance
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Source: Goldman Sachs Research. December 7, 2016.
...as realized stock correlation is falling...Average 3-month correlation
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Source: Bloomberg. November 18, 2016.
...and implied stock correlation is also fallingCBOE implied correlation index
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[3] Rising US natural gas prices due to large-scale US LNG exports? Unlikely on both counts
I was reading reports that mentioned how the US Department of Energy has approved applications for US firms to export 50 billion cubic feet per day of liquid natural gas (LNG), an amount equal to 2/3 of current US natural gas production. Some analysts see this as a catalyst for much higher US natural gas prices. A closer look: first, it would be surprising if US LNG exports were to exceed 20% of production, and second, much of the US LNG export arbitrage opportunity disappeared over the last three years as Asian LNG import prices fell.
The chart shows Japanese and Korean LNG import prices on the left axis, and on the right axis, US natural gas production (green line) and current export applications (blue dots), both in billions of cubic feet (bcf) per day.
Here’s how we see it:
• Understanding what DOE approvals really mean. The DOE has “approved” 50 bcf per day ofUS LNG exports to Free Trade Agreement countries (point A on the chart). However, approvals toFTA countries are basically a rubber stamp and do not entail substantial documentation requirements.Korea is the only FTA country of 20 with large LNG import demand22, and now Korean LNG importprices have fallen, reducing the arbitrage potential which existed three years ago. A large pricedifferential vs. the US is needed to justify LNG exports given the high cost of constructing LNGimport/export facilities and shipping costs.
• We mostly focus on DOE approvals to NON-FTA countries. What matters more are DOEapprovals to non-FTA countries that are large LNG importers: China, Taiwan, Japan and India. Whilethe DOE has received export applications for 46 bcf per day (point B), they have only approved 14-15bcf (point C). Around 2/3 of these approved projects are now under construction at 6 US LNGfacilities (point D).
• Some non-FTA projects are unlikely to proceed given Asian LNG price declines, and risingcosts of project approval. What about the 31 bcf of non-FTA LNG export applications that havebeen received but not approved? Given the decline in Asian LNG import prices, we’d be surprised tosee many of these projects proceed, particularly given new rules which require DOE applicants to firstobtain costly approvals from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. A shortage of investment-grade counterparties is also a challenge for LNG project developers, given the need for long-termbond/bank financing.
22 Most FTA countries import natural gas via pipeline from Russia, Norway and the Netherlands.
A: Applications approved by DoE to export LNG to FTAB: Applications received by DoE to export LNG to non-FTA
C: Applications approved by DoE to export to non-FTA (less contingent approvals)
D: LNG export facilities under construction0102030405060708090
$2
$6
$10
$14
$18
$22
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Source: DoE, EIA, FERC, J.P. Morgan Securities, JPMAM. Dec. 12, 2016.
LNG: Asian import prices and US export applications$ per MMBtu Billion cubic feet per day
Japan-Korea LNG import price
US export applications
US natural gasproduction
B
CD
A
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• How does the DOE make decisions on LNG export projects? The DOE takes a lot of things intoaccount when considering non-FTA approvals, including the adequacy of the domestic natural gassupply, US energy security, impacts on the US economy (particularly the cost of electricity23 and gas-related input costs for manufacturers), international considerations and environmental impacts. Aspart of this process, the DOE issued a study in October 2015 that considered the macroeconomicimpact of US LNG exports reaching 20 bcf per day, which may represent an upper bound in theirthinking on the subject. Their primary conclusion: any increase in US LNG exports would mostlyresult from increases in US domestic production, and not result in much higher US prices orconstrained demand.
The bottom line: given the decline in Asian LNG import prices, lower-cost gas import options for Eastern and Western Europe (pipelines from Russia, Norway and the Netherlands, and LNG from Algeria), the high costs of constructing LNG plants, the need for high-quality counterparties to secure long-term financing, the cost and complexity of the US approval process and the likelihood that higher US natural gas prices would unleash a domestic production response, we’d be surprised to see US LNG exports exceed 20% of US production. We also do not expect US natural gas prices to change much when LNG facilities under construction come online.
As for the increase in natural gas prices since February 2016 (their all-time low), this appears to be more a reflection of falling US shale production than of the prospect of rising US LNG exports.
23 Residential and commercial electricity prices in the US are roughly 30%-40% lower than in Europe and China.
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85
$1
$3
$5
$7
$9
$11
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'06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
Source: EIA, Bloomberg. December 28, 2016.
Natural gas price and US production$ per MMBtu Billion cubic feet per day
Production
Price
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0%
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40%
60%
80%
100%
'02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10
ST capital loss LT capital gain LT capital loss ST capital gain
Source: Parametric Portfolio, JPMAM. Q4 2015. Shown for illustrative purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Distribution of realized tax events% of all realized tax events by vintage year, cumulative through 2015
[4] For taxable US investors: how to track a benchmark on a tax-aware basis
Tax-loss harvesting has been around for a long time. The general premise: securities sold at a loss can be used to offset capital gains for tax purposes. This technique particularly benefits investors with large short-term capital gains, which are taxed at almost twice the rate of long-term gains. This asymmetry suggests that accelerating short-term losses can be valuable for investors.
However, mutual funds and exchange-traded funds are typically not ideal vehicles for individuals to use for tax-loss harvesting. The reason: when units are sold, tax consequences are based on the changing price of the unit itself, which reflects all of the gains and losses in the fund and not just the losses. In many years (see 1st chart), S&P stocks with substantial declines are offset by stocks that rise sharply. To isolate the tax losses inside a portfolio, it makes more sense to use a separately managed account.
Here’s the goal of this exercise: can a separately managed equity account isolate tax losses while still tracking a specific equity index closely? We asked a manager we work with that specializes in this approach to illustrate how it can be done. As shown in the 2nd chart, the performance of indicative separately managed portfolios is almost identical to the S&P 500 (the performance series are practically superimposed on each other).
Low return dispersion vs. the benchmark is a good sign, but what about the portfolio’s tax- loss harvesting capabilities? A manager of such a strategy tries to realize short-term capital losses, and when gains must be taken to rebalance the portfolio, they are generally deferred until they qualify as long-term. As shown in the final chart, illustrative tax-aware portfolios have done exactly that: the tax realizations are dominated by short-term capital losses and long-term capital gains. Ultimately, this is all about maximizing tax efficiency while minimizing return deviation from an index. The ample liquidity and depth of the US equity market enables these kinds of strategies to pursue both goals.
Even if some parts of Trump’s tax plan are enacted, tax-aware investing will still make sense given the spread between tax rates on short-term gains and long-term gains.
-100%-80%-60%-40%-20%
0%20%40%60%80%
100%
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 '14 '16
Source: Bloomberg, JPMAM. December 16, 2016.
Intra-index price dispersion in the S&P 500% of stocks
stocks w/ return > 15%
stocks w/ return < -15% -25%-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%
10%15%20%
'02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16
S&P 500
Portfolio
Source: Parametric Portfolio. Q3 2016. Shown for illustrative purposes only. Average annualized tracking error of 0.73% vs. 4.1% for active US large-cap equity funds and 0.04% for passive S&P 500 tracker ETFs.
Very little performance deviation between portfolio & benchmark, Pre-tax quarterly total return
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[5] Infrastructure investing and the role for public-private partnerships
The GOP and Democrats seem to agree that infrastructure investment is a high priority. However, there’s disagreement about how to do it. Clinton’s plan relied on direct government spending on infrastructure, financed through taxes on accumulated and untaxed offshore corporate profits. Trump’s plan appears to rely more on private sector investment by offering tax breaks to private enterprises to construct and operate new revenue generating projects in concert with public agencies (i.e. public-private partnerships, or PPPs). Some commentators have criticized Trump’s plan (Krugman called it “basically fraudulent”24 and Sanders described it as “corporate welfare”25). However, there are ways that PPPs can drive infrastructure investing, particularly if the use of proceeds is to finance new greenfield projects. It all depends on the details.
Let’s start with the recognition that the current system does not produce the necessary amount of US infrastructure spending26. Since Federal debt ratios are close to the highest levels since WWII and since most municipalities are constrained on spending (due to unfunded pension and retiree healthcare costs), some analysts believe that PPPs can play an important role. In fact, Obama’s Treasury department issued a report in 2015 on the subject which strongly endorses PPPs as a means of building infrastructure for the future27. Here are some of its conclusions:
“The need to reverse years of underinvestment in infrastructure, despite tighter budgets atevery level of government, calls for us to rethink how we pay for and manage infrastructureinvestment”
“When the private sector takes on risks that it can manage more cost-effectively, a PPP maybe able to save money for taxpayers and deliver higher quality or more reliable service over ashorter timeframe compared to traditional procurement”
“When sponsors contract with private partners that support strong labor standards, PPPs canalso provide local economic opportunity and create good, middle-class jobs that benefitcurrent and aspiring workers alike”
“While PPPs cannot eliminate the need for government spending on infrastructure, we canhelp meet our nation’s infrastructure needs by expanding the sources of investment andusing those dollars, whether public or private, as effectively as possible to advance thepublic’s interest”
“Other advanced economies, including Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, relymore heavily than the United States on PPPs to secure equity financing for infrastructure”
“Although the role of PPPs in the US market is limited, the US Department of the Treasury’sresearch and engagement with stakeholders indicate that significant private capital could bemobilized for infrastructure investment”
“However, in order to attract this capital, US public infrastructure assets will have to supporthigher rates of return than are currently generated through 100 percent low-cost debtfinancing in the municipal bond market”
24 “Build He Won’t”, Paul Krugman, New York Times, November 21, 2016. 25 “Let’s Rebuild our Infrastructure, Not Provide Tax Breaks to Big Corporations and Wall Street”, Bernie Sanders, Medium.com, Nov. 21, 2016. 26 In 2013, the American Society of Civil Engineers graded the United States infrastructure in a 74-page report. The grades: B- for solid waste, C+ for bridges & railways, C for ports, D+ for energy, D for aviation systems, dams, drinking and waste water, schools, transit, and roads, and D- for inland waterways and levees. 27 “Expanding the market for infrastructure public-private partnerships: alternative risk and profit sharing approaches to align sponsor and investor interests”, US Department of the Treasury, April 2015.
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I asked our infrastructure group at J.P. Morgan Asset Management to weigh in on the subject. Here’s what they had to say about PPPs:
PPPs require some combination of federal grants, taxes and user fees to incent private capital toparticipate. This framework has to exist before PPPs can be launched, and must often be precededby political outreach to gain support from taxpayers and other constituents. While user fees oftenseem like a nuisance or private sector profiteering, they are essentially a replacement for public sectorspending and related taxes paid by citizens
While the privatization of existing assets may not appear to generate much in the way of investmentor hiring on the asset privatized, the use of proceeds can accelerate greenfield (new) projectsthat have higher multiplier effects
In principle, a PPP that allocates responsibilities optimally would have governments deal withlegislation, jurisdictional considerations, procurement, permitting, siting, appeals, etc28. Then, privatesector operators would focus on project delivery and management
There are examples of successful PPPs, some of which have taken place outside the US, as notedin the Treasury report:
o Local privatization of 11 Canadian airports, with the Ministry of Infrastructure quid pro quo thatit be able to use proceeds for new greenfield projects
o Australian infrastructure program, in which existing infrastructure assets are sold to finance theconstruction of new projects at the national and local level (similar in concept to Canada)
o In the UK, the £4.2 billion Thames Tideway wastewater project was financed through a PPPwhich took advantage of low interest rates on project financing. The UK government took thetiming and construction cost overrun risk (immunizing private sector capital from a Boston-esque“Big Dig” outcome), which then lowered the return requirement for private capital. The UKintends to use the same approach for future electricity transmission and aquifer projects
o In Texas, with guidance and direction from government entities, private capital (a combination ofutilities, cooperatives and private investors) financed $7 bn of wind farm transmission lines from2007 to 2013, supporting Texas’ 18.5 GW of installed wind capacity, the highest in the US
o In Los Angeles, major public transit projects are being financed in part by an increase in the salestax until 2062, based on a bill approved this fall. Projects include extending light rail to LAX,extending the subway to Westwood, earthquake retrofits and highway improvements. Projectedtax proceeds of $120 bn will be used as the government’s contribution to projects that also entailprivate sector capital and private sector project management and construction (thereby limitingpermanent employment increases for California’s public sector)
o Denver’s airport train system received a $1 bn Federal grant as part of a larger PPP in whichprivate sector bidders identified design efficiencies that resulted in significant cost savings (oneexample: double tracking wasn’t necessary for the entire route given train frequencies); the grantwould not have been available if it were a public-only project
28 A good example of the constructive role that government can play: the Path-15 electricity transmission project in California. An impasse between the California Energy Commission and the California Public Utilities Commission had prevented improvement of transmission bottlenecks that led to blackouts in 1996 and 2001. The Western Area Power Administration (a Federal entity) was able to use the threat of jurisdiction and eminent domain to get both parties to the table to complete the project.
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[6] The biggest problem with “clean coal”: scope “Clean coal” is a euphemism for coal powered electricity in which carbon capture and storage of CO2 takes place (CCS). By the end of 2016, CCS facilities in operation will be able to capture and store just 0.1% of the world’s CO2 emissions. Let’s put aside issues of large cost overruns on recent projects29, the Department of Energy withdrawing support from several large projects (FutureGen in Illinois), project cancellations in Europe, legal uncertainties about liability associated with CO2 leaks, evidence of leakage and earthquake risk from CCS operations in the Middle East and the North Sea, and the ~30% energy drag on coal facilities required to perform CCS in the first place.
Let’s assume that all of these problems can be solved via technological innovation and legislation (an aggressive assumption, for sure). The bigger problem with CCS is the scope required to make a difference. To see why, let’s assume the world aims to sequester just 15% of global CO2 emissions.
In 2015, global CO2 emissions were 33.5 billion tonnes To sequester 15%, that would mean capturing, transporting and burying 5.0 billion tonnes of CO2 That amount of CO2 by weight is equivalent to 6.3 billion cubic meters of CO2 by volume (assuming
0.8 tonnes per cubic meter of CO2 when compressed) How much volume is that? Global crude oil extraction in 2015 was 4.4 billion tonnes by weight,
which is equivalent to around 5.1 billion cubic meters of oil by volume
Compare the two bolded numbers above, and you can see the problem. Even capturing a small portion of global CO2 emissions would require a CO2 compression/transportation/storage industry whose throughput is even greater than the one used for the world’s oil transportation and refining, which has taken 100 years to build (see map); and that’s without the benefit that oil provides as an energy input to vehicle transportation and industry. There may be applications where CCS makes sense (enhanced oil recovery, and meeting small amounts of commercial CO2 demand). But as a big picture solution to CO2 emissions, CCS infrastructure needs and costs are very daunting. Global oil pipeline and refining networks
Source: Rextag. November 2016.
29 According to the New York Times, the Kemper clean coal plant in Mississippi is more than two years behind schedule, more than $4 billion over its initial budget of $2.4 billion, and still not operational.
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[7] User-based digital business models and the monetization challenge How helpful is information about user growth when digital internet companies go public? The answer: not very, or at least not without a lot of other accompanying information. The 1st chart shows growth in active users for a variety of different internet-based companies that went public over the last few years30. For each one, user growth is indexed to 100 at month zero (the time of the IPO). The companies whose stocks eventually fell well below their IPO price are shown in red; the winners are shown in green.
Among stocks that performed poorly after IPO, Zynga is actually the exception: a poorly performing stock whose declining user base was a clear, coincident signal. For many of the other poorly performing stocks, user growth was strong both before and also after the IPO, at least during the first year or two. Some examples: Pandora, Zulily, Groupon, Etsy, Angie’s List and Twitter had rapid user growth out of the gate post-IPO, sometimes faster than user growth at Yelp, Facebook and LinkedIn. Nevertheless, the former group’s stocks substantially underperformed the latter.
It might seem with the benefit of hindsight that some of the red-lined stocks in the chart on the left were challenged from the beginning. But at the time these stocks went public, that wasn’t the case, at least not among the analyst community that covered them. The chart on the right shows consensus price forecasts for each company. With the exception of Groupon and Pandora, the consensus was that these stocks would either remain stable or rise sharply after IPO.
Here’s some additional information that we look for when evaluating pre-IPO and post-IPO investments in companies like these: “lifetime customer value”, which incorporates churn rates, revenues and variable costs; user engagement, measured either in time or in features accessed; daily active users (rather than monthly active users); customer acquisition costs, which include total marketing expenses; and data on both “bookings and “revenues”, with the latter recognized only when service is provided.
However, this kind of information is often not available before or at the IPO, requiring investors to make a lot more assumptions than usual about what the future holds for these businesses. That‘s one reason (among many) why J.P. Morgan Asset Management has generally not included pre-IPO positions in its equity mutual funds, despite a small allowable allocation to do so. The liquidity, disclosure and overall risk of pre-IPO positions, particularly in digital/internet companies, are better suited to vehicles specifically designed for them.
30 We collected the user metric that each company reports. Facebook, Pandora, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Yelp report monthly active users. Other companies report daily active users (Zynga), trailing twelve month active users (GrubHub, Zulily, Groupon, Etsy), quarterly visits (RetailMeNot) or paid memberships (Angie’s List).
All companies referenced are shown for illustrative purposes only, and are not intended as a recommendation or endorsement by J.P. Morgan in this context.
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-36 -30 -24 -18 -12 -6 0 6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54 60 66Months before/after last private observation
Source: Company filings, Bloomberg, JPMAM. October 2016.
User growth: an insufficient metric for investors Index of user growth (final private observation = 100)
Stocks above IPO price
Last obs. before IPO
LINKEDINYELP
GROUPON
PANDORA
TWITTERRETAILMENOT
ZYNGA
GRUBHUBZULILY
ETSY
ANGIE'S LIST
Stocks below IPO price
Link
edIn
Face
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Yelp
Gru
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Pand
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Twitt
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Angi
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List
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-50%
0%
50%
100%
150%
200% Consensus proj. 12-monthprice change at IPO
Actual performance to date
Source: Bloomberg. December 15, 2016.
Consensus projections versus actual performanceStock price change, %
335%
217%
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[8] A large capex decline set the stage for rising industrial metals prices In January 2016, some colleagues showed me a report on commodity super-cycles dating back to 1779, and how on average, they took 15 to 30 years to bottom after the peak. The implication: there’s a long way to go before the damage from the current super-cycle ends, since we’re only 4-5 years into its unwinding. However, as I wrote in February 2016, commodity prices typically declined by 50%-70% when these prior super-cycles unwound. In that regard, the damage had been done: commodity prices had already declined by roughly half from their peak by the end of 2015. For investors, I think “price” is more important than “time”, which is why we became more optimistic on industrial metals prices in early 2016.
The 1st chart shows the stabilization in industrial metals prices. Why did prices stabilize if inventories are still at or close to multi-year highs (2nd chart)? Note: while zinc is an outlier given its declining inventory levels, it is much less important than the other three: the dollar value of zinc inventory is only 7% of the total inventory value of the 4 metals shown.
In our view, markets are looking past the current inventory glut and paying more attention to the sharp decline in capital spending on industrial metal extraction. This capex decline is very similar to the one taking place in oil, which is also having a stabilizing effect on oil prices. Our view on commodity prices is “stabilization” rather than a sharp upward spike like 2006 or 2009; that should be sufficient to stabilize conditions in many EM commodity exporters as well.
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2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016Source: Bloomberg. December 15, 2016. Index tracks aluminum, copper, zinc, nickel and lead.
Industrial metals prices are stabilizingIndex level
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Nickel
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ZincCopperNickel
AluminumOil
On Oil. In our 2016 Outlook, we wrote that the supply-demand adjustment in oil would be well underway by 2017, which pointed to higher prices. In June 2016, we wrote again about the oil capex decline, large investor short positions, rising non-OPEC field decline rates, stable oil demand growth and the utter irrelevancy of renewable energy when discussing prospects for oil markets. Where to from here? An oil supply deficit is now in plain sight by the end of 2017, particularly if OPEC countries adhere to their historical 50% compliance rate with announced cuts. Peaking shale oil productivity per rig is another factor which may contribute to further tightening in supply-demand conditions.
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Time capsule on the 1970s: what if True Believer central banks lost control of inflation? I don’t think it will get nearly this bad, but as a reminder, this is what can happen if central banks lose control of inflation and are forced to play catch-up from behind. During the 1970s, real returns on commodities were substantial, particularly when compared to the zero real returns earned on stocks and bonds over the course of the decade. Richard Nixon may have opened the door to China, but he also opened the door to stagflation, through the imposition of wage/price controls, and through interference in the inner workings of the Federal Reserve (see box).
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'70 '71 '72 '73 '74 '75 '76 '77 '78 '79 '80
Source: Shiller, Ibbotson, S&P, Bloomberg, JPMAM. December 1979.
Real total return on stocks, bonds and commodities in the 1970s, January 1970 = 100
S&P Composite
Intermediate US treasuries
Commodities (S&P GSCI)
Remembering Richard Nixon
Interference at the Federal Reserve. When Fed chairman Arthur Burns resisted pressure from Nixon to guarantee full employment, the White House planted negative stories about Burns in the press. Nixon’s people also floated stories about diluting the Fed Chairman’s power by doubling the Board’s members. Nixon wrote to Burns: “There is no doubt in my mind that if the Fed continues to keep the lid on with regard to increases in money supply and if the economy does not expand, the blame will be placed squarely on the Fed.” In 1971, H.R. Haldeman spoke about the effectiveness of Nixon’s strategy: “We have Arthur Burns by the [expletive deleted] on the money supply”.
Sources: "Secrets of the Temple: How the Federal Reserve Runs the Country" by William Greider "Before the Fall: An Inside View of the Pre-Watergate White House" by William Safire "Monetary Policy and the Great Inflation in the United States: The Federal Reserve System and the Failure of Macroeconomic Policy" by Thomas Mayer
Political shenanigans. It’s hard to talk about Nixon without also recalling how he and his operatives conducted themselves during elections; Watergate was not an isolated event. Some examples: President Nixon and an aide discussed planting McGovern campaign literature in the apartment of the man who shot George Wallace; Nixon operatives produced counterfeit mailings on Muskie letterhead that were critical of Ted Kennedy, and that accused Hubert Humphrey and Henry Jackson of sexual misconduct; Nixon aides hired phony Muskie volunteers to call people at home in the middle of the night, ringing back multiple times with the same questions; Nixon aides hired a woman to strip outside Muskie’s hotel room yelling “I Love Ed Muskie!”; and invitations to non-existent events with (alleged) free food and alcohol were distributed by Nixon operatives on behalf of other candidates, angering people when there was none.
Sources: New York Times, December 14, 1992 William Manchester and J. Anthony Lucas in “Nightmare: The Underside of the Nixon Years”
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LinkedIn updates
Since August 2016, we have posted the following market and economic updates on LinkedIn:
12/12/2016 Life Away from Home, Part 2 (Holiday Eye on the Market) 11/30/2016: Japan equities: Higurashi moments are rare 11/11/2016: Orange is the New Tack: Implications of a Trump Presidency 11/2/2016: Why voter clustering matters and the battle for the House 10/26/2016: Electric cars: a 1% solution? (with commentary on renewable energy) 10/12/2016: The tell-tale heart of the Buffett Rule 10/5/2016: After the fall, own some emerging markets 9/28/2016: Presidential debate chart-watch 9/21/2016: The distant meteor of unfunded pensions 9/14/2016: War on savers retirement kit 9/7/2016: Worst moments from the Party conventions 8/30/2016: China’s environmental mess 8/25/2016: The high price of bond-like stocks 8/23/2016: The limited impact of geopolitics on markets Sources and acronyms
“Challenges to mismeasurement explanations for the US productivity slowdown”, Chad Syverson, University of Chicago, NBER Working Paper, February 2016.
“Does the United States have a productivity slowdown or a measurement problem?”, Byrne et al, Federal Reserve and the IMF, Brookings Paper on Economic Activity, March 2016.
“Piles of Dirty Secrets Behind a Model Clean Coal Project”, New York Times. July 5, 2016.
“The Chinese Consumer: Outlook and Trends 2016”, Gavekal Research. November 2016.
“The truth behind 10 years of earnings underperformance”, Morgan Stanley Research, June 7, 2016.
“There’s actually a way for Trump to help coal and still help the climate”, Washington Post, Nov. 17, 2016. AfD: Alternative for Deutschland; bcf: billion cubic feet; BEA: Bureau of Economic Analysis; BLS: Bureau of Labor Statistics; BOJ: Bank of Japan; CBO: Congressional Budget Office; CBOE: Chicago Board Options Exchange; CC: China Customs; CCS: carbon capture and storage; CFLP: China Federation of Logistics & Purchasing; CNBS: China National Bureau of Statistics; DOE: Department of Energy; EBITDA: earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization; ECB: European Central Bank; EIA: Energy Information Administration; EM: emerging markets; EPS: earnings per share; ETF: exchange-traded fund; FDA: Food and Drug Administration; FERC: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission; FOMC: Federal Open Market Committee; FRB: Federal Reserve Board; FTA: free-trade agreement; ICT: Information and Communication Technologies; IMF: International Monetary Fund; IPO: Initial Public Offering; LNG: liquefied natural gas; LT: long-term; NATO: North Atlantic Treaty Organization; NFIB: National Federation of Independent Business; OECD: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; P/E: price-to-earnings ratio; PBOC: People’s Bank of China; PCE: personal consumption expenditures; PMI: Purchasing Managers’ Index; PPP: public-private partnership; QE: quantitative easing; ROE: return on equity; SOE: state-owned enterprise; ST: short-term; UKIP: UK Independence Party; VAT: value added tax
EYE ON THE MARKET • MICHAEL CEMBALEST • OUTLOOK 2017 JANUARY 1, 2017
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EYE ON THE MARKET MICHAEL CEMBALEST OUTLOOK 2017 JANUARY 1, 2017
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EYE ON THE MARKET • MICHAEL CEMBALEST • OUTLOOK 2017 JANUARY 1, 2017
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MICHAEL CEMBALEST is the Chairman of Market and Investment Strategy for J.P. Morgan Asset Management, a global leader in investment management and private banking with $1.8 trillion of client assets under management worldwide (as of September 30, 2016). He is responsible for leading the strategic market and investment insights across the firm’s Institutional, Funds and Private Banking businesses.
Mr. Cembalest is also a member of the J.P. Morgan Asset Management Investment Committee and a member of the Investment Committee for the J.P. Morgan Retirement Plan for the firm’s more than 250,000 employees.
Mr. Cembalest was most recently Chief Investment Officer for the firm’s Global Private Bank, a role he held for eight years. He was previously head of a fixed income division of Investment Management, with responsibility for high grade, high yield, emerging markets and municipal bonds.
Before joining Asset Management, Mr. Cembalest served as head strategist for Emerging Markets Fixed Income at J.P. Morgan Securities. Mr. Cembalest joined J.P. Morgan in 1987 as a member of the firm’s Corporate Finance division.
Mr. Cembalest earned an M.A. from the Columbia School of International and Public Affairs in 1986 and a B.A. from Tufts University in 1984.
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