Chartbook - Lombard Street Research

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Oct 1, 2014 - 2. 4. 45. 50. 55. 60. Growth (Markit Manufactuing PMI). A cce le ra tio n. (6 m th. C h g ...... v c. In f
Chartbook October 2014

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Chart of the month Total assets held by the Fed, ECB, BoJ and BoE combined have been rising at an average pace of about $850bn per year over the past five years, exceeding $10tn as of this month.

G4 central banks’ combined balance sheet to keep expanding ECB

BoJ

Fed

BoE

14

12

(*) Assuming the following balance sheet changes: - ECB: expanding by €1tn over 3 years; - BoJ: expanding by JPY70tn a year; - Fed: shrinking by $200bn a year; - BoE: unchanged.

The trend of the aggregate CB balance sheet is not going to change meaningfully over the next three years, as the BoJ and ECB will more than fill the gap left by the Fed ending QE.

Projection*

While EUR and JPY liquidity may not be as “powerful” as USD liquidity, global asset markets are nonetheless going to continue benefiting from accommodative global monetary conditions. We explore this theme in the Multi Asset section.

10

8

6

Elsewhere in this month’s Chartbook:

4

2

0 2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

 Fixed Income. UST 10y spread to Bunds can widen well beyond 155bp.  Currencies. USD “mega uptrend” still in its early stages.  Equities. Pick EMs carefully – and expect underperformance relative to DMs.  Commodities. A series of lower highs confirms the downtrend that started in 2008. [Andrea Cicione]

Contact and disclaimers

$tn

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

1 October 2014

In this month's Chartbook

............................................................................................................................ Summary and key points ............................................................................................................................ Macro drivers

Multi-Asset

Fixed Income

US growth acceleration, slowdown elsewhere 55

G4 central banks: a balance-sheet act

13

US short end remains a puzzle

21

Global inflationary pressures remain subdued 66

CB assets and asset markets

14

Bear-flattening is only recent

22

Growth can push up funding costs

77

Short-dollar, long-rates trades?

15

Spread to bunds could go a long way

23

…pressuring parts of EMs

88

EM equities getting ahead of themselves?

16

Especially as Treasuries aren’t cheap

24

And a China slowdown doesn’t help

99

EMs’ US vulnerabilities

17

The problem with BoE hikes pricing

25

But Fed tightening likely to be gentle

10

China weighing down on EMs too

18

US High Yield lagging IG credit

26

…the ECB has much further to go

11

EM equities-commodities recoupling

19

US HY fundamentals remain solid

27

…and the BoJ can’t stop now

12

Slowing rotation out of bonds

20

Differentiation key for EM debt

28

............................................................................................................................ Equities

Commodities

USD mega uptrend in early stages

29

A bad breadth problem

37 37

Commodity de-correlation to continue

45 45

Valuations supportive of USD strength

30

There is no alternative

38 38

A less commodity-intensive growth cycle

46 46

FX carry vulnerable to USD strength

31

Can ECB QE push valuations higher?

39 39

Declines in all sub-categories

47 47

Draghi driving the euro lower

32

EM to underperform DM

40 40

Performance patterns change

48 48

GBP: policy divergence and C/A to weigh

33

DM/EM rotation in reverse?

41 41

Crude upheaval

49 49

Reasons to be bearish CHF

34

EM macro: choosy does it

42 42

Deteriorating demand outlook

50 50

AUD to underperform CAD

35

EM: Lagging earnings, flagging inflows

43 43

Cattle bulls

51 51

EM Macro RV interesting to us

36

Mind the EM value traps

44 44

Rates taking the lustre off gold

52 52

Contact and disclaimers

Currencies

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Summary - key points

............................................................................................................................  US and US-leveraged economies continue to outperform the Eurozone, China and most of EM.  While US rates may rise, pressuring parts of EM, any policy tightening will likely be gentle.  Further supportive of our “Goldlilocks” outlook is further stimulus by the ECB and BoJ in the wake of sputtering growth. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Macro drivers

 G4 central banks’ combined balance sheets will keep expanding at roughly the same pace as the past five years.  While not as “powerful” as USD liquidity, BoJ’s and ECB’s balance sheets expansion will continue to support asset prices.  EMs are more vulnerable to falling USD liquidity than DMs. EM stocks look particularly exposed after their good run this year. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Multi-Asset

 US short-end rates path remains a puzzle. Evidence of bear-flattening has emerged, which we think will crystallise into 2015.  Treasury spreads to Bunds can widen by a lot more if the experience of JGBs is any guide; our model also supports this view.  US HY underperformance relative to IG debt looks stretched; we expect a convergence. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Fixed Income

 The long-term dollar upswing is in its early stages. Historical parallels and valuations suggest significant further upside.  While the euro has weakened quite a bit, we see plenty of further weakness on Fed-ECB balance sheet divergence.  In commodity and EM FX, we like macro RV themes based on terms of trade and monetary policy divergence (e.g. PLN/HUF). ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Currencies

 Commodities remain in a weakening trend, as broad indices continue to form a pattern of lower highs.  The recent uptick in EM leading indicators is unlikely to signal the beginning of a cyclical upswing.  China softness and excess oil supply suggest that Energy and Industrial Metals will remain under pressure. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Commodities

Contact and disclaimers



A US correction may be looming with QE3 about to end, rates going up soon, valuations full, small caps underperforming, and market breadth measures worsening. But the US remains investors’ best bet over the medium term.  EMs have had a good run since March this year but that’s running out of steam: it’ll pay off to be selective. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Equities

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers US growth acceleration, slowdown elsewhere US & linked economies have accelerating growth expectations…

0

Russia

US

Korea India

Indonesia

-2 Italy

Greece

Turkey Germany

-4

50

Spain Mexico Global

0 Czech

Eurozone

France

Japan

Taiwan

EM

Brazil

China

100

Canada

China

Eurozone

Japan

-50

UK

-100

-6 Poland Growth (Markit Manufactuing PMI)

-150 Jan-14

-8 45

50

55

60

For the US and US-leveraged economic blocks (including Canada and Taiwan), survey growth-expectations data show evidence of not only faster growth, but also growth acceleration in recent months. On the other hand, Eurozone and related economies (especially Poland, but also the UK) have noticeably lost growth momentum.

Feb-14 Mar-14

Apr-14

May-14

Jun-14

Jul-14

Aug-14

Sep-14

Oct-14

Evidence based on hard data is consistent, as US data surprises have been regularly on the topside in recent weeks. Most other major blocks, especially China, Japan and the Eurozone have had negative data surprises.

5

Contact and disclaimers

2

US

Acceleration (6mth Chg in PMI)

4

…and the most positive hard-data surprises

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers Global inflationary pressures remain subdued

5

Commodities (CRB; rhs)

6

Inflation (2014 OECD forecasts)

OECD CPI YoY

…while large output gaps imply low demand-driven inflation

500 4

5

450 3

4 400 3

Turkey (-5.1%, 8%) Mexico

Chile

UK

2

All OECD

350

US

2 1

300

Italy Ireland

0

250

Spain

Eurozone Czech

200 2006

2008

2010

2012

New Zealand

Hungary

Sweden Switzerland

Greece (-12.8%, -1.1%) -1 2004

Norway Canada Germany Poland

France

1

0

Japan

Australia

Output gap (2014 OECD forecasts)

-1

2014

-9

From a supply perspective, softness in commodity prices has meant lower rawmaterial prices and lower cost-push inflation. Commodity prices have a lead on gauges of global inflation and appear to be heading lower again against the backdrop of soft investment and production data out of China recently.

-6

-3

0

3

Aggregate demand pressures on inflation are also very subdued, given large output gaps and generally below-target inflation rates in major economies. Most inflation rates in the chart above are way below the 2% level targeted by major central bankers globally.

6

Contact and disclaimers

Softer commodities mean low cost-push inflation…

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers Growth can push up funding costs Policy rules suggest higher equilibrium short-end rates… Actual Fed funds rate

…and rising growth expectations imply higher long-end rates

Taylor-rule implied

Global PMI

6

US 5y/5y swap (rhs)

56

5

4.3

55

4 54 3

Widening policy gap

3.8 53

2 1

3.3

52

0 51 -1 50

-2 -3 2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

49 Oct-11

2014

Acceleration in US growth means that the same policy rules that earlier called for “negative policy rates” (or unconventional policy measures such as QE) are now calling for positive and rising policy rates. The Fed funds rate will have to rise in the coming months, raising short-term costs of funding.

2.3 Apr-12

Oct-12

Apr-13

Oct-13

Apr-14

Long-end rates also respond to measures of growth expectations, especially insofar as they generate inflation risk premiums. Further acceleration in such measures can cause higher long-end rates too, though, for the most part, our central scenario is for short-end rates to rise by more and the curve to bear flatten.

7

Contact and disclaimers

2.8

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers …pressuring parts of EMs Sections of EM still fragile with worsening C/A balances…

1

India

4

Romania

3

Poland

Hungary Israel

Czech

Ukraine Turkey

-1

1

Chile Philippines

-1

Philippines

South Africa Mexico Taiwan Colombia Brazil Korea Indonesia Peru Hong Kong

EMs with high and rising inflation rates vulnerable

Thailand

Czech Poland

Singapore

China

India

Russia Brazil

-4

The vulnerable lot with deteriorating C/As

Romania Hungary

-5

C/A to GDP -2 -10

Russia

China Israel

-3

South Africa

Turkey

Malaysia

-2

Malaysia

Indonesia

Colombia

Peru

0

Singapore

Hong Kong

Mexico

0

2

Taiwan

Korea

Chile

Current inflation rates -6

-5

0

5

10

15

20

-1

Higher global funding costs in the wake of rising US rates will be problematic for sections of the EM universe, especially for those countries which have seen a further deterioration in the external balances since last year’s “taper tantrum” sell-off.

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

And those EM countries with high and rising inflation rates may need to tighten policy in tandem with the Fed in order to stem capital outflows. Countries falling in both trouble zones (i.e. wider C/A deficits and higher inflation) are likely to face significant short-term challenges. Notable in this group are Brazil, South Africa and Turkey.

8

10

Contact and disclaimers

2

Change in C/A to GDP since Q1 2013

3

5

Thailand

Change in inflation since Q1 2013

4

…and higher inflation rates than in Q1 2013

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers And a China slowdown doesn’t help China’s economic slowdown is broad-based… Fixed asset investment yoy

…which hurts commodities and many EMs’ terms of trade

Retail sales yoy

Brazil

South Africa

Chile

Indonesia

Industrial production yoy 45

30

35

25

25 20 15 15 5 10 -5

-15 0 2010

2011

2012

2013

-25 2009

2014

An additional challenge for many EMs is the broad and sustained slowdown in China, which is the destination of a large chunk of global commodity exports

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

And, as a consequence, the terms of trade of major EM commodities exporters have been on a deteriorating course recently.

9

Contact and disclaimers

5

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers But Fed tightening likely to be gentle Declining participation rate implies slack Jobless claims

… which shows up in subdued wage growth Average hourly earnings yoy

Participation rate (rhs)

Core PCE deflator

ISM manufacturing (rhs) 700

68

3.75

60

67

3.25

55

66

2.75

50

65

2.25

45

1.75

40

1.25

35

650 600 550 500 450

350 300

64

63

250 0.75 2008

200 62 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014

However, we note that higher global funding costs are unlikely to come in a violent way. Yes, jobless claims are close to levels of previous booms, but the sharp decline in the participation rate qualifies that observation heavily. There is still spare capacity in the economy…

30 2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

…which is also evident in the fact that core-inflationary and wage-growth pressures are subdued despite the strong evidence of an accelerating cyclical recovery.

10

Contact and disclaimers

400

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers …the ECB has much further to go With growth slowing, inflation pressures remain absent… CPI

5y/5y inflation swap

…and credit market fragmentation remains large

Composite PMI (rhs)

3.3

Italy 56

Spain

300 250

54 2.8

Spread to Germany in bp on loans to non-financial corporations

200

52

150

2.3 50

100 1.8

48 50 46 44

-50

42

-100

40

-150 2004

0.8

0.3 Sep-11

Mar-12

Sep-12

Mar-13

Sep-13

Mar-14

Sep-14

Eurozone inflation and long-term inflation expectations (as measured by President Draghi’s preferred 5y5y inflation swap) have declined and an incipient recovery has stalled with country-level and Eurozone-level PMIs dropping, raising further the spectre of deflation.

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

And the fact that credit market fragmentation still persists, the case for the ECB to act further strongly and decisively remains. The balance sheet expansion that President Draghi envisages will unlikely be achieved by the measures announced so far and the governing council will probably have to agree new measures.

11

Contact and disclaimers

0

1.3

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Macro Drivers …and the BoJ can’t stop now The BoJ knows inflation will fall once the tax effect rolls out… CPI yoy

…and has already begun moving quietly Increase in BoJ holdings of gov't paper, % of GDP

CPI yoy (without tax hike)

USD/JPY (rhs)

4

30% 105

3

20%

2 1

95

10%

0

85

0%

-1 -2 Jan-13

Apr-13

Jul-13

Oct-13

Jan-14

Apr-14

-10% 2011

Jul-14

75 2012

2013

2014



US and associated economies continue to outperform other major blocks including Eurozone and China.



Stronger US growth will mean higher rates and tighter global funding conditions…



…generating pressure points in sections of the global economy, particularly in C/A deficit EMs.



But Fed tightening is likely to be gentle given that spare capacity persists.



Future ECB and BoJ easing will further mitigate the stresses coming from tighter US policy.

12

Contact and disclaimers

Investment conclusions

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Multi-Asset

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

G4 central banks: a balance-sheet act

G4 central banks’ combined balance sheet to keep expanding ECB

BoJ

Fed

Over the past five years, total assets held by the Fed, ECB, BoJ and BoE combined have been rising at an average pace of about $850bn per year, reaching more than $10tn as of the start of this month.

BoE

14

12

(*) Assuming the following balance sheet changes: - ECB: expanding by €1tn over 3 years; - BoJ: expanding by JPY70tn a year; - Fed: shrinking by $200bn a year; - BoE: unchanged.

Projection*

While the jury is still out with regard to the long-term economic benefits of all this money being pumped into the financial system (at least as far as Europe and Japan are concerned), there is little doubt by now that liquidity has had very positive repercussions on asset prices.

10

8

This trend is unlikely to change anytime soon, as we expect the growth rate of cumulative G4 central bank assets to remain largely unchanged over the next three years.

6

4

While EUR and JPY liquidity may not be as “powerful” as USD liquidity, global asset markets are nonetheless going to benefit from accommodative global monetary conditions.

2

0 2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

13

2016

2017

Contact and disclaimers

$tn

Lombard Street Research

Multi-Asset

Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

CB assets and asset markets

CB assets’ 85% correlation with DM stocks since March 2009… Total G4 CB assets

…and 93% correlation with G4 bonds

MSCI World (rhs)

Total G4 CB assets

14

2400 $tn

14

Projection

Avg G4 10y yield (inv, rhs)

$tn

0.0

Projection

2200 12

0.5 12

2000 1800

10

1.0 1.5

10

1600 8

2.0

1400

8

2.5

1200 6

3.0 6

1000 800

4

3.5 4.0

4

600 2 2007

4.5

400 2009

2011

2013

2015

2 2007

2017

DM equities have benefited from G4 central banks’ balance sheet expansion…

5.0 2009

2011

…as have done G4 government bonds.

14

2013

2015

2017

Contact and disclaimers

Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Multi-Asset

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Short-dollar, long-rates trades?

Are US stocks and HY short-dollar trades? HY spread to Libor (bp)

S&P 500

And are they long-rates trades? Dollar Index (rhs)

2200

HY spread to Libor (bp) 130

S&P 500

UST 2y yield (rhs)

2200

%

8 7

120

1800

1800 6

110 1400

5

1400 100

4

1000

1000

3

90 2 600

80

1 200 2000

70 2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

200 2000

2014

With the dollar getting stronger as the market continues to re-price Fed policy, investors are concerned that HY and S&P 500 are looking increasingly vulnerable. US corporate profits may suffer from a stronger currency to a degree, but the strength in the domestic economy will probably outweigh the negative FX impact.

0 2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

Besides, while dollar down / stocks up was the norm in the pre-Global Financial Crisis period, we believe that going forward strong dollar will be associated with rising equities – just as in the second half of the 1990s. There is also little historical evidence that a rising rates environment is unfavourable for corporate bonds and equities, at least early in the tightening cycle.

15

Contact and disclaimers

600

Lombard Street Research

Multi-Asset

Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

MSCI EM

EM ccy avg vs. USD*

120 EM debt "craze"

115

EM LC bonds (rhs) All measures rebased (1-May-2013 = 100)

105

EM equity "craze"?

110

105

100

95

100

90

95 85 90 80 85 75

80 * Simple average of Poland, Brazil, South Africa, Malaysia, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, Thailand, Hungary, Colombia

70 Feb-11

Equities

Commodities

EM equities getting ahead of themselves?

EM equities a possible casualty of tighter US monetary policy

75 Aug-10

Currencies

Aug-11

Feb-12

Aug-12

Feb-13

Aug-13

16

Feb-14

Aug-14

Loose US monetary policy has caused EM bubbles to develop in the past. The last one was in 2012-2013, when EM debt – local currency particularly – benefited spectacularly from falling US yields, prompting investors to seek higher returns in developing economies’ debt. Before the “taper tantrum” hit, EM debt had diverged significantly from the equity and currency markets. May 2013 put an end to the EM debt “craze” and EM LC yields rose sharply, reconciling the differences between bond prices, equity prices and FX rates. EM bonds never fully regained their pretantrum valuations, but EM equities darted ahead, surpassing their early-2013 highs. This has been on the back of slightly improved fundamentals, in some cases, but expensive equity valuations in DMs and still ample dollar liquidity played a major role too. As the first Fed hike gets closer, EM equities are likely to suffer. But, with the BoJ and ECB stepping on the liquidity pedal, and investors’ positioning less extreme than last year, we don’t expect a repeat of the taper-tantrum experience.

Contact and disclaimers

Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014

Lombard Street Research Contents

Multi-Asset

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

EMs’ US vulnerabilities

A rising dollar favours DM equities over EM… MSCI DM / EM

…and so do rising real yields MSCI DM / EM

US$ Index (rhs)

UST 10y real rate (TIPS) (rhs)

4.0

130

4.0

5

3.5

120

3.5

4

3.0

110

3.0

3

2.5

100

2.5

2

2.0

90

2.0

1

1.5

80

1.5

0

70

1.0 2000

1.0 2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

If a secular bull market is about to start for the USD, as we suspect to be the case, DM equities’ outperformance of EMs will likely continue.

-1 2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

Rising real yields in the US will also hinder EM stocks’ performance.

17

2014

Contact and disclaimers

Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Multi-Asset

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

China weighing down on EMs too

Weak China driving EM currencies down… China Manuf. PMI

JPM EM Ccy index (rhs)

65

130

China Manuf. PMI

ZAR/USD* (rhs)

TRY/USD* (rhs)

65

BRL/USD* (rhs) 150

1-May-2010 = 100

140

120

60

China HSBC PMI

60

130

110 55

120

55

110

100 50

50

100

90

90

45

45

80

80 40

70

40

70

60 35 2005

60 2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

35 2005

2014

Given the exposure of many emerging market economies to the commodity supercycle, a further Chinese slowdown will continue to weigh on EM currencies.

50 2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Current account-deficit currencies will continue to be hit the hardest.

18

Contact and disclaimers

China HSBC PMI

…particularly the “usual suspects”

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Multi-Asset

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

EM equities-commodities recoupling

Jump in real UST yields driving commodities lower Real 10y UST yield

Energy

Industrial Metals

Precious Metals

EM equities-commodities: re-coupling EM equities

3.5

DM equities

200

3000

3.0

CRB Index

Industrial Metals

Jan-2010 = 100

180

2.5

2500

160 2.0 1.5

140

2000

1.0

120

0.5

1500

100

0.0

80 1000

60

-1.0 -1.5 2005

500 2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

40 2005

2014

Rising USD real yields are also a factor in driving commodity prices down, above all precious metals.

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

EM equities started moving sharply higher in April, shortly followed by industrial metals. The recent weakness is helping EM stocks re-couple with the broader commodities complex, which has been rolling over since June.

19

Contact and disclaimers

-0.5

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Multi-Asset

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Slowing rotation out of bonds

Early signs of rotation back into US Treasuries? S&P500 / UST total return (7.5y z-score)

Stocks still investors’ favourite compared to HY in the US

y/y (7.5y z-score)

S&P500 / US HY total return (7.5y z-score)

5

y/y (7.5y z-score)

6

4 3

4

2

2

1 0

0

-1

-2

-2 -3 1992 1994 1996

1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008

-4 1992 1994 1996

2010 2012 2014

1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008

2010 2012 2014



Despite the end of Fed QE and the first rate hike looming closer, G4 central banks’ combined balance sheets will keep expanding at roughly the same pace as the past five years for the foreseeable future.



While not as “powerful” as USD liquidity, BoJ’s and ECB’s balance sheets expansion will continue to be supportive of asset prices.



EMs are more vulnerable to falling USD liquidity than DMs. Investors’ recent enthusiasm with EM stocks makes them vulnerable to a stronger USD. EM bonds, still “unloved” after last year’s “taper tantrums”, could be more resilient in the near term.



Commodities, industrial metals above all, will continue to track EM equities’ performance.

20

Contact and disclaimers

Investment conclusions

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income US short end remains a puzzle Forward pricing has shifted lower despite tapering and higher inflation UST 2y

Forward implied after Jan Fed meeting

Forward implied after September Fed meeting

Core PCE y/y

1.6

1.4

1

0.8

0.6

0.4

Mar-14

May-14

Jul-14

Sep-14

Nov-14

Jan-15

21

Mar-15

We continue to see the likely re-pricing of the short-end and the attendant bear-flattening of the Treasury curve as the most significant risk in the US and global fixed-income markets. Judging by the price action in recent days, in the wake of strong PMI and housingmarket data, we believe we may already be in the bear-flattening phase. The risk is that flattening turns sharper and more rapid.

Contact and disclaimers

However, the path for the 2-year Treasury as yield priced in the forward curve after the September FOMC is significantly below the path after the January FOMC. What’s more puzzling is that this shift lower in the forward path has occurred over a period that the FOMC members’ own forecasts of the Fed funds rate have staggered higher (in the FOMC “dots”).

1.2

0.2 Jan-14

The behaviour of the short-end of the US Treasuries curve is a bit of a conundrum to us. The Fed started tapering its asset purchases at the end of last year, since which time macroeconomic indicators have gone from strength to strength. Core inflation is also higher than at the start of the year.

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income Bear-flattening is only recent The short-end has underperformed the long end US 2/10y (rhs)

1.01 1

US 2/10y 270

220

0.6

260

215

0.58

250

210

0.99

0.52

195

220

0.5 190

210

0.96

0.54

200

230

0.97

0.56

205

240 0.98

US 2y (rhs)

0.48

185 200

0.46

180

0.95 190

0.93 Jan-14

0.44

175

0.94

180 170 Mar-14

May-14

Jul-14

0.42

170 165 Jul-14

Sep-14

In fact, for much of the year, the long end of the curve has outperformed the short end defying most consensus expectations of a bear-steepening of the Treasury curve along with Fed’s tapering of asset purchases.

Aug-14

Sep-14

0.4 Oct-14

In the last few sessions, however, we have seen more evidence of the sort of flattening we typically associate with tightening cycles, i.e. bear flattening. We think this trend is likely to crystallise as we head into next year.

22

Contact and disclaimers

Short/Long end total return

But bear-flattening is just beginning

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income Spread to bunds could go a long way Scenario stress-testing suggests scope for a lot more widening Fitted* 100

…. as indeed happened with JGBs in the 90s

Bund 10y - UST 10y

Generic 10y JGB/UST ratio

bp

10y JGB-UST yield differential (rhs)

1.25

-100

1.20

-150

1.15

-200

1.10

-250

50 0 -50 -100

-200

1.05

Scenario A: factors 1 stdev from mean

-250 -300 -350 -400

* Based on relative inflation expectations (5/5y inflation swaps), growth expectations (PMI new orders and IFO expectations), REER, equity volatility and consumer confidence

-450 1996

1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

Scenario B: min/max in factors

2008

2010

2012

Japan falls into deflation

1.00

-350

0.95

-400

0.90 1991

2014

-300

-450 1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

…as indeed happened for the case of the Treasuries spread to JGBs in the 1990s after the Japanese crash in 1989. The Treasury-JGB spread went from about 150bps at the start of the 1990s to a whopping 400bps+ by the time Japan actually fell into deflation in 1998.

While the spread of 10-year Treasuries to Bunds has been on a sustained widening trend, our model-based scenario analysis suggests that it could ultimately go much wider than current levels, …

23

Contact and disclaimers

-150

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income Especially as Treasuries aren’t cheap Fair value estimates are moving gently higher with inflation Model-implied

Core PCE y/y (rhs)

6.0

US 10y 3.0

Fed balance bheet ($trn, rhs, inverted)

4.5

0.0

5.5 5.0 4.5

0.5 4.0

2.5

1.0 3.5

4.0 3.5

2.0

2.0

3.0 1.5

2.5 2.5

3.0 2.5

1.5

2.0

3.0

1.0

3.5

2.0

4.0

0.5

1.5

1.5 1.0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

4.5 0.0

1.0 2008

Most of the further spread-widening relative to Bunds is likely to come from Treasuries moving higher. Modelling Treasury yields using monetary-policy, inflation and growth fundamentals, we find that Treasuries are expensive even at the current subdued levels of core inflation. Our estimate of fair value is now trending gently up with core inflation.

5.0 2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Moreover, Fed balance-sheet expansion is now coming to an end, which will take away an important policy driver of the downtrend in Treasury yields.

24

Contact and disclaimers

US 10y

And balance-sheet expansion is coming to an end

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income The problem with BoE hikes pricing Markets have steadily priced in BoE rate hikes Latest

6mths back

… but much of the case for rate hikes lacks an inflation basis 12mths back

1y/1y swap

55

CPI

Unemployment (rhs, inverted)

3.0

6.0 6.2

45

2.5

6.4 6.6

35 Cumulative rate hikes priced in money-market curves (bp).

2.0

6.8

25

7.0 1.5

7.2

15 7.4 7.6 7.8 -5 1m

2m

3m

4m

5m

6m

7m

8m

9m

10m

11m

0.5 Jan13

12m

Base rate hikes by the Bank of England have been getting priced in sterling money-market curve throughout the previous 12 months, with the BoE governor seeming to confirm market’s expectations.

8.0 Jul13

Jan14

Jul14

While we agree that the BoE will probably hike, we also note that the case for rate hikes is mostly built on the strong performance of the job market. Inflation has been trending lower and has so far shown no tendency to rise. The shortend of the sterling curve appears to be taking notice of this lack of inflation.

25

Contact and disclaimers

1.0

5

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income US High Yield lagging IG credit US HY underperformance of IG getting stretched

Mixed evidence of US HY being short-dollar trade

650

CDX HY

2-year history

600

HY spread to Libor

R2 = 0.96 2200

550

Dollar Index (rhs) 130

bp

120

1800

500

110 1400

450 100 400

1000 90

29-Sep-14 600

80

300 CDX IG 250 50

60

70

80

90

100

200 2000

110

The underperformance of US High Yield relative to Investment Grade credit presents an opportunity for a convergence trade (see Portfolio Tactics, 24-Sep2014). HY outflows, which have been large in recent weeks and have been a major driver of the divergence between HY and IG, have slowed down significantly.

70 2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

A possible further repricing of Fed policy expectations, driving the US$ higher, is a risk for HY. But while there’s been positive correlation in the past between dollar and HY spreads, there have been periods when the two have diverged markedly – most notably since 2011 until very recently.

26

Contact and disclaimers

350

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income US HY fundamentals remain solid Risk-adjusted HY/IG relative performance

A 2-standard deviation dislocation

5 x CDX IG - CDX HY 100

5 x CDX IG - CDX HY (3-month z-score) 3

bp

2

50

1

0

0 -50

-1

-100

2012

2013

-3 2010

2014

CDX HY fundamentals remain solid Net debt to ebitda

2012

2013

2014

An undemanding refinancing profile Gross margins (rhs)

7.5

Bonds %

7.0 6.5

35

100

34

80

Loans CDX HY (100 constituents)

$bn

33

6.0 5.5

60

32

27

2030+

2029

2028

2027

2026

2025

2024

2023

0

2022

29 Q1 2014

2021

Q1 2013

2020

Q1 2012

2019

Q1 2011

2018

Q1 2010

20

2014

Q1 2009

30

2017

40

31

2016

5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 Q1 2008

2011

Contact and disclaimers

2011

2015

-150 2010

-2

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Fixed Income Differentiation key for EM debt Outside of taper tantrum, EM does well with rising US yields EMBI 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 2004 2005

…but a few like Turkey could still feel the heat

US 10y (rhs)

Turkey 5y CDS 5.5 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0

2006 2007 2008 2009

2010 2011 2012 2013

Short-term external debt/total external debt (rhs)

450

36

Steady ramp-up of short-term debt since US QE

400 350

32

300

28

250

24

200

20

150 100 2005

2014

16 2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014



We think US short-end rates are too low relative to the macroeconomic dynamics.



And while long-end rates seem destined to rise too, we look for bear-flattening to intensify into next year.



Our scenario analysis and the example of JGBs show that the UST-Bund spread can widen further significantly.



Without a pick-up in CPI inflation, UK short-end rates could correct lower.



The underperformance of US HY relative to IG looks stretched; we look for convergence.



EM sovereign credit performance likely to be less uniform with rising US yields.

28

Contact and disclaimers

Investment conclusions

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Currencies

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

130

Overvaluation after the Volcker rate hikes

29%

Overvaluation after the tech boom

21%

Historical average 90

80

1978

1982

1986

1990

1994

It has long been our central FX view that the dollar is in a multi-year upswing, as US monetary policy is likely to diverge on the tighter side relative to most other major global currencies. Indeed, the dollar has made significant headway relative to a broad basket of currencies since 2011. Given such sustained outperformance, worries about dollar overvaluation can surface in investor discourse. We argue, however, that any such worries are way too premature, especially when compared to previous multi-year dollar upswings during the regime of floating exchange rates in operation since the early 1970s.

100

1974

Commodities

1998

2002

29

2006

2010

2014

The dollar real effective exchange rate is 21% below the peak reached in the early 2000s at the end of the tech boom and 29% below the peak in the early 1980s, when the Volcker rate hikes pushed the dollar higher against its global counterparts. On both occasions, the dollar had become the highest-yielding major currency globally, a title we expect it to reclaim during the current cycle.

Contact and disclaimers

110

70 1970

Equities

USD mega uptrend in early stages

Long way to go before dollar valuation becomes extreme

120

Currencies

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Currencies

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Valuations supportive of USD strength

USD expensive only against a handful of currencies

… some of which can stay cheap or cheapen further

40%

0%

30% -5% 20% -10%

10%

0%

-10% -20% -20%

BoJ QE

Weak domestic demand; heavy dependence of oil and exports to US

C/A deficit; Deflation inflation risks high; CBRT tending to ease

TRY

SEK

INR

CAD

TWD

JPY

Comparing the dollar real effective exchange rate ratios to a range of currencies over a 20-year horizon, we see that the dollar is still cheap against a majority of major G10 and EM currencies.

ZAR

-25%

JPY ZAR TWD CAD INR SEK TRY GBP HUF EUR CLP KRW COP PLN CHF MXN RUB CZK ILS CNY NOK MYR AUD IDR NZD BRL

-30%

Low growth; C/A deficit; negative real rates; SARB credibility; labour unrest

And the currencies which look cheap on this metric are likely to stay cheap for some time owing to strong specific structural and policy drivers, which are likely to operate for the foreseeable future.

30

Contact and disclaimers

-15%

Lombard Street Research

Chartbook October 2014

Chart of the month

Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Currencies

FX carry vulnerable to USD strength

USD strength associated with negative carry-trade returns Deutsche Bank FX carry index

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Pick-up in short-term FX volatility accompanies carry sell-offs

Nominal effective USD (rhs)

AUDUSD 1m2y Vol Curve

150

115

140

110

FX carry (rhs)

6

130

5 125

4 130

105

120

100

110

95

3 120

2 1

115 0

90

90

85

80

80

-1

110

-2 -3

105

-4 70 2000

75 2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

-5 2009

2014

Sustained dollar strength has been bad historically for the FX carry trade. Over the previous 10 years, this was largely because USD was among the lower yielding major currencies globally. In future, we expect USD rates to overtake those of high yielders and ultimately USD will become a recipient of carry inflows.

100 2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

FX options-market signals, specifically a rise in short-dated implied volatility compared to long-dated implied volatility for high-yielding currencies, are indicating that this carry sell-off has begun. Historical experience suggests that there is plenty of further carry sell-off still ahead of us.

31

Contact and disclaimers

100

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Currencies

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Draghi driving the euro lower

The yield advantage of EUR will erode further with ECB QE EURUSD 1y1y differential

… and excess liquidity will put further pressure on EUR

Fed to ECB balance sheet

200

EUR/USD Xccy Basis

EUR/USD spot (rhs)

0

2500

1.50

-20

150

1.45

2000 -40

100

1.40 1500

-60

50

1.35 -80

1000 0

1.30 -100 500 1.25

-120 -100 2009

0 2010

2011

2012

2013

-140 Jan-10

2014

While nominal interest-rates differentials have been in a EUR-negative trend since last year, ECB balance sheet contraction during 2013 relative to the Fed has been a major support for the EUR. With the ECB committed to expanding its balance sheet significantly, the relative balance-sheet dynamics are likely to turn strongly EUR-negative, especially as Fed QE ends.

1.20 Jan-11

Jan-12

Jan-13

Jan-14

As a consequence of ECB measures, relative liquidity dynamics will generate an excess supply of euros relative to dollars (as seen in measures such as the 3month cross-currency basis), which will likely get more scarce with the end of Fed QE and will increasingly become expensive to short against the euro with Fed rate rises next year.

32

Contact and disclaimers

-50

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Currencies

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

GBP: policy divergence and C/A to weigh

GBP vulnerable to policy re-pricing on both sides … GBP rate hikes (MPC swaps)

… and the impact of unfavourable BoP dynamics

USD rate hikes (Fed funds futures)

UK C/A % GDP

80

US C/A % GDP

0

0

70

-1 -1

60

-2

50

-3

-2

40

-4 -3

30

-5

20

-6 -4

0 Oct-14

-7

Jan-15

Apr-15

Jul-15

-5 2000

Oct-15

While the forthcoming Bank of England rate hikes are well telegraphed and more than adequately priced in, we see a risk of sterling suffering relative to the dollar on account of possible policy re-pricing for both the BoE and the Fed. Inflation dynamics are diverging in the two economies, …

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

-8 2014

…and the relative balance-of-payments dynamics have turned much more dollar positive over the recent years. The current-account cycles in the two economies were quite synchronised in the pre-crisis years, but the sustained US C/A adjustment is in sharp contrast to the UK’s C/A deterioration over the last couple of years.

33

Contact and disclaimers

10

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Currencies

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Reasons to be bearish CHF

C/A and haven flows have persistently supported the franc CHF NEER

SNB will be keen to ward off any challenges to the floor

Swiss C/A, % GDP (rhs)

EUR/CHF

150

18

145

16

140

25d risk reversal (rhs)

1.26

4

1.25

3

14 1.24

135

12

130

2

Markets challenged the SNB floor in early 2012

1

1.23

10 125

-1 8

1.22

120

-2 6 1.21

1.20

2

105 100 2001

-3

4

110

0 2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

1.19 Jan12

2013

In a world beset with financial, sovereign and geopolitical crises, safe haven demand for the Swiss franc has been more than ample and quite sustained, contributing to deflation in the Swiss economy, despite the EUR/CHF floor imposed by the SNB at the height of the Eurozone periphery crisis.

-4 -5 May12

Sep12

Jan13

May13

Sep13

Jan14

May14

Sep14

Markets may be looking again to test the resolve of the SNB to defend the floor as EUR/CHF risk reversals have turned negative for the first time since Q4 2012. We believe this will press the SNB into taking CHF-weakening measures, given the deflationary pressures in the Eurozone and the weakening of the euro. Our preference, however, will be to sell CHF against USD.

34

Contact and disclaimers

115

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Currencies

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

AUD to underperform CAD

AUD terms of trade and C/A underperforming those of CAD AUD/CAD Terms of trade ratio

Domestic and external FX drivers have turned CAD positive

AUD-CAD C/A % GDP (rhs)

1.1

AUD-CAD CPI 2

US-China leading indicator (rhs)

3.0

25 23

2.5 1.0

0

21 2.0

0.9

19

-2 1.5

0.8

-4

17

1.0

15 13

0.5 0.7

-6

11 0.0 9

-8 -0.5

0.5 2000

-10 2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

-1.0 2010

2014

Within the commodity-FX complex, we are much more positive on the Canadian dollar than the Australian dollar. Relative terms of trade and currentaccount dynamics have turned AUD-negative in recent months, with industrial metals significantly underperforming oil, …

7 5 2011

2012

2013

2014

…and China, the key target of Australian exports, underperforming the US, the main destination of most Canadian exports. The cyclical divergence between China and the US is also reflected in the cyclical divergence between Australia and Canada, which we believe will generate significant monetary policy divergence between the two and push AUD/CAD lower.

35

Contact and disclaimers

0.6

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Currencies

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

EM Macro RV interesting to us

We like cyclical divergence stories such as PLN/HUF

… and terms-of-trade based themes such as TRY/RUB

IP Growth Differential (Poland-Hungary)

TRY/RUB

CPI y/y differential (Poland-Hungary, rhs) 15

23

1

60

22

10

70

21

0

5

Brent (rhs, inverted)

80

20

0

-1

-5 -10

19

-2

-15 -20 Jan-12

-3 Jul-12

Jan-13

Jul-13

Jan-14

90

18 17

100

16

110

15 2008

Jul-14

2009

2011

2012

2013

2014



We believe the long-term dollar upswing is in early stages; fundamental valuations seem to support our view.



A resurgent dollar will be problematic for the global FX carry trade hitting higher-yielding G10 and EM FX hard.



Cyclical and monetary-policy divergence will likely take the euro much lower relative to the dollar.



GBP/USD is vulnerable to a relative policy re-pricing too, with UK CPI and C/A dynamics suggesting weakness.



AUD is set to underperform CAD over the coming years as economic cycles and terms-of-trade dynamics diverge.



In EM, we like cyclical and terms-of-trade divergence stories such as short PLN/HUF.

36

Contact and disclaimers

Investment conclusions

Lombard Street Research

Equities

Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Equities

Commodities

A bad breadth problem

Waiting for the “big one” NYSE Composite Index

% NYSE stocks above 200d MA, rhs

11500

100

11000

90

10500

80

10000 70

9500

60

9000 8500

50

8000

40

7500

30

7000 20

6500

10

6000 5500 May-09

Currencies

0 May-10

May-11

May-12

May-13

37

May-14

The last correction (i.e. a more than 10%, but less than 20% decline) in the US stock market happened in 2012, coinciding with the end of QE2. The previous one, in 2010, corresponded to the end of QE1. It is therefore not surprising that US equity investors have been waiting for the end of QE3, likely to happen in the next couple of months, with some trepidation. In addition, expectations of the first Fed rate hike have been brought forward – adding to the general sense of anxiety – as data has been surprising to the upside. But there are other signs suggesting that a possible US equity market correction may be looming. The small-cap Russell 2000 index has failed to make new highs in August, unlike the S&P 500. And market breadth indicators, such as the number of stocks in the NYSE trading above their 200d moving average, have been noticeably weaker. This suggests that the extraordinarily consistent trend that the S&P 500 has been in since May 2012 may be finally about to break.

Contact and disclaimers

Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Equities

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

There is no alternative

EA earnings? What earnings? EPS (fwd)

Expensive DM valuations

p/e (fwd)

2.8

Stoxx 600 (rhs)

17

400

p/b

2.6

US Switzerland

2.4

15 350

2.2

11

DM

2.0

300

250

1.6

7

Spain

200

3 2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

5

Despite the concerns about the US stock market, probably overdue for a correction, the hard truth for equity investors is that, to quote former UK prime minister Margaret Thatcher in a different context, “there is no alternative”. Euro Area profits, despite rather promising leading indicators in the past 12 months, have been noticeable for the absence.

RoE

Italy

1.0

2014

France

Japan

1.2 150

Germany

Euro Area

1.4

5

Australia

UK

1.8 9

Canada

7

9

11

13

15

Besides, DM equities valuations are generally quite expensive in p/e terms – though on a p/b vs. RoE basis things are more nuanced. And while EM valuations are generally cheaper, there are pretty good reasons for it – be it the end of cheap dollar funding, a strong dollar, China’s slowdown, or their weak fundamentals.

38

Contact and disclaimers

13

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Equities

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Can ECB QE push valuations higher?

A very selective earnings growth picture…

…but a very broad-based repricing p/e (12m fwd)

EPS (12m fwd) change since May-2012

Change since May-2012

25 20

Msci Emu

15

Inf Tech

10

Industrl

5

Hlth Care

MSCI Euro Area sector weights

Material

25

Utility

20

Energy

15

Tel Svc

10

Inf Tech

Cons Dis

Industrl

Con Stpl

5

30

The upside for Euro Area stocks looks limited, despite expectations of ECB QE. Sectors that had potential for earnings recovery have already done so. Others, with a more domestic focus, will be unlikely to benefit from liquidity and a weaker EUR.

39

Inf Tech

Finance

0

Tel Svc

20

Material

10

Energy

0

Hlth Care

-10

Utility

-20

Con Stpl

-30

Industrl

-40

Cons Dis

-50

Contact and disclaimers

Finance

Material

Hlth Care

Utility

Finance

Cons Dis

Energy

Con Stpl

Tel Svc

Msci Emu

0

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Equities

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

EM to underperform DM

Unsustainable divergences

Higher $ rates not an obstacle to DM outperformance

DM / EM equities

Dollar index (rhs)

DM / EM equities

4.5

Fed funds rate (rhs)

4.5

130

%

1997-98 EM crisis

4.0

8

4.0

120

9

7

3.5

3.5 6

110 3.0 3.0

2.5

5

100 2.5

4

Dot-com bubble

2.0

Global Financial Crisis

90 2.0

1.5

1.5

1.0

1.0 1990

70 1994

1998

2002

2006

2010

2014

1 0 1994

1998

2002

2006

2010

2014

High or rising Fed fund rates do not seem to have prevented DMs from outperforming EMs historically. Emerging markets’ stronger showing during the 2003-2007s period had more to do with EMs’ 5x index gain than with US rising rates.

DM / EMs relative performance tends to correlate with the USD. We expect the dollar to continue to get stronger, and as a consequence EMs’ outperformance of DMs year-to-date to be reversed (something that has already started occurring in the past couple of weeks).

40

Contact and disclaimers

2

80

0.5 1990

3

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Equities

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Equities

Commodities

3

DM / EM equity TR (y/y)

Jan-2010 = 100

%

MSCI EM (removing)

80

170

70

160

60

150

50

140

40

130

30

120

20

110

10

100

0

2

1

0

90

-1

-2

-10 -3

-20 2011

2012

2013

MSCI World (adding)

MSCI EM (adding) -3

2014

With the DM / EM total returns rate of change shortly going negative a few weeks ago, it looked like investors had had enough of DMs’ expensive valuations and had started piling in into EM stocks.

DM / EM equity TR (7.5y z-score) -2

-1

0

1

MSCI World (removing) 2

3

Those early signs have not been confirmed, and a sharply rising dollar has sent DM / EM relative performance into reverse gear – at least for the time being.

41

Contact and disclaimers

EM Equity TR

Investors have not given up on DMs just yet

DM / EM equity TR (y/y) (7.5y z-score)

DM Equity TR

80 2010

Currencies

DM/EM rotation in reverse?

Early signs of rotation into EMs not finding confirmation

180

Fixed Income

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Equities

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

EM macro: choosy does it

Positive and rising real rates not enough for Brazil, Russia Sep-14

Apr-13

5

EM FX much more stable after the fall caused by the “taper tantrums”

Change

Since May-2013 10

Real short-term interest rates (%)

4

Currency % change vs USD

5

3

0

2

-5

1

-10

0

-15

-1

-20

-2

Since Feb-2014

-25 Russia

India

S. Africa

China

Mexico

Korea

Taiwan

Russia

Current account deficits still a problem for South Africa and Brazil… Current 15

Brazil

India

Mexico

Taiwan

China

Korea

…And that’s not the only one they have

1 year ago

GDP growth (% of Q1 00 - Q2 08 average) 100

Current account balance (% GDP)

10

S. Africa

80 60

5

40

0

20 0

-5

-20

-10

-40 S. Africa

Brazil

India

Mexico

China

Russia

Korea

Taiwan

Taiwan

42

China

India

Korea

Mexico

Russia

S. Africa

Brazil

Contact and disclaimers

Brazil

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Equities

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

EM: Lagging earnings, flagging inflows

More of a EM re-rating than a recovery MSCI EM 100

Inflows showing signs of fatigue already Non-financials

EEM (MSCI EM ETF)

12m trailing EPS

60

1600

50

1400

40

1200

30

1000

20

800

10

600

0

400 2010

VWO (FTSE EM ETF)

90 80 70 60 50

30 20 10 0 2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

Earnings have been soft in EMs ever since 2011, making the recent rise in emerging equities more of an exercise in re-rating than one in recovery. NonFinancials have been faring particularly poorly in terms of profitability.

2011

2012

2013

2014

The tentative signs that flows into EM equities were recovering have already started to fade.

43

Contact and disclaimers

40

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Equities

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

35 30

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Mind the EM value traps

Valuations generally cheaper than DMs… 40

Fixed Income

(0.7) 0.3 (1.3) Number of stdev from 7.5y mean

(0.3)

0.5

2.0

25

…but mind the value traps (1.0)

1.9

Key

Last

+/- 1 stdev

Avg

3.0

0.1

p/b

Mexico

2.5

7.5y range

India Taiwan (tr.)

2.0

South Africa

20 1.5

15 10

EM

China

Korea (tr.)

1.0

5

Brazil

Russia

0

RoE

0.5 CN

IN

KR

TW

BR

MX

RU

ZA

EM

5

10

15

20

25



A US correction may be in the making, with (1) QE3 about to end, (2) rates going up soon, (3) valuations full, (4) small caps underperforming large caps, and (5) market breadth measures sending warning signals.



However, there are few markets, if any, where equity investors can reasonably expect better returns than the US.



Europe, with virtually no earnings growth, has already re-rated and ECB QE and a weaker euro will be of little help.



EMs have had a good run since March this year but that’s already running out of steam: being selective will pay off.



Russia, Brazil and South Africa remain value traps. India still looks appealing in the long-term but may suffer from a higher dollar and tighter USD liquidity. China may outperform other EMs as it is less dollar-dependent.

44

Contact and disclaimers

Investment conclusions

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Commodity de-correlation to continue

UBS Bloomberg CMCI Composite TR Index

MSCI AC World TR (rhs)

1800

200

1700 180 1600 1500

160

1400 140

1300 1200

120

1100 100

1000 900

80 800 700 2007

60 2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

45

2014

As we have often pointed out, the paths of commodities and global equities have been divergent over the last couple of years. We continue to believe that a re-coupling is unlikely. The relative demand-supply outlook has deteriorated for long commodity positions, while the improving earnings outlook (especially in the US, but also in Japan) and the still ample global liquidity are likely to keep equities well supported. Secondly, the China slowdown is real and even the Chinese authorities seem to suggest that they would not lean heavily against the slowdown insofar as it aids economic rebalancing. Lastly, low and falling real interest rates are likely to become a thing of the past, especially as the Fed begins contemplating policy rate hikes along with other central banks like the Bank of England. So while a deteriorating demand-supply outlook and adverse discount rate effects will persistently keep commodities under pressure, equities are likely to ride higher with solid earnings growth.

Contact and disclaimers

Commodities’ persistently divergent path relative to equities

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities A less commodity-intensive growth cycle More growth doesn’t necessarily mean higher commodities JP Morgan Global PMI

Not the beginning of a cyclical upswing EM leading indicator (based on OECD series), 6m%

CRB index (rhs)

DJ-UBS Commodity TR index, (rhs) 54

330

53

320

2.5

520

2.0

470

1.5 52

420

1.0

310

370

0.5 51

320

300

0.0 270 -0.5

290

220

-1.0 49

170

-1.5

280

120

-2.0 48 Sep-11

Mar-12

Sep-12

Mar-13

Sep-13

Mar-14

270 Sep-14

-2.5 1994

The global growth cycle has turned significantly less commodity-intensive over the last 18 months or so, with a China slowdown being accompanied by a US growth acceleration and increased global commodity supply relative to demand.

70 1996

1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

We don’t expect the uptick in EM leading indicators to signal the beginning of a cyclical upswing for commodities. China’s slowdown, rising real rates and generally improved supply-demand dynamics will likely keep prices in check for now.

46

Contact and disclaimers

50

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Declines in all sub-categories Weakness all around… Energy 120

…particularly in Grains

Industrial Metals

Agriculture

Agriculture

Precious Metals

Soybean

Corn

Wheat

Total returns, Jan-2014 = 100

Total returns, Jan-2014 = 100

120 115

110

110

105

100

100

90 95

85 Jul-13

Oct-13

Jan-14

Apr-14

Jul-14

70 Jul-13

Oct-14

Since late summer, we have seen broad declines across all major sub-categories including energy, industrial metals, agriculture and precious metals, with the declines in agricultural commodities being particularly pronounced.

Oct-13

Jan-14

Apr-14

Jul-14

Oct-14

A significant portion of the decline in agricultural commodities is down to the bumper corn crop in the US. Also adding to the downtrend is the lack of any meaningful disruptions from a feared El Niño event.

47

Contact and disclaimers

80

90

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Performance patterns change Arabica’s robust performance

Commodity carry staring an unwind in the face

35

30

JP Morgan commodity carry index

Circle size reflects returns per unit of volatility: the bigger the circle, the higher the Sharpe ratio

Oats Palladium

6

350

5

300

4

250

3

200

2

150

1

Lean Hogs

20 Zinc

Coffee Robusta Cocoa

15 Aluminium 10

Live Cattle Annualized ytd return (%)

5 -10

400

Coffee Arabica

Nickel

25

USD 1y1y (rhs)

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

100 2007

70

0 2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

The commodity carry trade (earning positive roll on backwardated term structures) has been one of the success stories of the crisis years, contributed to by the robust growth in China and the decline in global funding costs. Both drivers are weakening.

In a year that has seen global growth accelerate, commodities most reliant on global growth (such as aluminium) are among the worst performers. Investment opportunities are likely to surface on the back of idiosyncratic stories, e.g., in the coffee market, the outperformance of Arabica (tracking the New York market) relative to Robusta (tracking the London market).

48

Contact and disclaimers

40

Annaulzed 30d volatility (%)

45

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Crude upheaval Goodbye backwardation

A long way to go

WTI (4th-16th ctr.)

CFTC net non-comm.positions 2.0

Difference (USD)

500

$

1.9

8

400

120

1.7

0

110

1.6

-4

140 130

1.8

4

300

100

1.5

-8

90

1.4

-12 -16

Ratio

200 80

1.3

-20

1.2

-24

1.1

-28

1.0

-32

0.9

-36 1992

WTI (rhs)

60

1998

2001

2004

2007

2010

50

0

40

0.8 1995

70

100

-100 2007

2013

Rising inventory levels have eroded the premium on near-term WTI contracts, bringing down the extent of backwardation, during a period when crude oil prices have declined globally.

30 2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Despite the recent decline, speculative positions are still net long. The decline could have a long way to go.

49

Contact and disclaimers

12

WTI (4th/16th ctr., rhs)

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Deteriorating demand outlook Demand-supply balance suggests a bearish outlook for crude Brent yoy

China softness implies downward pressure on industrial metals HSBC China Manuf. PMI

Demand/Production 1y change (rhs)

China Manuf. PMI

BBG Industrial Metals (rhs) 200%

20

65

300

15

150%

260

60 10

220

100%

55 5

180

50%

50 0

140

0%

45

-5

-100% 1995

-10

40

-15 1998

2001

2004

2008

2011

35 2005

2014

The most recent Oil Market Report of the International Energy Agency suggests that the global demand-supply balance has tilted towards excess supply. There has been a pronounced decline in demand growth in Q2 2014, with a weaker outlook for Europe and China underpinning the downward revisions.

60

20 2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

A down-drift in Chinese activity indicators bodes especially ill for industrial metals, as China is by some distance the most significant marginal importer of industrial commodities such as iron ore and copper.

50

Contact and disclaimers

-50%

100

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Cattle bulls Forming a base

A consistent trend

DJ-UBS Live Cattle TR index

5-year MA

Live Cattle, generic 1st contract ($/lb)

220

170

200

150 130

180

110 160

90

140

70 Jul-06

Jul-08

Jul-10

Jul-12

50 Mar-02

Jul-14

Falling headcount

Mar-04

Mar-06

130

Million heads

Mar-10

Mar-12

Mar-14

Cattle placement on feed still slow in attempt to rebuild the herd Cattle, beginning stocks

140

Mar-08

Cattle on feed for 7 states, y-y% 8

source: USDA

6 4

120

2

110

0 -2

100

-4

90

-6

80

-8 2007

60 63 66 69 72 75 78 81 84 87 90 93 96 99 02 05 08 11 14

51

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Contact and disclaimers

120 Jul-04

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

Commodities Rates taking the lustre off gold Volcker rate hikes finished off the 1970s gold bull market Gold

History just seems to be repeating itself

US 2y real rate (rhs)

Gold

US 2y real rate (rhs)

1900

780 9

680 480 380

5

1500

3

1300

1 -2

180

-4

900

-6

700 2009

1977

1978

1979

1980

1981

1982

1983

2 1 0 -1

1100

280 80 1976

3

1700

7

580

4

1984

-2 -3 -4 2010

2011

2012

2013

2014



Commodities remain in a weakening trend, as broad indices continue to form a pattern of declining highs.



We doubt that the recent uptick in EM leading indicators signals the beginning of a cyclical upswing, as the global growth cycle has turned significantly less commodity-intensive.



China softness and excess oil supply suggest that Energy and Industrial Metals will remain under pressure, while rising real rates will weigh on Precious Metals just as they did in the early 1980s.



We continue to like Cattle due to strong fundamentals and supportive technicals.

52

Contact and disclaimers

Investment conclusions

Lombard Street Research Chart of the month

Chartbook October 2014 Contents

Summary

Macro Drivers

Multi Asset

Fixed Income

Currencies

Equities

Commodities

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Lombard Street Research Financial Services Limited may have issued other reports that are inconsistent with, and reach different conclusions from, the information presented in this report. Lombard Street Research Financial Services Limited is Authorised and Regulated by the UK Financial Services Authority. FSA Firm Reference Number: 502674. Registered Office: 9 cloak Lane, London EC4R 2RU Registered in England No. 6862824 Registered in England No. 6862824

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Contact and disclaimers

The value of any securities or financial instruments or types of securities or financial instruments mentioned in this report can fall as well as rise. Foreign currency denominated securities and financial instruments are subject to fluctuations in exchange rates that may have a positive or adverse effect on the value, price or income of such securities or financial instruments. Certain transactions, including those involving futures, options and other derivative instruments, can give rise to substantial risk and are not suitable for all investors. This report does not have regard to the specific instrument objectives, financial situation and the particular needs of a client. Clients should seek financial advice regarding the appropriateness of investing in any of the types of financial instrument or investment strategies discussed in this report.